Hiking, snorkelling, strange rocks, perhaps a seafood lunch – Hong Kong’s small islands offer plenty for the visitor
- While many of Hong Kong’s 200-plus islands are barren rocks, there are plenty of others that can be reached by ferry, speedboat or even kayak
- A world away from the bustle of the city and sparsely populated at best, these islands are havens for marine life and offer hiking and curious rock formations
Hong Kong’s outlying islands have a habit of vanishing.
Chek Lap Kok metamorphosed into an airport. Stonecutters Island – which within living memory was favoured for its coral reefs – is now bolted to the Kowloon peninsula and hosts a Chinese People’s Liberation Army naval base and a world-class sewage treatment plant.
In the 1950s, naturists made a beeline for Wok Tai Wan on Tsing Yi, an island which at the time barely supported any houses, let alone skyscrapers, malls and one end of a 2km-long suspension bridge.
Apart from the usual suspects – Cheung Chau, Peng Chau, Lamma, Lantau – most of Hong Kong’s 200 islands are barren rock. Those that still support a community, with a ferry service, are often besieged by city dwellers yearning to breathe free in the time of Covid-19, particularly at weekends and on public holidays.