I used to be sitting within the entrance of a pick-up. Wedged between the motive force and me was Ed Tucker-Brown, the gearstick between his knees. Tucker-Brown’s job was to vary gear when the motive force pressed the clutch. He had little to do, although, given we not often acquired out of first.
We plunged by swamps, the bonnet disappearing underneath muddy soup. We inched our means down vertiginous, rutted slopes of crumbling laterite soil, typically on three wheels, after which needed to winch ourselves up the opposite aspect. We crashed by subhumid forests. Farmers sitting on their zebu-drawn carts — the one different wheeled transport we noticed within the three hours it took us to cowl 50km — watched us from the shade of tamarind timber.
“If I make roads, the white man will solely come and take my nation,” Madagascar’s King Radama I declared within the early nineteenth century, because the island battled colonialism. It appeared as if the legacy of the royal decree was nonetheless being felt.


We had been driving from the grass strip in Soalala, on Madagascar’s north-west coast — the place I’d landed after a 90-minute constitution flight from the capital, Antananarivo — to the distant 220 sq km Tsingy de Namoroka Nationwide Park.
I’d learn that, since man’s arrival on Madagascar, considered between 1,500 and a couple of,000 years in the past, greater than 90 per cent of the forest that when lined the whole island has disappeared, largely destroyed by impoverished subsistence farmers — Madagascar is the world’s fifth-poorest nation. They slash and burn, a way known as tavy in Malagasy, to construct rice paddies and produce charcoal for gas.
Much more alarmingly, some estimates recommend 40 per cent of the forest has been misplaced since Madagascar gained independence from France in 1960, throughout which era the inhabitants has elevated greater than fivefold to 30mn.
Within the week I used to be spending on what some biologists name “the eighth continent” — 90 per cent of all its vegetation and animals are discovered nowhere else — I might be visiting two new lodges with a powerful conservation ethos. Each are hoping to carry an financial profit to an island the scale of France that noticed fewer than 320,000 international guests final yr and the place the overwhelming majority of its inhabitants dwell on lower than $2 a day.


On condition that a lot of the forest, and the life it sustains, has been misplaced, attending to the remaining pristine pockets requires a powerful sense of journey and an excellent stronger 4×4.
“Fewer outsiders have visited this place than summit Everest in a yr,” Tucker-Brown informed me, as we crashed by a thick discipline of roof-high wild mint, the perfume filling the truck.
Final yr, Welsh-born Tucker-Brown, 49, opened Namoroka Tsingy Camp, on the sting of the park, the primary and solely lodging within the space. “There have been about 40 guests to the park since 2019,” he informed me.

We lastly arrived on the camp: seven surprisingly luxurious tented rooms set round an out of doors eating space embraced by slabs of tsingy, the otherworldly limestone karst that provides the park its title.
After a bathe to clean off the laterite, we set off for a stroll within the park, which has six distinct ecosystems, together with dry deciduous, riverine gallery and bamboo forests, tsingy and the Marosakabe cave system, stretching for greater than 100km and believed to be the biggest in Africa.
Having made us work arduous to get there, the nationwide park delivered its treasures thick and quick. There have been towering baobab timber, with their swollen trunks and sparse, stubby branches — six of the 9 species on the earth are endemic to Madagascar, and the opposite three are considered escapers. The ground was scattered with elephant-foot vegetation; with their gray, distended trunks spreading out throughout the soil, flecked with brilliant yellow flowers, they regarded like dwelling rocks.
That a lot of the natural world is endemic is the results of the break-up of the Gondwana supercontinent about 180mn years in the past, with Madagascar drifting away from mainland Africa, leaving the vegetation and animals to evolve in isolation.



“Initially, I used to be going to name this camp the Ark Challenge, as a result of it looks like we are able to actually assist cease the decline on this contained, distant spot,” mentioned Tucker-Brown, who had first come to Madagascar in 2006 and fallen arduous for the nation, its folks and its wildness. He now employs greater than 150 folks from the Sakalava, the native ethnic group, within the camp, bettering the roads and constructing firebreaks in order that the tavy is contained.
We walked on. Large Malagasy chameleons, 60cm lengthy, sat on branches and watched us by eyes like rotating gun turrets. Large Madagascan velvet geckos, their mottled skins excellent camouflage on the tree trunks, hissed at us to maintain strolling. Round us flitted Madagascan sundown moths, their iridescent patches of each rainbow hue making them resemble flying kaleidoscopes.
There have been additionally many snakes, on the bottom, climbing timber — large hognose, pencil, floor boa constrictors, two metres lengthy and as thick as my arm — all fortunately innocent to people, in addition to enormous golden orb weaver spiders, whose silk is so robust that the Madagascan royal household as soon as made Queen Victoria a pair of stockings from it.
Point out to mates that you’re visiting Madagascar and the very first thing they’ll say is “lemurs!” (clearly their kids will shout “King Julien!”). I believed they is likely to be arduous to identify, however, no, there they had been, critically endangered Von der Decken’s sifakas, one of many 10 lemur species discovered within the park. (There are considered greater than 100 species in whole in Madagascar and extra being found on a regular basis.)
The lemurs had been huddled collectively in teams of 4 or six, staring down at us from the cover with seeming bemusement; creamy teddy bears with jet-black faces and “eyes limpid amber, wherein the pupil floated like a glittering jewel”, as William S Burroughs described them in his 1991 Madagascar-adventure novella, Ghost of a Probability.


Tucker-Brown defined how lemurs — like a lot of the “stranded” natural world of Madagascar — are successfully dwelling fossils. Belonging to a primate group known as prosimians, lemurs had been evolutionarily outmoded by monkeys on mainland Africa 35mn years in the past and pushed to near-extinction. A number of stowaways, maybe curled up in hole logs, managed to get throughout the Mozambique Channel to Madagascar, the place, with out competitors, they remained true to the species’ authentic kind.
We emerged from the forest into an unlimited clearing of tsingy, the place it regarded as if sci-fi animators had created a megacity on a monochrome planet — towering shards of gray limestone hovering from a crevassed flooring. Tsingy means “the place one can not stroll barefoot”; it was shaped on the backside of the ocean till, tens of millions of years in the past, seismic exercise thrust the limestone upwards and erosive acid rain did its work.
We dropped beneath the floor, right into a deep karst canyon, beneath rock formations resembling immense winged gargoyles. We donned head torches and entered the cave system, largely unexplored. We discovered the bones of pygmy hippos and large lemurs within the mushy sediment — each animals among the many lengthy record of Malagasy megafauna worn out when people lastly made it to Madagascar. Enormous crocodiles are believed to dwell deep inside the caves, Tucker-Brown mentioned, “and God is aware of what else. Maybe undiscovered species.”


That evening, over zebu lasagne, and underneath a staggering show of stars (the closest gentle air pollution is Maputo in Mozambique), Tucker-Brown informed me concerning the environmental work funded by a €50 per-person-per-night conservation levy, and concerning the younger Malagasy researchers from Wildlife Madagascar, a US non-profit, who dwell within the camp.
He’s additionally constructing an airstrip to rework the logistics within the space. If you happen to don’t deal with poverty and training, he mentioned, then nothing else will work. “Everyone is working collectively to avoid wasting this space, this wild area in the course of nowhere,” he mentioned. “That’s why it looks like an ark. The entire of Madagascar ought to be an ark, and perhaps it’s too late for that, however we have now to attempt.”
From Namoroka, I flew, through Antananarivo, to the island of Nosy Boraha, generally known as Île Sainte-Marie, a 50km-long, 7km-wide strip of land, 8km off mainland Madagascar’s east coast, dense with rainforest and fringed with abandoned, white-sand seashores overhung with coconut palms. It was a cliché of a tropical island, a way solely heightened when I discovered a pirates’ cemetery, full with Seventeenth-century coral graves inscribed with cranium and crossbones motifs.


I used to be right here to go to one other new and distant mission with conservation and sustainability at its coronary heart. So, after a 45-minute drive north on easy asphalt, then for an additional 30 on a hideously rutted assault course of a monitor, full with rickety plank bridges, that might have made outdated King Radama swell with pleasure, I arrived at Voaara.
There to greet me was Philippe Kjellgren, 57, one other European who misplaced his coronary heart to Madagascar — in his case when he lived right here as a teen whereas his father labored on the mainland. “It was probably the most stunning locations I’d ever seen,” he mentioned.
Swedish-born Kjellgren had spent his working life travelling extensively, reviewing 3,000 of the world’s best motels for his PK’s Listing web site. However Madagascar saved calling him again, so within the distant north of Sainte-Marie, he purchased 45 hectares of land and, alongside together with his Canadian spouse Vi, constructed a barefoot luxurious lodge, which opened in 2024.
“Over 90 per cent of our workers are Sainte-Marie locals who’ve by no means had a job,” says Kjellgren. They’re working with conservation teams to reintroduce critically endangered turtles, replanting timber and inspiring the ending of tavy. Whereas I used to be there, a biologist from the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Belief, a Jersey-based conservation charity, was visiting.
Voaara has seven solar-powered oceanfront bungalows and a villa, every with traveller-palm thatched roofs and driftwood beams from close by seashores. As you would possibly count on from a person who compiled what Forbes known as the “Michelin Information equal for the posh lodge world”, all the things is beautiful, from the indoor-outdoor loos, with granite basins and toiletries made by Sainte-Marie-based model Anoka, to the handmade, down-topped sheep’s wool mattresses and crisp linen sheets, to the prints of native life by celebrated Malagasy photographer Pierrot Males.
The restaurant, with its steeply pitched roof impressed by the rova architectural model seen within the royal palace in Antananarivo, has a menu designed by Spain’s vaunted Aleixandre Sarrion and expertly executed by Malagasy chef Jean Notia Vincent. It makes use of fruit and greens from Voaara’s kitchen backyard and, naturally, the plentiful larder of the Indian Ocean.

I walked for hours alongside the seashore and noticed not a soul, then spent the remainder of the afternoon snorkelling on the reef. That night, I met Kjellgren on the seashore bar, additionally constructed of driftwood. We ordered chilly Madagascan Three Horses beer and watched the solar soften into the ocean.
Kjellgren informed me that, from June to September, 7,000 humpback whales collect within the waters right here after migrating from Antarctica to breed and calve. “And with so few vacationers, you’ll be able to have them to your self,” he mentioned.
As evening fell on the mainland throughout the channel, there was not a single gentle to be seen. “We don’t have children,” Kjellgren informed me. “So, that is our legacy.”
A canine ran as much as us, licked my hand. “That is Misplaced,” Kjellgren mentioned. “He was a stray, so we took him in.” Misplaced, I requested?
“Sure,” Kjellgren laughed. “Misplaced in paradise.”
Particulars
Mike Carter was a visitor of Pink Savannah (redsavannah.com), which affords a 12-day tailored journey to Madagascar from £8,758 per individual, together with 4 nights full-board at Voaara, 4 nights full-board at Namoroka Tsingy Camp, three nights at a four-star lodge in Antananarivo, inner flights, non-public transfers by air-conditioned SUV, all native guides, entrances, actions and nationwide park charges
Discover out about our newest tales first — observe FT Weekend on Instagram, Bluesky and X, and sign up to obtain the FT Weekend e-newsletter each Saturday morning