Pitcairn Island - as far away as you can get

Adamstown, the only settlement on Pitcairn Island.
Adamstown, the only settlement on Pitcairn Island.
It is bare of white sandy beaches and about as far away as you can get from anywhere - but that has not stopped super-remote Pitcairn Island from marketing itself as a holiday paradise in a newly embraced tourism push.

Today, about 50 residents on the lonely island in the South Pacific are celebrating Bounty Day - or the 222nd anniversary of the burning of HMS Bounty - along with a handful of visitors who were drawn in for the festivities.

Islanders hope the official holiday, marked with boat races and the annual burning of a miniature replica of the Bounty, will become a tourist-puller as they look to holidaymakers as a way to bolster a flagging economy.

Visitor numbers have dwindled since a shipping lane change slashed the once-large number of ships that would stop at Pitcairn and buy produce and island-made crafts and curios, Pitcairn Islands Study Centre director Herbert Ford said.

The island's international image had not recovered from the 2004 sex assault trials which resulted in six islanders - including mayor Steve Christian - convicted on 35 charges.

"That's Pitcairn's burden to bear," said Mr Ford, who saw the trials as "just a piece of history now".

Rather, islanders were keen to trade on the history of their mutinous sailor-ancestors who hid themselves away from British justice in 1790, immortalised on the the screen by the 1962 Marlon Brando film Mutiny on the Bounty, as well as the relics of other vessels shipwrecked near Pitcairn.

"There's an awful lot of interest in the Bounty story, especially in Europe," Mr Ford said.

"For tourists, Pitcairn has the smack of adventure to it, the romantic and adventurous story of the Bounty solidly glued to it ... and it is such an isolated place that you get the idea you are going to go as far from the outside world as you possibly can."

But with the quest for seclusion comes the long haul of getting to Pitcairn, where visitors must first fly to Papeete in Tahiti, catch a flight to Mangareva in the Gambier Islands and then spend up to 36 hours on a chartered boat.

"You do have a few cruise ships going by, but these don't quite add up to what you used to have, with a few commercial vessels in one day," Mr Ford said.

"In terms of tourists, on the other hand, it's changed 100% - whereas you might have once had four or five over several months, now they're seeing four or five each month. They'd like to get that up to maybe 20 or 30 each month if they could."

As for things to do, Mr Ford said visitors should not head to Pitcairn expecting another Hawaii or Fiji.

"Before I started the centre, I was seeing a tremendous number of newspaper pieces describing white sandy beaches and lazy islanders lying under palm trees, which was all cloud nine stuff.

"None of that applies to Pitcairn - it's just a volcanic rocky outcrop and the biggest threat is falling off a cliff."

Instead, Pitcairn tourism officials cite "great fishing", quad bike tours, snorkelling, hiking and bird-watching among other "fun spots" in a Pitcairn vacation package.

Things to do on Pitcairn
Fishing:
Pristine waters teem with fish. Visitors can head out with locals in a boat, fish off the rocks or get their catch underwater.
Snorkelling and scuba diving: There is an abundance of marine life, especially amid the wrecks of the Cornwallis and the Bounty.
Bird watching: The island boasts the endangered Pitcairn Island warbler, while Henderson Island, 193km away, is home to a range of birds including the flightless Henderson crake.
Walking: The island is well signposted and offers an eco trail and unique flora and fauna along the track to Christian's Cave.

 

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