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Malolo Island Fiji
Home » Hotels & Resorts » Pacific Island » Fiji Islands » Mamanucas & Yasawas » Malolo Island Fiji
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Malolo Island Fiji is located in the Mamanuca Archipelago, just 25 kilometres west of Nadi International Airport. The resort is a firm favourite for both families and couples who want to enjoy snorkelling, diving, island hopping and dolphin spotting in this beautiful, unspoilt paradise.
A recent major refurbishment has resulted in a new, bright, stylish design for the resort. Plantation-style duplex accommodations, reminiscent of colonial times and featuring high-vaulted ceilings, give a feeling of spaciousness and elegance. The bures are fully air-conditioned and nestled amongst lush, tropical gardens, only a few lazy steps from the beach and water's edge.
The resort's 45 bures are offered in four different categories including 28 Ocean View, 12 Deluxe Ocean View, three Family and two Tadra Beach Bures. All Ocean View and Deluxe Ocean View Bures have a king bed and two single beds making them ideal for a couple or a family of four. The spacious Family Bures can sleep up to seven guests while the couples-only Tadra Bures have a king bed with two daybeds – perfect for a couple enjoying a romantic interlude.
Malolo offers a variety of menus and dining locations. The Beach Bar is located at the water's edge and offers casual beachside dining for lunch and dinner. Enjoy the evening sunset ritual flare lighting ceremony to the resounding beats of Lali drum. With views across the resort swimming pools and lush gardens, the Terrace Restaurant offers all-day alfresco dining with a full buffet breakfast each morning and a daily-changing ŕ la carte lunch and dinner menu. Below a canopy of trees and the Fijian sky, Treetops offers a dedicated dining experience for families with older children and couples only.
Experience a warm Fijian welcome
While the resort offers a fantastic range of resort facilities and services, the most amazing experience of your Fijian holiday is sure to be the wonderful Fijian staff. The staff will welcome you to the resort like a family member into their home and it is this experience that keeps guests returning year after year.
Be luxuriously indulged at Leilan's Spa in one of the unique open-air treatment bures nestled in tropical gardens where qualified therapists use the renowned Pure Fiji products. Whether you choose a sunset stroll along the beach, an afternoon siesta, quiet read in a hammock, or a private candlelit dinner for two on the beach or jetty, Malolo Island Fiji has it all and more!
Guide to Mamanucas & Yasawas
There are 13 islands in all, not counting those covered by the Pacific at high tide and they all share in common pristine white sandy beaches, waving palms, crystal blue waters and, at night, the cooling influence of the trade winds. The Mamanucas (pronounced Mah-mahnoo-tha) are essentially volcanic outcrops pushed up from the ocean floor in a gigantic earthquake thousands of years ago. Some are especially significant in Fijian folklore.
From the air you can see that the Mamanucas group is two clusters known as Mamanuca-i-ra and Mamanuca-i-cake. Within the Mamanucas is the Malolo group, five kilometres inside the barrier reef, extending in a curve for 120 kilometres. A number of resort islands are scattered throughout the Malolo group, each offering bure accommodation, a relaxing holiday atmosphere and a range of water activities.There are boat excursions, fishing trips and watersports including waterskiing, windsurfing, snorkelling, diving, sailing, speedboat riding, and coral viewing. Malololailai is the centre for most tourism to and from the Mamanucas. It has safe anchorage, a cosmopolitan community and an airstrip serviced regularly from Nadi.
Other resort islands within the group include Bounty Island, Amunuca Island Resort, Yaqeta Island, Beachcomber Island, Castaway Island, Malolo Island, Mana Island, Musket Cove, Nanuya Balavu, Plantation Island, Tavarua Island, Namotu Island, Vomo Island, Lomani Island Resort, Treasure Island, Matamanoa Island Resort and Tokoriki, which is located the furthest from the mainland.
The Yasawa Islands have a different ambience. They are a chain of 16 volcanic islands and dozens of tiny islets stretching 80 kilometres in a north-northeast direction off the west coast of Viti Levu. They are special because of their beautiful, isolated beaches, cliffs, bays and reefs, unspoilt by much tourist development. Because they sit in the lee of Viti Levu, the Yasawas are dry and sunny with crystal clear waters. It was from the north end of the Yasawas that two canoe-loads of cannibals appeared in 1789 and gave Captain William Bligh and his 18 companions a chase, less than a week after the famous mutiny. Two centuries later, cruise ships ply the island chain and its waters, while more and more luxury resorts dot the islands’ foreshores.
The islands of the group include Waya Island, the highest in the Yasawas; Tavewa Island, a strikingly beautiful small island about two kilometres long; Turtle Island, which has the ultimate resort owned by Richard Evanson who bought the island in 1972; Yasawa Island; Sawai- Lau Island with its large limestone cave illuminated by a crevice at the top; Naviti Island which is the largest of the Yasawas; and Viwa, the most remote, squatting alone 25 kilometres northwest of Waya. The Outer Islands are Kadavu, 80 kilometres south of Suva, Ovalau with the former capital, Levuka and Vatulele Islands.
There is a wide range of accommodation to suit all tastes. Levuka has retained much of its late Victorian charm and is well worth a tour. Kedavu has a number of resorts specialising in scuba diving on its world renowned Astrolabe Reef.