Intelligent Travel

Postcard from Tristan da Cunha

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Traveler writer Andy Isaacson is just back from Tristan da Cunha on assignment for the magazine. Below, he offers a peek into what it's like to visit the most remote island in the world.

IMG_1430.jpgReaching the world's most remote inhabited island is, and probably has always been, an awesome moment. From Cape Town, I sailed west across the Atlantic for six days on a South African polar research vessel, covering nearly 1,700 miles, or the equivalent trip from NYC to Denver. Every day the horizon was flat, unbroken. On the seventh day, at 6 a.m., I walked onto the deck and looked up to an enormous volcano, capped by snow, towering over the sea. This is how I arrived at the island of Tristan da Cunha, and its tiny settlement, the romantically named, "Edinburgh of the Seven Seas."

How did I get here? One afternoon last spring, I was curious about how it felt to live on the fringe of the planet, and a bit of online searching turned up Tristan, located 1,450 from the nearest inhabited settlement of St. Helena (the distance from Chicago to Miami). I'm spending three weeks here on assignment for the magazine. In recent years, many changes have come to this formerly isolated outpost. Now, in ways, this UK territory, inhabited by 270 descendants of British soldiers, Dutch sailors, American whalers, and (two) Italian castaways, resembles a Scottish fishing village: one general store and pub (The Albatross), and the community meeting place, Prince Philip Hall, which holds Saturday night dances and the mail call when ships arrive every 4-6 weeks. The landscape is a mix of potato plots and sheep fences, and tiny single-story houses with corrugated roofs that have the Internet and British TV piped into their living rooms.

Working here has had its challenges. Over the years, journalists have visited Tristan, only to write or air inaccurate, superficial or somehow offensive things, resulting in a justifiable weariness. (Every visitor, in fact, must be appeal to the Island Council to land here - for real, you can be voted on or off this island.) I've warmed up to the locals by helping plant potatoes and dancing a decent waltz, but I haven't managed to warm the weather any. It's been mostly gusty and overcast; there have only been three sunny days in three weeks, which has confined my movement. Everything is determined by the weather, Tristanians will say, and that also depends on which way the wind blows. Today it's an easterly, and as my host here said: "East is the Beast."

Andy Isaacson has written for the New York Times, Afar magazine, and National Geographic Traveler. Check out his most recent article about an ocean engineer, a famed aviator, and their secret project to reach the bottom of the planet in National Geographic Adventure magazine. Learn more about Andy on his website or by following him on Twitter.

5 Comments

Claire Volkwyn said:

What a pity your article is so short - after three weeks on Tristan, I would have thought there would be a lot more to say about this unique place.

Ms Alex said:

I hope you write more about the experience, though I understand that living amongst a small community may restrict what you can say about the people it hopefully won't limit your writing about the place.

Richmond said:

I would like to suggest to Andy that apart from this, Nicobar islands in India also counts in the deserted islands.Well, this is a nice photograph.Keep it up!!

Erik Nolke said:

Where is the article? It is a fascinating subject and I would like to read the article about the 3 weeks spent there.

Janelle said:

This is just a quick dispatch from the trip, Andy's article on Tristan will be appearing in a forthcoming issue of National Geographic Traveler. Stay tuned!

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Janelle on Postcard from Tristan da Cunha: This is just a quick dispatch from the trip, Andy's article on Tristan will be appearing in a forthc
Erik Nolke on Postcard from Tristan da Cunha: Where is the article? It is a fascinating subject and I would like to read the article about the 3
Richmond on Postcard from Tristan da Cunha: I would like to suggest to Andy that apart from this, Nicobar islands in India also counts in the de
Ms Alex on Postcard from Tristan da Cunha: I hope you write more about the experience, though I understand that living amongst a small communit
Claire Volkwyn on Postcard from Tristan da Cunha: What a pity your article is so short - after three weeks on Tristan, I would have thought there woul

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