Socotra is filled with stunning landscapes. The forest of iconic dragon blood trees on the Diksam plateau is truly unique in the world, and one of the main draws here, but there is so much more. My first night, we camped between the amazing dunes of Arher beach and the ocean. This has to be one of the most amazing campsites I have ever stayed at. White sand dunes climb up to 200 meters along the face of towering 600+ meter cliffs. Besides the dragon blood trees, which never get old, there are also thousands of fuchsia-flowering bottle trees and a few frankincense trees to watch for. There is great rugged hiking, such as into the Kalissan canyon where you can then cool off in emerald colored fresh water pools between gently eroded white limestone rocks. The white sand beach beside Detwah lagoon and near Qalansiya at the far northwest of the island is probably one of the most beautiful beaches in the world without any sort of hotel on it. Besides the handful of more famous beaches that are commonly visited by the small tour groups, there are literally miles of gorgeous white sand beaches that are practically untouched.
I visited in April 2022, and at this time, there is exactly one flight per week from Abu Dhabi, and you have to book an organized tour to visit. This makes it rather expensive, and just the Yemen visa, obtained through the UAE, costs $US 170. Our tour camped for all seven nights. While camping in the hot sun and sand was a little tiring, I have to say it is the best way to experience the island. For slightly cooler temperatures, but to still catch the bottle trees in flower, come a little earlier, like in early March.
There isn't a lot of tourist infrastructure on the island, and that is part of the appeal. The current situation of one flight a week limits the number of tourists, which is a good thing (my flight was roughly half western tourists, half more local visitors/returnees). Tourists are still enough of a novelty that the little kids are happy to wave or ask you your name, or show off a pufferfish without expecting/demanding a tip. But it probably won't last. As the UAE have taken more of an interest in the island and started buying up prime locations there, it might not be too long before luxury hotels start appearing on these exotic locations. The current state of Yemen government would seem to make regulation or preservation or sustainable development just a dream. Incidentally, the island felt untouched by the current mainland Yemen civil war. It was actually one of the safest feeling places I've ever been.