Es Vedrà is a 413-metre uninhabited rock island off Ibiza's southwest coast, and it is one of the most mythologised places in the Mediterranean. Ancient Greek sailors believed it was the island of the Sirens from Homer's Odyssey. Local fishermen speak of compass needles spinning wildly in its shadow. Scientists have measured electromagnetic anomalies around the rock that remain unexplained.
What is beyond dispute is the visual power of this place. As the sun drops behind Es Vedrà on a clear evening, the rock becomes a black silhouette against a sky of molten gold and crimson. The light changes minute by minute — amber, copper, rose, violet — until the first stars appear and the rock dissolves into the darkness of the sea.
Watching this spectacle from the deck of a private yacht, glass of Ruinart in hand, the warm Mediterranean breeze on your skin — this is the quintessential Ibiza experience, and the one that stays with you long after you leave the island.