Scandola Nature Reserve
Corsica's inaccessible volcanic coastline — rust-red cliffs, sea caves, and osprey-haunted waters accessible only by boat.
About this spectacle
Scandola Nature Reserve occupies a dramatic stretch of Corsica's western coast where ancient volcanic cliffs plunge directly into the crystalline Mediterranean Sea. Visitors arriving by boat — the only means of access — are greeted by sheer columns of rust-red and ochre porphyry rock sculpted by millennia of wave action into sea caves, arches, and jagged pinnacles. The water below shimmers in impossible shades of turquoise and emerald, and the reserve's strict protection means wildlife is abundant: ospreys circle overhead, cormorants perch on ledges, and the occasional monk seal may surface in sheltered coves. The silence is broken only by waves, seabirds, and the creak of a boat hull. No roads reach here, no crowds press in from land. This inaccessible quality — rare for the Mediterranean — gives Scandola a sense of untouched wilderness. The geology itself is the spectacle: a palette of volcanic rock faces that glow at golden hour, their vertical ridges casting long shadows across the sea.
When to go
Apr — Oct, peak May — Sep
Getting there
Nearest airport: CLY. Nearest city: Calvi.
Booking options
Goyova doesn't process bookings directly. When you tap "Plan this trip" in the app, you'll see options from our partner providers — accommodation, tours, transport — with affiliate links where applicable. See our affiliate disclosure for details.