Saturday, October 19, 2024

Brendon Grimshaw

 In 1962, British Brendon Grimshaw bought a small uninhabited island in the Seychelles archipelago for $13,000.

At less than 40 years old, he quit his post as editor to begin a new life on this island where no one had set foot in 50 years.

Like a true modern-day Robinson, Brendon met René Lafortin, a resident of a neighboring island, and together they transformed the island.

For 39 years, they planted 16,000 trees, created nearly 5 kilometres of trails, and reintroduced more than 100 giant turtles, helping save the species from extinction. Brendon has also attracted 2,000 new bird species to the island, turning this once deserted piece of land into a true wildlife paradise. Today, this island is home to two-thirds of Seychelles' wildlife. 🇸🇨

In 2007, René Lafortin passed away, leaving Brendon alone on the island. Despite a $50 million offer from a Saudi prince to buy the island, Brendon has declined, preferring his island to become a national park accessible to all.

"I don't want the island to become a luxury resort. "This better be a National Park for everyone to enjoy."

Thanks to his efforts, the island was declared a national park in 2008. Brendon passed away on his island in 2012 at the age of 87. This man is an example of values and virtues we all should follow.

Respect, honor and peace be upon you Sir! Thank you. 💚👏🏼 


Marine National Park off the north coast of Mahé, Seychelles. Since the 1970s onwards, it has been a flora and fauna reserve. From 1915 until the 1960s, the island was abandoned until its purchase by Brendon Grimshaw for £8,000. He was a newspaper editor from Dewsbury in Yorkshire, England. Grimshaw was the only inhabitant of the island until his death in July 2012. The island is now a national park and can be visited as part of organized trips.

Moyenne Island: The world's smallest national park

Martin Barraud/Getty Images Moyenne Island: The world's smallest national park (Credit: Martin Barraud/Getty Images)
Moyenne Island: The world's smallest national park 

Once a neglected wasteland, this paradisiacal eco-reserve stands as a reminder of what the Seychelles were like before tourism arrived.

Most people who buy their very own tropical island do so in the pursuit of luxury. Brendon Grimshaw was different. So, too, was Moyenne, the island in the Seychelles that Grimshaw bought. 

Grimshaw first came to the Seychelles – an archipelago of 115 islands in the Indian Ocean, only eight of which are permanently inhabited – on holiday in 1962. At the time, he was an editor working for some of the biggest newspapers in East Africa. It was an exciting time in Africa and, as part of his job, he rubbed shoulders with Tanzania's charismatic new leader and future president, Julius Nyerere.

But Grimshaw was looking for something more than a holiday.

Tanzania had declared independence the year before; Kenya would follow a year later; and Grimshaw, an Englishman, understood that jobs such as his would soon pass to locals. Knowing that he would soon be unemployed, Grimshaw searched for a new direction in life, one that took him closer to nature. He dreamed about owning land in the Seychelles – ideally, he'd buy his own island.

imageBROKER/Alamy Moyenne is a 0.099sq km dot off the coast of the Seychelles' largest island, Mahé (Credit: imageBROKER/Alamy)
Moyenne is a 0.099sq km dot off the coast of the Seychelles' largest island, Mahé 

On his first few weeks in the Seychelles, Grimshaw began to wonder whether he needed a change of plan: there weren't many islands on the market, and those that were had eye-watering price tags. On the second-to-last day of his holiday, a young man approached him in the Seychelles' capital, Victoria, and asked Grimshaw if he wanted to buy an island. Just like that. They travelled together to Moyenne, a 0.099sq km dot 4.5km off the north coast of the Seychelles' largest island, Mahé. Grimshaw fell in love immediately with its silence and its wild tangle of vegetation. It was, he would later say, close enough to be accessible from the Seychelles' main island, and yet a world away. 

"It was totally different. It was a special feeling," he told a documentary film crew in 2009. "This is the place I'd been looking for." 

At four minutes to midnight on the last day of his Seychelles holiday, Grimshaw signed an agreement to pay £8,000 for Moyenne. The island was his. But buying Moyenne would prove an easier task than taking care of it. 

Save for a family of fisherfolk who lived on the island, Moyenne had been abandoned for decades. With tourism starting to take off in the Seychelles, it seemed only a matter of time before someone cleared the land to build a five-star resort.

PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy Moyenne was once so overgrown that falling coconuts never hit the ground (Credit: PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy)
Moyenne was once so overgrown that falling coconuts never hit the ground 

Moyenne is one of the smallest of the Seychelles' inner islands: it measures just 0.4km long and barely 0.3km wide, and its coastline runs for less than 2km. Its highest point rises to an altitude of just 61m above the water's edge. Moyenne possesses the same paradisical white sand and granite boulders that characterise so many Seychelles shorelines, but it's also home to a dense, unbroken wall of trees that cover the island, forming a low pyramid above the water's edge. It's a riot of green against cobalt skies and a sapphire sea, like a tiny rainforest erupting from the ocean.

Despite Moyenne's diminutive size, restoring the island's natural beauty was a massive task. A combination of neglect and heavy-handed human intervention had left Moyenne dishevelled and gasping for air. Weeds choked the understorey, and the island was so overgrown that, it was said, falling coconuts never hit the ground. In the tangle of weeds, birds were noticeably absent and rats foraged in the undergrowth. 

By Grimshaw's side was a local named Rene Antoine Lafortune, the 19-year-old son of a local fisherman. The two became inseparable, and together they set about transforming the island, clearing the scrub, planting trees and forging paths through the undergrowth. It was painstaking, back-breaking work – and it became Grimshaw's life-long obsession. 

Grimshaw's initial goal was to protect Moyenne from overdevelopment. At first, this meant uncovering the island's raw beauty and building a humble island home where he could live out his days. But his longer-term dream was to create a natural paradise that would outlive him and remain protected long after he was gone.

 

Marion Kaplan/Alamy Grimshaw was a former newspaper editor-turned-conservationist (Credit: Marion Kaplan/Alamy)
Grimshaw was a former newspaper editor-turned-conservationist 

"His vision was to leave an unspoiled island for future generations of Seychellois and the world," said Suketu Patel, who first met Grimshaw in 1976 and became a lifelong friend. "He wanted a mini-Seychelles. He wanted to try and replicate what Seychelles and its islands were like before tourists came." 

It wasn't all hard work, though. While taming the overgrown north-western corner of Moyenne, Grimshaw found two graves. Their tombstones read, "Unhappily Unknown". Grimshaw became convinced that pirates from centuries past were buried here; one of the beaches on the island's north side is known as Pirate's Cove. The graves belonged to a pair of lowly buccaneers, so the story went, who were killed by two famous pirate leaders so that the dead men's spirits would haunt the island and protect the treasure. 

Whether Grimshaw really believed the legends is unknown. "For him it was fun to get up in the morning, ask, 'What will I do today? Let's go look for treasure'," remembered Patel. Today, there are two sites marked on maps of Moyenne with a skull-and-crossbones symbol, where Grimshaw and Lafortune tried their luck looking for, but never finding, the pirates' hidden treasure. 

As tourism in the Seychelles grew in the 1980s and the archipelago became synonymous with a tropical island paradise, investors turned their covetous gaze towards Moyenne. Grimshaw received offers of up to $50m to sell the island. He resisted every overture.

PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy Moyenne is like a tiny rainforest erupting from the ocean (Credit: PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy)
Moyenne is like a tiny rainforest erupting from the ocean 

As Grimshaw grew older, he became increasingly aware that he had limited time left to protect the island's future. He had no children to whom he could pass on custodianship of the island, and when Lafortune passed away in 2007, Grimshaw decided to act. With Patel and others, he set up a perpetual trust to protect the island and signed an 2009 agreement with the Seychelles' Ministry of Environment that included Moyenne as part of Ste Anne Marine Park, but granted it its own special status. With that, Moyenne Island National Park, the world's smallest national park, was born. 

It can be easy to imagine Grimshaw as an eccentric figure. After all, he moved alone to the other side of the world, bought an island, believed in pirates and spent a lifetime restoring a seemingly inconsequential speck of land. But many Seychellois remain grateful for what he bequeathed to his adopted nation. 

"Personally, I don't think he was crazy," said Isabelle Ravinia from the Seychelles National Parks Authority. "He gave the island back to the country, which was a noble thing to do. Normally people would try to sell off the island before they die so they can obtain money to do something else. Instead, he did something incredible." 

Grimshaw died in 2012 and his grave sits alongside that of his father (who later came to live with Grimshaw) and the two unknown pirates. At his request, Grimshaw's tombstone reads, "Moyenne taught him to open his eyes to the beauty around him and say thank you to God." In his last will and testament, he expressed his final wishes: "Moyenne Island is to be maintained as a venue for prayer, peace, tranquillity, relaxation and knowledge for Seychellois and visitors from overseas of all nationalities, colours and creeds."

PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy Thanks to Grimshaw and Lafortune's work, Moyenne is crisscrossed by nature trails today (Credit: PhotoStock-Israel/Alamy)
Thanks to Grimshaw and Lafortune's work, Moyenne is crisscrossed by nature trails today 

The task of fulfilling Grimshaw's wishes now lies in the hands of the Moyenne Island Foundation, which is overseen by Patel. Apart from a restaurant – the Jolly Roger – that serves local dishes like grilled fish and seafood curries in a red Creole sauce, a small museum dedicated to Grimshaw's life and two nurseries for giant tortoise hatchlings, Moyenne remains undeveloped. 

How to visit Moyenne

Aside from hiring your own boat, the best way to explore Moyenne is on a half- or full-day tour with Creole Travel Services and Mason's Travel, which also take in the other islands of the Ste Anne Park.

The island has no jetty and arriving here carries a special kind of magic: nowhere else in the Seychelles can match Moyenne's sense of deserted-island discovery as you wade ashore, barefoot, through the shallows. As you reach dry land and take your first steps along the gently climbing forest trail, the trees close in behind you and you enter another world. Dappled sunlight filters down through the canopy to the forest floor, the temperature is cooler, and the island's 16,000 trees – mahogany, palm, mango, pawpaw – planted by Grimshaw and Lafortune surround you. By one estimate, Moyenne has more plant species per sq m than any other national park in the world. 

Every now and then, you may find your path blocked by one of Moyenne's nearly 50 free-range giant Aldabra tortoises. They're in no hurry, and nor should you be as you watch them pass. Back in the shallows and by the beaches at Pirate’s Cove, watch for hawksbill turtles that often come ashore to nest.

Kit Day/Alamy Fifty free-range giant Aldabra tortoises roam Moyenne (Credit: Kit Day/Alamy)
Fifty free-range giant Aldabra tortoises roam Moyenne

Even during peak tourist season, there are rarely more than 50 visitors on the island at any one time, and never more than 300 over the course of a day. Six islands make up the Ste Anne Marine Park, but Moyenne is the only one, aside from tiny Ile Cachee, with no hotel development or other forms of private land ownership. And thanks to Grimshaw and his friends, Moyenne is likely to stay this way.

"There's something that grabs you when you go there," said Patel. "If you think you have a big problem, when you're on the island you realise that it's not a problem after all. Moyenne is what life should be like."



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