Socotra Island

The Jewel of the Arabian Sea

Welcome to Socotra Islands, Yemen’s off-the-beaten-track travel destination, Socotra should definitely be on your list. With its unique plant and animal species, otherworldly landscapes, and rich culture, it is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. One of the most fascinating things about Socotra is the indigenous dragon blood tree, which is known for its distinctive red sap and has been used for medicinal purposes for centuries. The islands are surrounded by the crystal clear waters of the Arabian Sea, making them a popular spot for diving and snorkeling. If you are planning to visit Socotra, it is important to be mindful of its delicate ecosystem and cultural traditions. Traveling to this remote corner of the world requires some preparation, but the rewards are well worth it.

2018,Yemen has a number of islands spread like a string of pearls along its coast; from the numerous small, flat coral-fringed island of the southern Red Sea (like Kamaran), which have developed on salt domes, to the smaller less common island along the Gulf of Aden, most of which are close to the coast and are generally extinct volcanoes thrown up out of the sea during the late Neogene. Some are more distant, fragments of displaced continental crust, like the Socotran Archipelago, which became separated from the mainland about 27 million years ago.
Soqotra island lie some 190 nautical miles off the southern coast of Yemen, in the Gulf of Aden. Their relative isolation merely hints at their extraordinary foreignness. Like a lesser Galapagos, these islands boast flora and fauna found nowhere else in the world. Moreover, the Socotran people have their own language (which lacks a script) and distinctive culture, cuisine and architecture: neither Arabian or African, yet strongly and distinctively Socotran.

Socotra is the largest in a small archipelago of four islands, which includes the Brothers (Samhah and Darsa) and Abd al-Kuri together with two rocky islets that lie in the Indian Ocean on a mic-oceanic volcanic ridge 500 km south-east of Mukalla and 170 km off the coast of Somalia. It is roughly 130 km long and 35 km wide.

Its name may be derived from the Sanskrit dripa sukhao (‘isle or abode of the blest’) or from the Arabic souk qotra, which would mean the market of dragon’s blood – a reference to the resin of its most famous tree species.

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