Thirty-five minutes by light aircraft southwest of Mahe, the Indian Ocean shifts from cobalt to emerald and a coral island six kilometres long and one and a half wide eases into view, Desroches, the flattest grain of sand in the Amirantes. Four Seasons is the only resort here, reopened in 2018 after a full redevelopment, its 72 villas, suites and residences scattered along 14 kilometres of white-sand shore, every one with a private pool, outdoor shower and direct beach access. Interiors channel a laid-back explorer aesthetic, bold printed textiles, natural timber, vintage collectibles from the age of sail — and barefoot on the deck is the only dress code. The seven-bedroom Presidential Villa tops the collection with its own kitchen, gym and full-size pool. The island's eastern half has been returned to nature, home to some 150 Aldabra giant tortoises; the eldest, George, is over 80.
Claudine, the main restaurant, runs a Mediterranean Riviera menu from breakfast through dinner with a weekly themed buffet. The Lighthouse perches on the shoreline, grilling the day's catch on an ocean-facing terrace at sunset. The Deli packs picnic baskets for guests to carry by bicycle along coconut-palm trails to a deserted stretch of sand. Circle of Connection Spa sits among tropical foliage with five treatment suites; the signature massage uses heated baobab-seed eggs in a rolling technique to release deep tension. More than 70 activities fill the days: Tropicsurf coaching, reef-restoration snorkels with a resident marine biologist, scuba diving, fly-fishing, kayaking, Creole cooking classes and tortoise feeding. After dark, the airstrip doubles as a stargazing dinner venue. This is an island that pushes doing nothing and doing everything to the same extreme, Four Seasons simply makes sure the sand stays soft underfoot.