St. Lucia Eco Lodge – Expansive views of the Indian Ocean

The St. Lucia Eco Lodge is nestled between the St. Lucia Estuary, the Indian Ocean and the iSimangaliso Wetland Park and is an ideal point from which to explore South Africa’s first World Heritage Site.  One of the few properties where you can see the marine protected area from your bedroom!

The lodge adjoins the rich diversity of Zululand’s wetland lakes and forests, while the sea and game reserves are a mere stone’s throw away.

iSimangaliso is a Zulu word that means “a place of miracle and wonder”, a name that aptly describes the pristine and intricate ecosystems of this World Heritage Site.

This 10 700 km2 MPA is home to coelacanths, fish that have been around since the dinosaurs. The original Maputaland and St. Lucia Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) were proclaimed in the 1970’s to protect the nesting grounds of leatherback and loggerhead turtles and the beautiful coral reefs enjoyed by thousands of local and international scuba divers.

The offshore expansion was proclaimed in 2019, which protects the homes of the most accessible coelacanth population on the planet. At least thirty-three individual coelacanths, each recognised by their distinct spot patterns, live in this MPA. Whale sharks, manta rays, marlin, broadbill swordfish, thresher sharks and even giant saw sharks visit the deep canyons. These areas (40 to 2200 m) are home to dense fields of sea pens, soft corals adapted to living in mud and sand, bands of delicate bird’s nest glass sponges and rocky cliffs with giant branching sponges that cascade down steep walls. The deep soft sediment provides homes for spider crabs and deep-water rock lobsters, species that are caught by fishermen south of the MPA and in Mozambique.

Published by tourismtails

Kian Barker, owner of Eco Lodge and ShakaBarker Tours has a B. SC. in Botany and Zoology, as well as a B. SC. Honours in Ichthyology and Fisheries Science. He has published numerous articles in a variety of publications on estuarine management, tourism and related ecological aspects, as well as appearing in a number of television documentaries concerning the iSimangaliso Wetland Park. Kian believes passionately in repurposing for an even more sustainable eco friendly future. He has established an eco friendly 50 Shades of Green benchmark, that will hopefully be accepted into the tourism industry as a standard to aspire to. He has adapted Eco Lodge to embrace these green living practices, that also help conserve our natural environment, animals, and resources like water and energy. He also specialises in offering a variety of eco-tourism services in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park and surrounds.

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