The Scotsman

Peaks of perfection

Who said beach breaks have to be lazy? Verena Vogt gets active on a twin-centre holiday in Réunion and Mauritius

-

We’re 15 minutes into our helicopter flight when we suddenly lose speed, and the deafening sound of the rotor blades fades. It’s a rather worrying developmen­t considerin­g we’re flying high above a gorge with sheer vertical cliffs and no obvious place for an emergency landing.

But it seems our pilot has simply slowed down so we can get a good look at waterfalls cascading below us, and soon we’re back at full speed, zipping over mountain ridges and into lush green valleys.

I’m on Réunion, a French overseas territory in the Indian Ocean, and our half-hour flight is the perfect

A bundle of vanilla pods, powder and a bamboo container set me back €12

introducti­on to this mountainou­s island.

Often overshadow­ed by its beachringe­d neighbour Mauritius, Réunion is an outdoor enthusiast’s dream, and combining both islands in one holiday means I get to explore two very different worlds.

With its jungle interior and volcanic peaks rising to more than 3,000 metres, Réunion is particular­ly popular with hikers, as many of its natural wonders can only be discovered on foot – or by air.

Among them are the three cirques The mountains near Mafate on Réunion, main; the Lux Belle Mare hotel on Mauritius, above or calderas; tree-covered valley basins hidden deep inland that were created by collapsing volcanoes.

From the air, we spot the most remote of these, Mafate, which is dotted with tiny villages and only accessible via a two-day hike.

Our guide Alexis, a wiry Frenchman with bags of charm, tells us that rafting and canyoning are other popular pastimes here, as is cycling – either along the 200km coastal road or, if you have the stamina, up the steep and winding roads to the island’s interior.

But I decide to skip the highintens­ity exploits and instead head south-east to Grand’anse, where a well-worn forest path leads us to clifftops and uninterrup­ted ocean views.

After an hour’s drive further east, we stop at the Grand Brule, a 60-metrewide hardened lava flow created by repeated outbursts of the Piton de la Fournaise, one of the world’s most active volcanoes.

The grey landscape has an otherworld­ly feel, and we detect few signs of life as we walk across the rough elephant skin-like surface back to our vehicle.

The eruptions that caused these flows also created lava tunnels; kilometre-long undergroun­d networks that can be explored on

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom