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Isolating on a desert island: Polish YouTube star skips lockdown

It’s 5.30 a.m. on Yemen’s remote island of Socotra, a 3,625 square kilometer desert paradise 60 miles east of the Horn of Africa.

The sun barely reaches over the island’s towering sand dunes and rocky cliffs, but Eva zu Beck is out of her tent and at the water’s edge.

Armed with a snorkel mask and a long piece of wood topped with a fierce-looking metal hook, she dives into the calm Indian Ocean in search of her breakfast: Socotran lobster.

Remote island life has become the new normal for the 29-year-old, an adventure YouTuber and travel documentary host from Poland.

While the rest of the world stays inside, Zu Beck, who grew her social media following to over 1 million with her travel vlogs on off-the-beaten path destinations like Pakistan, Bangladesh and Syria, has spent the last two months wild camping on deserted white-sand beaches, fishing for grouper in the open ocean and climbing 10 story-high sand dunes as she waits out the pandemic on one of the world’s most isolated islands.

The only catch? She has no idea when she’ll be able to leave.

A marathon stay on a desert island

Zu Beck arrived on Socotra — an island with an ecosystem so unique it’s often referred to as the “Galapagos of the Indian Ocean” — on a weekly commercial flight from Cairo on March 11.

The travel vlogger, along with 40 other international tourists, arrived that day to take part in Socotra’s first-ever marathon event and was due to stay for two weeks.

Unbeknownst to Zu Beck and her fellow marathon runners, however, the world was quickly shutting down due to the rapid spread of the novel coronavirus. On March 15, after she and the other participants had completed the race, Socotri officials announced that the island would be closing its borders, and that the marathon runners should return home as soon as possible.

“We were woken up in the middle of the night in our tents,” says Zu Beck, “and told that we should make our way to the airport immediately.”

She was faced with a difficult decision: should she leave Socotra, and risk contracting the virus on her 5,000 kilometer journey back to Europe? Or should she stay in paradise, and accept the possibility of being stuck on a desert island for the foreseeable future?

Zu Beck knew almost immediately what her decision was. “I have so much love for the island,” she says. “I’d visited last year and I swore I’d return one day for an extended stay. I took what was happening as a sign.”

With permission from Socotri officials, Zu Beck and four other tourists decided to stay. The rest, including Zu Beck’s Canadian boyfriend, returned to Cairo on the last flight out of Socotra.

“I had butterflies in my stomach as I watched the plane leave,” she says. “But I knew I’d made the right decision.”

Not everyone agrees with Zu Beck’s decision to visit a remote and potentially vulnerable island as the pandemic took hold.

But she says she didn’t realize how serious the coronavirus outbreak was when she arrived in March, and medical screening upon entry reassured her that she wasn’t introducing the virus.

“But I am trying to contribute to the people of the island by being here in any way that I can,” she says.

Local hospitality makes an extended stay possible

With the last flight gone and with no signs of borders reopening, Zu Beck settled right into island life.

“Life on Socotra is slow,” she says. “I spend most days outside reading a book, writing in my journal or hiking in the mountains.”

While Socotra’s most comfortable hotels are in the capital, Hadibu, she spends much of her time wild camping or renting basic guest rooms from local goat-herder families in Socotra’s less populated rural villages, only returning to Hadibu for Wi-Fi, laundry services and electricity to charge her devices.

“Hadibu is chaotic and noisy,” says Zu Beck. “I prefer to be out in nature and living alongside rural communities, who have been kind enough to welcome me into their homes.”

Local hospitality has allowed her to keep costs down while living in Socotra, a destination which, due to its remote location and lack of tourist infrastructure, is notoriously expensive to visit.

“There’s a code of hospitality in Socotra called Karam,” she says. “It dictates that guests should be welcomed unconditionally, so traditional hosts are very reluctant to take money from guests.”

Despite this, Zu Beck says she insists that her hosts accept $150-200 per month to cover her food and accommodation.

‘Parallel universe’: Movement around the island is unrestricted

Zu Beck’s close contact with the local community is facilitated by Socotra’s lack of lockdown restrictions. She isn’t aware of any reported cases of coronavirus, and the island is one of the few places on earth that continues to operate as normal.

“There are no social distancing or lockdown measures on Socotra,” says Zu Beck. “We are free to visit friends and move around as we please. It’s as if we’re in a parallel universe.”

Freedom of movement recently allowed Zu Beck to spend her 29th birthday riding her new 150cc motorbike — Socotra’s ubiquitous form of transport imported from Al Mukalla in mainland Yemen — across the island’s southern region, a windswept, sparsely populated area known for its alien-like dragon blood trees, an endangered plant species endemic to Socotra.

But being stuck in paradise hasn’t all been smooth sailing.

Zu Beck was admitted twice to the hospital in Hadibo, first for a nasty cut on her leg she acquired while hiking the island’s steep cliffs, and later for suspected heat stroke and a viral infection.

“I’ve been very impressed with the professional care offered by the hospital staff on Socotra,” she says.

Unlike mainland Yemen, which has been devastated by the ongoing civil war, Socotra’s healthcare system is supported by the UAE, meaning care for minor illnesses and injuries is relatively good.

But Socotra isn’t immune to clashes. A recent armed conflict there between the Saudi-backed government forces and UAE-backed southern separatists was deescalated in early May.

Missing loved ones is the hardest part

Aside from recovering from her recent illness, missing loved ones — and a lack of internet to connect with them — has been Zu Beck’s toughest challenge.

“The Wi-Fi isn’t strong enough for Skype or Facetime, and power cuts are common,” she says. “I have to make do with just an ordinary telephone call whenever I have signal. I miss them all dearly.”

The travel vlogger doesn’t regret her decision to stay on Socotra, despite the challenges. However, she admits that not knowing when she’ll be able to leave has been playing on her mind recently.

“I’m very happy that I stayed,” says Zu Beck. “But I do wonder every day how much longer I’ll be here.”

Despite her growing love for the island, she is concerned about the approaching monsoon season and admits that she is about ready to return home. “If there was a flight tomorrow, I think I would probably take it,” she says.

On a more positive note, she hopes that her extended time on the island will allow her to support the local community, which due to the devastating cyclone in 2018 and the ongoing war in mainland Yemen, has been facing many challenges.

The travel vlogger, who ran a marathon in Iraqi Kurdistan last October and raised over $4,000 for FreeToRunGo, hopes to leverage her social media following to provide computers for a girl’s school in Hadibo as well as set up a crowdfunding project to help the island deal with its severe waste management problem.

“I’ve learned so much from this beautiful island these past two months,” says Eva. “Now I’d like to give something back.”

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