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November 15, 2018

Tourism Solomons closes off 2018 with flurry of media visitation

Tourism Solomons closes off 2018 with flurry of media visitation
September 17, 2018

Welkam to the Solomons

For those of us who remember reading Douglas Adam’s ‘A hitchhiker’s guide to the galaxy’ you might recall a character called Slartibartfast who was given responsibility […]
August 17, 2018

The Surprising Solomons

There are so many ways to approach a place you’ve never visited before. At one end of the spectrum, people do weeks of research and make […]
July 26, 2018

Tourism Solomons creates trust account for families of lost marketing officers

Honiara, Solomon Islands – Tourism Solomons has established a trust fund for the families of senior marketing officers Chris Nemaia and Stella Lucas tragically lost in […]
July 26, 2018

“A major step in the right direction” Tourism Solomons welcomes introduction of Minimum Standards and Classification for Tourism Accommodation program

Honiara, Solomon Islands – Tourism Solomons CEO, Josefa ‘Jo’ Tuamoto has applauded the Solomon Islands Ministry of Culture & Tourism’s (MCT) move to introduce a Minimum […]
July 5, 2018

A “seismic shift” – new look ‘Solomon Is.’ branding catalyst for Solomon Islands’ tourism future

“It checks every mark at this stage of the Solomon Islands tourism evolution and this branding is intended to evolve as the industry evolves” Honiara, Solomon […]
July 5, 2018

Tourism Solomons: Our Updated Logo

The dugout canoe is an institution of highest value in the Solomon Islands. Even today, our daily economics continue to rely on it for fishing, commuting […]
July 5, 2018

Solomon Islands stages inaugural ‘Mi Save Solo’ tourism exchange

Honiara, Solomon Islands – Underlining ever-growing international interest in the Solomon Islands as a new and exciting travel destination, more than 50 buyers from Australia, Japan, […]
July 4, 2018

Land Of Peace & Palms

A trail of shimmering bubbles in our wake, the hull of the Hirokawa Maru slowly takes form as we descend first as a faint shadow against deep blue Pacific waters, and then, as we draw closer, as a towering darkness that threatens to suck up all the light. As my eyes adjust, the vessel’s sheer size begins to reveal itself; at 156 meters long, the Hirokawa Mari isn’t the largest of the wrecks which litter Ironbottom Sound, a strip of water between the islands of Guadalcanal