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Minimoy |top| May 2026

Tucked away in the calm waters of the Morbihan Gulf in Southern Brittany, France, lies a speck of land that most tourists zoom right past. It isn’t as famous as Mont Saint-Michel, nor as glamorous as the Île de Ré. It is Minimoy —and despite its name meaning “very small,” this island packs a punch when it comes to mystery, solitude, and tragedy.

Minimoy is tiny. At high tide, it measures just a few hundred meters across. Located between the larger islands of Île-aux-Moines and Île d’Arz, it is a flat, windswept slice of heather, sea thrift, and sand. There are no cars, no paved roads, and no hotels. There is only the sound of the waves and the cry of the gulls. minimoy

If you are looking for crowded beaches and noisy nightlife, keep scrolling. But if you want a place where the tide dictates your schedule and history whispers from the ruins, read on. Tucked away in the calm waters of the

For decades after, locals claimed that on stormy nights, you could hear the bells of the Hilda ringing beneath the waves. Today, the ruins of a small stone house on Minimoy (once a customs officer’s hut) serve as a silent memorial. Divers still find debris from the wreck scattered across the seabed. Minimoy is tiny

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