Visit the sacred Skull Island — an islet adorned with ancestral skulls of past chiefs — with a village elder as your guide for an intimate ceremonial experience found nowhere else on earth.
What to expect
Your private boat crosses a mirror-calm lagoon to the tiny island of Nusa Hope, where centuries-old chiefs' skulls rest in open shrines amid lush vegetation. A village elder receives you with a brief welcome ceremony and explains the spiritual significance of each skull and the chiefly lineage they represent — a window into Melanesian ancestor veneration that remains fully alive today. There is no roped-off museum quality here: this is a living sacred site, and the kastom fee you pay goes directly to the guardian family. You are free to ask questions, photograph respectfully, and absorb the profound stillness.
Good to know
Modest, respectful dress required (shoulders and knees covered). Kastom fee paid in cash (SBD) on arrival. Arrange the boat charter via Gizo Hotel; journey is under 10 minutes from town. Allow 1.5–2 hours. Combine with Kennedy Island or Saeragi Beach for a full day ashore.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Gizo — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.