Island in the sun: Bokissa Private Islands Resort occupies a thumbnail of the 72ha island and can hardly be seen. (Bokissa Private Island Resort)
Hey! Are you interested in buying a South Pacific island?
One that’s just three hours or so from Brisbane, with a little resort tucked into a thumbnail of its 72ha (180 acres).
Your island in the sun on which to build your own secret place for family or maybe investment-mates in its rainforests or along its beaches, and far enough away from that little resort – that takes up just 5 per cent of the island – that you could be on another planet?
And if you want, have the existing owners stay on and manage that resort for you, or run it yourself in your retirement…(and when the grandkids visit and you don’t want them to miss school, you’ll find you’ve got your own Kindy to Grade 7 school that’s attended by a dozen children of staff who come across daily from a neighbouring island).
Bokissa Private Island
This rare little gem is called Bokissa Private Island Resort, just off Santo in the north of Vanuatu and made famous by James A. Michener who penned his famous Tales of the South Pacific about its beauties and mysteries after serving there during the Pacific War.
Retired Brisbane businessman, Dave Cort, went there for a diving holiday with a mate in 1993 and jokes now about “becoming an accidental South Pacific island resort owner”.
“We went to Bokissa for the then daily shark feeding dive,” Dave says. “It was pretty run-down and I didn’t think a lot about it, but the next year I went back with our son Alan, who was then 26, and we stayed there.
“It was even more run-down, but it’s natural beauty got to me and we went back a few more times…each time finding it more run-down than before, and in 1998, learned it was for sale – in fact almost sold – by a Melbourne group who owned the lease.
“Out of the blue, I made a bid – and with absolutely no knowledge of the hotel industry, suddenly found myself an accidental South Pacific island owner.”
Dave and wife Jan, with Alan, moved up to Bokissa soon after and got into the mammoth task of renovating the run-down resort, landscaping its gardens and putting in the infrastructure that would make it liveable for themselves – and more desirable for guests.
Million Dollar Point
Diving is spectacular over vast beds of corals alive with marine populations. (Bokissa Private Island Resort)
Today, Bokissa Private Island Resort has 15 private bungalows – called farés – amongst the trees on a beach of talcum-white sands melding into aqua waters. Vast coral beds swarm with myriad fish and marine life, there are boats for reef and sport fishing (marlin, sailfish, mahi mahi, wahoo, dog tooth and coral trout) and fly-fishing as well.
For divers, neighbouring Santo has some of the world’s best wreck diving from the Pacific War, including the sunken passenger liner-cum-troopship, President Coolidge, recognised as the world’s largest accessible wreck dive. And there is also Million Dollar Point, where the Americans bulldozed millions of dollars worth of wartime vehicles, weapons of all kinds, machinery and supplies into the sea at war’s end.
On Bokissa itself, there is a 25m pool with a swim-up bar (currently under renovation), landscaped gardens, bushwalks through the rainforest and along the beaches, wartime relics, snorkelling, kayaks and sailboats, volley-ball, soccer field, giant outdoor board games…and a library for something to read in the hammocks between the trees.
Fresh Food
For seafood lovers locally caught lobster features at least twice weekly, together with fresh reef fish, while for carnivores, there is the famed Santo beef that’s exported to Japan and island pork, plus freshest locally grown vegetables…and to finish, a now legendary homemade fruit salad, crepes, caramelised bananas, coconut cream pie.
Dave and Jan are long retired – again – but still living on the island, with the resort managed by Alan who married a local staff member, Elizabeth, in the island’s own church (that’s been used by numerous guests for also getting married). Alan and Elizabeth have four children who attend their island school.
Staff are from nearby Tutuba Island whose people are the traditional landowners from whom Bokissa is leased, who come across daily to work at the resort, leaving the island at night purely to the Cort’s and their guests (primarily honeymooners and winding-down couples.)
If owning all or part of this sounds like your idea of heaven in the Pacific or if you just want a holiday, drop Dave a note on dave@vanuatu.vu.



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