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Mafia Island and the surrounding archipelago have a great deal to
offer as an unspoilt, little-visited alternative to other Indian
Ocean locations around Zanzibar and along the coast.
The archipelago provides excellent
opportunities for diving and snorkelling, and for discovering deserted
beaches and offshore islands fantastically imbued with rich natural
and historic interest.
Mafia Marine Highlights
The deeper channels around the islands
are also renowned for world-class deep sea fishing, and home to
at least two greatly endangered species; the docile dugong (manatee
or sea cow) is still thought to find refuge cruising the seagrass
between Mafia and the Rufiji River Delta, and the small islands
around the archipelago remain a popular breeding ground for giant
and green turtles.
These islands are an idyllic natural
haven for birds and wildlife, with over 120 different species of
birds sighted and recorded, (including five types of sunbird), and
the whole area is best explored from the comfort of the deck of
a traditional sailing dhow.
Mafia - Historic Indian Ocean
Islands
Mafia is an archipelago of islands
at the mouth of the Rufiji river delta, composed of Mafia Island,
Jibondo, Juani and Chole. Their position as the most southerly islands
on the Tanzanian coast has made them strategically covetable throughout
the long game of historical wrangling for rule, but visitors today
find essentially rural farming and fishing communities whose day
to day lives continue in much the same pattern as has been traditional
for millennia.
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