I've always been really interested in these far flung places and used to spend hours on Google Earth scanning the middles of the oceans for islands like this and think about how to visit them.
In particular I've always been fascinated by Tristan da Cunha which has a village and is livable if you can get there:
And for whatever reason, one I discovered by browsing Google Earth directly (as opposed to the others which people mention as far flung places), which I can't remember the names of right now, but I can find them on Google maps though they're not labeled: a series of three islands between NZ and Antarctica, closer to Antarctica. Barren islands only potentially visitable for part of the year. The winds and sea in the Southern Ocean sound terrifying. Here's the pin:
We're lucky to be able to see some videos of these places on youtube. When I was little, there were only satellite images and the occasional grainy photo or two online if one did a deep search.
A short documentary of a place called Kurlis came out recently, you should watch it if you're interested. It's about conservation.
This documentary is particularly interesting for me because I used to browse satellite imagery of the place and to see people walking around it it's as amazing as I had imagined. A volcano in the middle of a lake in a remote island???! Thinking about this stuff is also what led me to have a tech career that has been related to conservation of these places (Kurlis from satellite):
Those Antarctic islands are the Balleny Islands. I took a cruise a couple of years ago from NZ to Antarctica, and we were able to land on Borradaile island [1], one of the Ballenys. I can't find my notes for the exact figure, but the historian on board said that, including us, only a few hundred people had ever set foot there. Many expeditions pass within sight of them, but landing is treacherous--IIRC, we went onshore for about an hour in the morning, and by lunch it no longer would've been possible to do so.
At one time you could group Wikipedia articles in “books” that you could have printed. I had collected all the islands listed in the book mentioned above into a sort of companion:
Not quite so remote but another thoroughly fascinating island is Miquelon-Langlade, part of St. Pierre et Miquelon.
What's thoroughly fascinating about both St. Pierre and Miquelon is that it's the last remaining French territory in North America, and located right off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.
It's the only place in North America where you actually spend Euros and the cars have EU license plates. The supermarkets sell authentic French wine and chocolate and will charge you for grocery bags, just like in Europe.
The vast majority (upwards of 90% I believe) of the 6000ish residents though live on the smaller island of St. Pierre. The nearby much larger island of Miquelon, and the attached island of Langlade to its south, are vastly barren with a very basic settlement that has 1 restaurant and 1 bakery. There are a couple of inns on it, and I managed to rent a bike from the one I stayed at, and used it to bike down to Langlade. A few photos from my trip:
The road to Langlade is actually very well-paved until the very end. It's a very nice road for biking, although a little terrifying hearing the waves crashing into the island on both sides, some wild horses, and no humans in sight:
I love exploring these "politically interesting" islands.
Another one I explored is the Matsu Islands which are very close to the coast of China but under control of the ROC (Taiwan) government. It's also a very interesting place. As a part of the ROC, it's littered with 7-Elevens. But due to the history of the place, its signs claim it to be a part of Fujian province, though Fujian under the ROC rather than Fujian under the PRC. (Not here to debate the politics, it's just what the local signs say.)
I think this is more mainstream than the remote places you linked (and, since it's pretty close to the Australian coast, not that remote) but Ball's pyramid is an uninhabited place that gives me strong "hard bonus mini-boss for the completionists" vibes [1].
I've always wanted to check out Raoul Island[1] in the Kermadecs, it looks quite lovely apart from the active volcanic lake that killed a ranger, and South Georgia Island[2] - especially after reading about Shackleton's epic feat of endurance[3] where they sailed 1300km in a small boat, then crossed the mountains of South Georgia to reach a whaling station to summon help.
I share the same interest. I remember years ago looking on Google Maps at South Georgia and dreaming about going there one day.
Well I decided to make "one day" happen and visited there as part of a two month sailing voyage on a tall ship. We also visited Antarctica and a number of Antarctic islands. Deception Island was a highlight.
We approached Tristan da Cunha but couldn't land due to the swell, which was disappointing.
I still dream about visiting these remote places, but the voyage did a great job of satisfying the urge (for now).
The voyage was via barkeuropa.com and it was one of the best experiences of my life.
Reminds me of René-Levasseur Island in Canada. It is a nearly circular island within a lake that's not much bigger than itself. And it, in turn, contains lakes, with islands within them.
I also routinely wander on google maps in search of remote islands. I always wonder what it’s like to grow up in a place like that. If I wanted to live in New York City or Paris or Beijing, it wouldn’t be too much of a problem. But for those remote islands, living there is only an experience for a small portion of human beings.
> I've always been really interested in these far flung places
This is what keeps me interested in such things regarding the USPS and similar [0]. How are they fed? Funded? Staffed? Otherwise maintained with supplies e.g. mechanically, computationally, electronically, &c?
I do not think my reference video is so far fetched regarding such a question.
I like to do this too. I've tried finding islands without names or county claims on them, but it's fairly difficult to do this–the islands you linked are the only ones I've been able to find.
In an interesting coincidence, Tristan da Cunha and Bouvet Island are both featured in Geoffrey Jenkins' A Grue of Ice (US title The Disappearing Island), along with the fictional Thompson Island.
Remote is more than a measure of distance on a map. Among climbers there is a logic about remote places: it took a week to get to the moon and back. There are places on rock faces and up mountians that take longer, that are more remote than the moon. In places like the alaska/canadian/russian north is very possible to be trapped by weather for days, weeks, even months. That is more remote than any island.
Neal Stephenson invented a humorous and not entirely serious comparison of difficulty of ground travel, measured in "Lewis and Clark Expedition Day" (LAC).
In which the relative difficulty and trouble in covering an amount of terrain is measured in units of LACs, equivalent to the theorized amount of suffering a member of the LAC expedition experienced in one day.
I don't disagree with the sentiment, but using the moon as an example is a bit far-fetched, as well as the metric being time. I thinkl it would be fair to say: Using the same amount of resources, how hard is it to reach a given point?
There is always someone who will fly a helicopter into the remote outback...
> is very possible to be trapped by weather for days, weeks, even months. That is more remote than any island.
Except those islands that you can't reach due to weather for days, weeks or, even months...
It would take longer to get to the moon and back if you walked there. There is no place on Earth that you couldn't get to quicker if your budget was the same
This is one damn fine piece of historical writing. I could read its like all day. This 10m video of a recent scientific visit is also well-done. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Io8pNQSesS0
One fun thing about Ham Radio is learning really odd bits about of unusual geography. There is the IOTA (Islands On The Air) where we try to collect as many as possible. However, apparently this one has resisted https://na-234.com/NA-232_index.html
I have in the past run mobile putting moderately rare US counties on the air.
Please don't post this sort of snarky dross to HN, regardless of how bad an article is. The article may not deserve better, but this community deserves better if you're contributing to it.
[+] [-] notsuoh|5 years ago|reply
In particular I've always been fascinated by Tristan da Cunha which has a village and is livable if you can get there:
https://wikitravel.org/en/Tristan_da_Cunha
And Bouvet Island, which is totally uninhabited:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouvet_Island
And for whatever reason, one I discovered by browsing Google Earth directly (as opposed to the others which people mention as far flung places), which I can't remember the names of right now, but I can find them on Google maps though they're not labeled: a series of three islands between NZ and Antarctica, closer to Antarctica. Barren islands only potentially visitable for part of the year. The winds and sea in the Southern Ocean sound terrifying. Here's the pin:
Dropped pin Near South Pacific Ocean https://maps.app.goo.gl/PpsVCzE7LXLrZFZe8
We're lucky to be able to see some videos of these places on youtube. When I was little, there were only satellite images and the occasional grainy photo or two online if one did a deep search.
A short documentary of a place called Kurlis came out recently, you should watch it if you're interested. It's about conservation.
https://youtu.be/kHGarqZFY1k
This documentary is particularly interesting for me because I used to browse satellite imagery of the place and to see people walking around it it's as amazing as I had imagined. A volcano in the middle of a lake in a remote island???! Thinking about this stuff is also what led me to have a tech career that has been related to conservation of these places (Kurlis from satellite):
Dropped pin Near Severo-Kurilsky District, Sakhalin Oblast, Russia, 694550 https://maps.app.goo.gl/6X54ZqdruRgB5KYW7
[+] [-] jsackmann|5 years ago|reply
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borradaile_Island
[+] [-] xefer|5 years ago|reply
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_of_Remote_Islands
At one time you could group Wikipedia articles in “books” that you could have printed. I had collected all the islands listed in the book mentioned above into a sort of companion:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book:A_Companion_Guide_to_At...
[+] [-] dheera|5 years ago|reply
What's thoroughly fascinating about both St. Pierre and Miquelon is that it's the last remaining French territory in North America, and located right off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.
It's the only place in North America where you actually spend Euros and the cars have EU license plates. The supermarkets sell authentic French wine and chocolate and will charge you for grocery bags, just like in Europe.
The vast majority (upwards of 90% I believe) of the 6000ish residents though live on the smaller island of St. Pierre. The nearby much larger island of Miquelon, and the attached island of Langlade to its south, are vastly barren with a very basic settlement that has 1 restaurant and 1 bakery. There are a couple of inns on it, and I managed to rent a bike from the one I stayed at, and used it to bike down to Langlade. A few photos from my trip:
https://dheera.net/photos/places/spm
The road to Langlade is actually very well-paved until the very end. It's a very nice road for biking, although a little terrifying hearing the waves crashing into the island on both sides, some wild horses, and no humans in sight:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/static.dheera.net/photos/places/spm...
I love exploring these "politically interesting" islands.
Another one I explored is the Matsu Islands which are very close to the coast of China but under control of the ROC (Taiwan) government. It's also a very interesting place. As a part of the ROC, it's littered with 7-Elevens. But due to the history of the place, its signs claim it to be a part of Fujian province, though Fujian under the ROC rather than Fujian under the PRC. (Not here to debate the politics, it's just what the local signs say.)
[+] [-] croissants|5 years ago|reply
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball%27s_Pyramid
[+] [-] EdwardDiego|5 years ago|reply
[1]:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raoul_Island
[2]:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Georgia_and_the_South_Sa...
[3]:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Trans-Antarctic_Exped...
[+] [-] castaweh|5 years ago|reply
Well I decided to make "one day" happen and visited there as part of a two month sailing voyage on a tall ship. We also visited Antarctica and a number of Antarctic islands. Deception Island was a highlight. We approached Tristan da Cunha but couldn't land due to the swell, which was disappointing.
I still dream about visiting these remote places, but the voyage did a great job of satisfying the urge (for now).
The voyage was via barkeuropa.com and it was one of the best experiences of my life.
[+] [-] acjohnson55|5 years ago|reply
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Ren%C3%A9-Levasseur+Island...
[+] [-] Stratoscope|5 years ago|reply
https://www.google.com/search?q=north+sentinel+island
[+] [-] mxcrossb|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Noos|5 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Neale
[+] [-] canjobear|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] drdeadringer|5 years ago|reply
This is what keeps me interested in such things regarding the USPS and similar [0]. How are they fed? Funded? Staffed? Otherwise maintained with supplies e.g. mechanically, computationally, electronically, &c?
I do not think my reference video is so far fetched regarding such a question.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhRFaY8A9cA
[+] [-] saagarjha|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Stratoscope|5 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouvet_Island#In_fiction
[+] [-] kypro|5 years ago|reply
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qmf7OZCe63s
No one lives there anymore, but there's still a small abandoned village where people used to live about 100 years ago.
[+] [-] unknown|5 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] cozzyd|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sandworm101|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] walrus01|5 years ago|reply
In which the relative difficulty and trouble in covering an amount of terrain is measured in units of LACs, equivalent to the theorized amount of suffering a member of the LAC expedition experienced in one day.
[+] [-] dmckeon|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wallnuss|5 years ago|reply
There is always someone who will fly a helicopter into the remote outback...
> is very possible to be trapped by weather for days, weeks, even months. That is more remote than any island.
Except those islands that you can't reach due to weather for days, weeks or, even months...
[+] [-] rfergie|5 years ago|reply
It would take longer to get to the moon and back if you walked there. There is no place on Earth that you couldn't get to quicker if your budget was the same
[+] [-] kqr2|5 years ago|reply
https://www.npr.org/2015/01/18/378162264/welcome-to-whittier...
[+] [-] LittlePeter|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] 8bitsrule|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] PopeDotNinja|5 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerguelen_Islands
[+] [-] wglb|5 years ago|reply
I have in the past run mobile putting moderately rare US counties on the air.
[+] [-] anyonecancode|5 years ago|reply
A Glance at Daily Life Among the Caretakers of Britain’s Small Islands [https://nyti.ms/2IlfSgu]
[+] [-] crehn|5 years ago|reply
Surely they would be aware of the benefits of warmth, and perhaps know there are warmer places on Earth?
[+] [-] rabbitonrails|5 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] dang|5 years ago|reply
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Edit: unfortunately, it looks like you've been doing a lot of this. Could you please not? We're trying for something else on this site.