Like most things about Lord Howe Island, its beaches are in a class of their own. Neds Beach is a marine reserve, and one of our secret treasures. Put on a snorkel and mask, step into the water and look down as coloured wrasse, parrot fish and trevally swarm round your ankles in anticipation of a feed. Every evening these fish are hand fed by one of the locals in an island tradition that dates back over many years - when feeding time arrives, the water boils with sand mullet, salmon and kingfish, racing in to snap up the food.
The island has several beaches on its eastern and western sides, each very different. On the western side, Lagoon Beach is the island’s largest, curving around to embrace the shallow lagoon, which is mottled with the iridescent blue-green swirls of coral.
Further north there’s Old Settlement Beach, a tiny, secluded beach studded with big, sea-sculpted boulders. On the eastern side, south of Neds and close to the airport, Blinkys is the place to go for raging surf, set against a dramatic backdrop of sheer cliffs.