Migratory Cruises


Going on a migratory cruise on the Nofy Be.


Morondava - Majunga return twice a year: outbound late May/June, return late November / December

Our home port Morondava on the west coast of Madagascar, allows us to offer 3 times a year cruises for sailing travel lovers. Taking advantage of the winds, the Nofy Be departing from Morondava offers its clientele a descent towards the south Ifaty/Mangily. The southwest coast of Madagascar is full of countless sumptuous scenery, anchorages from another time, with beaches and coral reefs that do not leave visitors indifferent. From April to May, a round trip is therefore offered to those who wish to escape off the beaten path. Nofy Be being the only boat to offer this 12-day migration for the pleasure of the eyes. These cruises are a bit more sporty and for passengers with sea legs! From 4 days to 12 days (winds permitting) in old rigging sailing course, continuous navigation possible day and night. Everything depends of course on your group and everyone's desires. Indeed, if you have time, we can offer you on this same route stopovers to make you discover incredible places, totally virgin, because isolated and therefore often accessible only by sea or by zebu cart....

From mid-May to June, with the direction of the southern winds that begin to come with the trade wind regime, the Nofy Be offers a migration to the northwest of Madagascar. This is how we offer round-trip cruises to Majunga in 10 days, passing through the Barren Islands facing Maintirano, and we stroll to Majunga to the rhythm of the winds. In Majunga for those who will leave the Nofy Be, it will be very easy to take from this magnificent city another land destination to discover another part of Madagascar. Early June, our migration continues, departing from Majunga, we offer you a discovery cruise of 8 to 9 days towards Nosy Be. This fabulous destination that is the island of perfumes, will make you discover on its way places more beautiful than each other. Moromba Bay with its tsingy and its Baobabs, Nosy Lava and its former prison, the Radama Islands, but also many bays, where certainly in the time of pirates many galleons must have anchored. The return to the south will be done in the other direction with the northern winds at the end of November or early December.