Tuvalu travel guide
One of the smallest and remotest countries on earth, these South Pacific islands are utterly laid-back – but under threat from rising sea levels
Tuvalu is tiny. Nine desert islands barely break the surface of the Pacific Ocean mid-way between Hawaii and Australia. With a population of just over 12,000 it is one of the world’s smallest nations: only the Vatican City has fewer citizens.
Tuvalu’s past is shrouded in mystery. It is thought that its first settlers came from Tonga, and cave remains indicate this might have happened 8,000 years ago.
The great European navigators of the 16th century knew about Tuvalu but with no safe berth it was little more than a navigation hazard and ships stayed clear. Missionaries arrived in the 19th century and until 1978 Tuvalu was administered as a British Protectorate along with the Ellice Islands. Development was incremental until the Americans noticed the islands’ strategic importance in the Second World War. The main island of Funafuti suddenly received an airstrip, a causeway, and many of the eight kilometres of paved roads that they still use today.
The main island, Funafuti, is a true atoll that consists of 30 motu, islets, surrounding a translucent lagoon. Nearly 500 kilometres to the north is the island of Nanumea, another true atoll. The island of Nanumaga is volcanic in origin. Nukufetau is another true atoll, three square kilometres of land surrounding a lagoon 13km by 7km, that the Americans used as their base during World War II. Kidney-shaped Nukulaelae is another true atoll surrounding a lagoon: it is said that this was where Christianity first reached Tuvalu, when a castaway from the Cook Islands washed up here in 1861.
Tuvalu has plenty of paradise beaches, but few are developed for tourism. Barely a hundred visitors a year make the epic trip across the Pacific to get here. The economy bumps along at subsistence level: the soil is rarely fertile and drinking water has to be collected from roofs and stored in tanks. Colourful postage stamps were an important source of revenue and it received a windfall when its internet suffix was declared to be .tv, but fishing from an outrigger canoe is a more usual career path.
As if this wasn’t enough, Tuvalu faces an uncertain future. The islands’ highest point stands 4.5m above sea level: the locals live in fear of a ‘King Tide’, an unusually high tide that could sweep Tuvalu away, and the even more dismaying prospect of rising sea levels is a long-term threat. It’s easy to say the best time to visit Tuvalu is now, but this time it’s true. It might be your only chance.
Wanderlust recommends
- Get Lost. Tuvalu’s relaxed island lifestyle and isolation is the ideal location for leaving the Western world behind
- Dive a Cave. A 1986 expedition investigating folklore stories of a ‘large house under the sea’ found a cave 40m below sea level in the north of Nanumaga. Inside was evidence of human occupation thought to date back 8,000 years
- Use the Airstrip. You may have landed on it already but the flat space isn’t wasted. Most of the time the runway is used as a football pitch for village games
- Go snorkelling. The beaches are tranquil, never crowded and surrounded by coral reefs. Even on the beach women should dress conservatively in long trousers and tee shirts
- Find a Wreck. The islands are littered with wrecked aircraft and ships from World War II: the best are found offshore, overgrown with coral and shoaling with fish
- Lets Dance. Watch local teams compete against each other in the energetic Fatele dance and music sessions
- Get Stamped. The Philatelic Bureau on Fongafale has a huge collection of Tuvalu’s collectible postage stamps.
Wanderlust tips
It is a part of Melanesian tradition to play host to travellers and invite them into their homes. Refusing such an offer could cause offence.