
Pemba beach
Pemba is a port town and the capital of the Cabo Delgado
Province, in the north of Mozambique. It has banks, patisseries,
supermarkets and restaurants yet it retains a ramshackle feel with
its potholed streets. The town was built over rolling hills and
most people live in wooden huts set amongst the many thick baobab
trees. The history of the people of the Cabo Delgado province lies
in many centuries of African, Arab and Portuguese sailing, trading
and settling. The Niassa Company founded Pemba in 1904 as Porto
Amelia, named after a queen of Portugal. It was renamed Pemba at
the end of Portuguese rule, in 1975.
Pemba is renowned for its Portuguese colonial architecture and
is a prime location for water sports and diving. Ibo Island is
nearby and worth visiting for its empty stretches of beach and to
explore some of the world's richest coral reefs. There is an
authentic local market (
Souk Souk) in the centre of Pemba
selling arts and crafts, as well as traditional silverware. It is
quite large, extending 1.2 miles (2km) along one of the town's main
thoroughfares. Avoid the ivory sold at the market; this is sold
contrary to Mozambican and international law.
On Wimbe Beach, Mar e Sol serves delicious fish and chips in a
spicy citrus sauce, and Pemba Dolphin does good seafood dishes.
Visit Restaurante Discoteca, also on Wimbe Beach, for a hot
Mozambican atmosphere. Quirimbas Restaurant, at the Pemba Beach
Hotel, offers lunch from an à la carte menu, as well as
breakfast and dinner buffets. Restaurante 556, in Old Town, has a
lovely view of the bay and good ribs, beef, eisbein and
chicken.
Tarred roads connect Pemba to Nampula and Ilha de Mozambique,
and international flights and tourist facilities are budding
steadily.