Showing posts with label South Pacific Beaches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Pacific Beaches. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2010

Tahiti Island

Tahiti island

Tahiti island seen from above Moorea island's best beach, Temae, northeast coast. Moorea's ring reef that runs all the way round the island, keeping inner waters calm, is clearly visible. 

Tahiti is a tired ex-paradise that’s well past its sell-by date, 100 years past it according to Gaugin who arrived for his second visit in 1900 and declared it too spoilt by civilisation even then. Big G immediately took off for the Marquesas Islands, where he died. Ironically the Gaugin museum is one of the best ‘sights’ on an island that is pretty short of exciting things to see. 

Tahiti is expensive but has an international airport [Faaa] and frequent flights that arrive very late so many visitors have no choice but to stay a couple of nights en route to far more attractive Bora Bora, neighbouring Moorea or other lesser know islands. 

You can drive around Tahiti in four easy hours on a circular road running beside the sea, lined with tropical vegetation and little plasterboard bungalows, unexciting but pleasant, in spite of fairly constant traffic. En route you will come across rocky black sand beaches [with reasonable surf because there's little protective barrier reef on this island], and one or two anaemic sights - tall waterfalls and sea puffing lava tubes. The lagoonarium is especially knackered. There are a few Tahiti Pictures on following pages. 

Papeete, Tahiti's capital, is car dominated and lacking in any kind of ethnic niceties or even decent architecture but does offer some excellent pricey restaurants and shops.

The best thing about Papeete is the evening mobile kitchens set up in the main harbourside plaza and delivering quality food outdoors for a fair price, though no booze is served. 

Tahiti's 114km [72 mls] ring road, pictured showing typical black sand beaches and moderate surf.

Best months: May, June, September, October. Tahiti and Moorea are warm and humid all year. The dry season is climatically the best, from May to October, but, July and August can get very busy.

Beware the November to April wet season. It may rain for an hour, it may rain for days on end, and even when it isn't raining the cloud cover, winds and choppy water make marine activities less attractive.

Aitutaki, One Foot Island

Aitutaki, One Foot Island

Some of the Cook Island's outer islands also have flights from Rarotonga so diehard adventure travellers could find places with few or no other visitors and isolated atolls. Accommodation of some sort - even with local people - is always available. These islands are among those that have flights:

Manihiki [north], aka the Island of Pearls, is one of the prettiest of the Cook's with a 4km wide lagoon - dotted with 40 islets - that provides top snorkelling, swimming and black pearls.

Pukapuka [north] is small, remote and has habits and customs similar to Samoa. Swimming and snorkelling are good.

Mangaia [the most southerly island] offers stunning rock formations and caves, so climbing, caving, interesting drives, biking and horse riding can be added to the usual snorkelling activities.

n.b. Rarotonga and Aitutaki are in the southern island group.


Fiji beaches, Yasawa Islands

Fiji beaches, Yasawa Islands

Fiji is one of the closest Pacific island groups to New Zealand [1,600kms/1,000miles to the south] and Australia [2,700kms to the southwest], so flights are reasonably short and cheap from these English-speaking countries. [New Caledonia is nearer to Australia and French Polynesia the furthest major island group. Easter Island is away further east....] 

Fijians are a relaxed and friendly people, cheerfully shouting the greeting "Bula!" [Health!] to any foreign traveller, a far cry from a hundred years ago in their cannibal era when they would shout "Dinner!" if they saw a white face, and reach for their four-prong, human flesh forks. Missionary eyeballs were especially succulent when barbecued apparently. 

Nearly half of Fiji's indigenous population are of Indian extraction, brought in by the British to work in the sugar cane industry in the late 1880's as the relatively enlightened colonialists did not wish to exploit the local Melanesians. Unfortunately the 'Fiji for the Fijians' system, while permitting Melanesians to continue owning their land and governing their own villages didn't do much for the rights of the Indians, an inequality that still burns today.

The upside of the racial mix is that the Indians are often more industrious than the laid-back Melanesians and have helped to develop and maintain the country's infrastructure, particularly with relation to tourism, though the Indians can be aggressive in their pursuit of the dollar. When changing money here tourists would do well to carefully check and double check rates and cash handed over.

Fortunately, though these two racial groups maintain fundamentally different life styles and rarely intermix, they co-exist with reasonable harmony and the country benefits from both attitudes. 

Fiji's high-speed, low cost Yasawa Island's ferry, the Yasawa Flier. 

Fiji comprises two large islands and around 300 small ones, so some upfront planning is essential here.

Viti Levu island is where most travellers arrive and hosts a lot of attractions, including golf, fishing and boating for the more affluent, or cultural tours, village visits, sandboarding, Highland hiking, rafting, tubing and bathing in hot mud pools for the rest of us. Nadi, an Indian-dominated town, is good for shopping but little else including accommodation.

Viti Levu also offers excellent beach hotels to suit all pockets, though the actual beaches and coral are not nearly as good as on other islands. The Coral Coast to the south is the usual starting point for beachgoers.

Some popular and extensive island bus tours cater specifically to backpackers.

Suva is Fiji's capital, on the other side of Viti Levu from Nadi and a cosmopolitan high-rise city that is short on interest for most travellers.

Vanua Levu, the other big island, north of Viti, is more wet and less developed than Viti, with few tourist-oriented options or transport, but much more of a feel of the old South Seas. The south side of the island with its coconut plantations and relaxed villages is particularly redolent of a bye-gone era.

Although the countryside feels primitive there are many excellent resorts in North Fiji, with scuba as the top attraction. The Somosomo Straits between Vanua Levu and Taveuni offer some particularly spectacular coral. Visibility is best May-October. 

Botaira Beach Resort welcoming guests with the usual tuneful island song, but unusually afloat. 

The Yasawa Islands, a chain of a dozen up to four hours from Viti Levu by the Flyer are - with the exception of the furthest, Yasawa Island itself - low cost and low profile places, providing basic services and activities, with snorkelling and kayaking topping the list. The islands are visited daily - [again, not Yasawa Island] by the Yasawa Flyer catamaran, lugging backpackers and flashpackers to and fro, some staying their entire time on one island, others hopping from one to another every couple of days.

For those prone to seasickness the waters around the Yasawa Islands are partly protected and the ride not too bouncy; maximum trip time to/from the furthest island is four hours.

The Yasawas are mostly powered by electricity generators so lighting is limited and air-con nonexistent; islands mostly offer simple thatched bungalows and communal meals. Beaches are generally small and unmanicured but pleasant, with pretty fair coral right near the beach, though these are not by any stretch of the imagination the world's best beaches. However... 

Yasawa Island hosts a couple of the best beaches in Fiji and possibly in the world, with its northerly beaches coming out on top and visited by the famous and costly Blue Lagoon Cruise ships. Otherwise Yasawa Island is home to an expensive hotel, the Yasawa Island Resort that needs to be reached by plane or via several hours on a water taxi. 

The Mamanuca Islands - on the way to the Yasawa chain and just off Viti Levu are perfect for the time short or very sea sensitive. They are a slightly more sophisticated and comfortable cluster of tiny islands - with air conditioning and mains electricity- that can work as a day trip or overnight stay. The Yasawa Flyer only takes 30 mins to South Sea, 5 more minutes to Bounty and Treasure, another 10 minutes to Beachcomber Resort [pictured above]. Easy peasy. The next island, Kuata, takes another hour.

The following pictures are mainly of Yasawa Islands beaches, but not, unfortunately of Yasawa Island itself - we also have budgetary constraints and that was a beach too far! 

North and West coasts are drier due to prevailing winds, so choose a beach resort on one of those coasts if travelling in the wet season. 

Visas: A 4 month visa is available on arrival to just about anyone owning a passport and a return flight ticket.

Bora Bora Beaches

Bora Bora Beaches

Bora Bora is a spectacular atoll in an amazing setting with powder sand beaches and fantastically seductive shallow swimming and snorkelling inside the all-embracing reef. It's expensive to both get there and stay there and is somewhat divorced from real life. i.e. it's life in the fat lane, but what a life... 

A classic over-water beach bungalow setup.

The reef ringing Bora Bora and protecting its beaches is clearly visible in this photo. The reef also keeps the waters inside calm, clear and generally free of potential marine nasties so snorkelling is a very pleasant way to pass some time and kids can splash around in safety. 

Feeding the fishes in Bora Bora's atoll, and not in the Mafia sense of the expression...

One of the South Pacific's pearls of great price [quite a price!], Bora Bora, a short flight from Tahiti.