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Five Islands in Paradise by Catamaran
By Brooke Cunningham
Our first morning on
Tahiti Moorea shined pink across the turquoise lagoon and cobalt sea that
separates the two islands. We walked paths through playful exotic flower
gardens, graceful palms, and glittering fresh water pools that overflowed
into the ocean. We were always aware of the delectable colors of sea and the
ever-present roar of the barrier reef protecting the quiet lagoon from it. A
buffet covered ten tables under the shade of the palms and allowed for every
possibility of breakfast choice. Enormous urns of scented vibrant flowers
were integrated with the edibles to create a riot of color, scent and
texture that was truly irresistible. Warm breezes played in the blossoms
while we sampled the delicacies at the buffet and watched small sailboats
and outrigger canoes on the lagoon.
John and I had
crossed the 3875-mile distance from Los Angeles to FAAA airport on Tahiti to
board a cabin charter boat called Nemo Polynesia. We would live aboard the
83' catamaran in our private cabin as we sailed between Tahiti, Huahini,
Tahaa, Raiatea, and Bora Bora. Cabin charter is the middle ground between
taking a cruise and chartering a yacht. Like a cruise there is a planned
itinerary, meals are all served at one time and the other guests are
unfamiliar. Unlike a cruise, there were only 12 of us and we had some
flexibility in our schedule. Like a yacht charter, we lived in cabins on a
comfortable boat, the food was regional, exotic, and beautifully presented,
and we spent leisurely days sailing from island to island. Unlike yacht
charter you don't have the boat to yourself, and that makes cabin charter
cost a fraction of the price of a private yacht.
A half-hour flight
from Tahiti brought us to the town of Fare on Huahini Nui. The village was
filled with the quiet bustle of barefoot activity and the ever-present
rumble of the barrier reef. Children and chickens wandered the flower-lined
street among the restaurants and shops. The locals are physically beautiful
people, so innocent that they meet your eyes like old friends. There are
flowers everywhere on these islands and people pluck a blossom from a bush
to stick behind their ear as part of strolling down the street. Little brown
bodies did flips off the dock into the iridescent water, performing tricks
and grinning in delight as they burst to the surface.
We met Michel, our
captain aboard Nemo, when he came to pick us up at the covered bridge dock
in Fare. After moving into our cabins and exploring the catamaran, the
process of getting to know our fellow travelers began. We all had sailing
and exploring new places in the world in common. There were twelve of us on
board, but with a boat 83’ long and 30’ wide there was always space for
gatherings small or large, and places to read quietly or work on a tan. Our
cabins were tight but efficient, each with it's own entrance and head. Life
aboard had a comfortable rhythm as we explored these primordial islands.
Before we left
Huahini we took a land tour with AFO Safari in the afternoon. Afo is a
native who gives a tour circumnavigating the twin islands of Huahini Nui
(big) and Huahini Iti (small). We saw fresh water blue eyed eels that have
been hand fed by the locals in the town of Faie and have been tame for
decades. At a small farm we all saw the processes involved in growing the
fresh vanilla used in most local recipes. The farmers pollinate the blossoms
by hand since there are no native insects for this job. We were taken to the
Maeva Bridge, the last remaining site of the local tradition of using fish
traps. You build stone walls in the tidal pools, shaped as a “V” which
follows the outgoing flow. These stone walls are just higher than the lowest
tide. When the tide comes in, the fish do too. When the tide goes out some
fish are trapped. The traps were just one more indication of people living
in elegant simplicity, enjoying a lifestyle which reveres the harmony of
natural forces.
Our first dinner
aboard Nemo was a delicious raw fish salad full of chopped raw vegetables
and a salty sweet dressing, followed by Polynesian chicken marinated in
coconut milk, and lots of wine. For dessert there was mixed fruit compote
with crème fraiche. Fabianne is Michel's wife and is a very creative cook.
She uses what ever is freshest of native produce to create beautiful and
tasty feasts day after day from her tiny galley.
Our first night sky
was filled with luminous reds and vibrating purples. The islands make
shadows into the bioluminescent water, and look as if they are floating. The
new moon in the Southern Hemisphere hangs in the air like a shallow bowl on
a tapestry of spilled sugar. In the morning the water was flat calm and
reflected the pink light so evenly that you could not tell where the sea
stopped and the sky began. Clouds hung in the rosy air, roosters crowed,
fragrant flowers and salt breezes blended to create a sense of being
suspended and timeless between sky and ocean. The smell of fresh coffee
drifted over the deck as people began to emerge from their cabins. Michel
prepared for our first day's sail, a three-hour run between Huahini and
Tahaa.
I had never seen an
atoll before, and did not understand the effect of a barrier reef. What it
creates is a lagoon with a clockwise circular current surrounding the
volcanic island in the center. Outside the ocean pounds against the barrier,
with surf is made up of rolling curls as high as 30'. The luminous turquoise
wave shatters into white spray with a continuous roar. There are only a few
breaks in the barriers to each island. These are known as “passages" where
the boats can pass through. The ride out of the passage at Huahini was calm,
just a moderate swell actually. As you go through the passage you can look
down the throat of this rolling curl, see the sunlight through it, and
imagine what power it must have. There is that ever-present sound of the
ocean, like an animal roaring in frustration.
Three hours of
peaceful sailing later we entered another passage, the one surrounding Tahaa.
Each island has what is clearly a volcanic shape covered in thick jungle. We
were able to go ashore on Tahaa for a little shopping in the afternoon. John
and I explored the small shops and sandy streets then settled in for a cold
local beer at an outdoor café. The leisurely pace and casual style of
everyone in the streets gave a feeling of being at the end of the world,
pretty much true. Children chatted happily to us in very pristine french as
we took in the comfortable life of the village. You would really have to
work hard to have a rotten day in an environment such as this.
Back aboard Nemo we
headed south around the lagoon to spend the night in the harbor of Point
Tuamaru. Our first dinner ashore was at the Marini Iti Restaurant. We were
treated to a festival dinner complete with native musicians and dancers. Our
stewardess aboard Nemo, Jese, grew up on this island and joined family
members in the dances. The dancers were instinctively graceful while music
was innately joyous. We wondered about an odd small wire basket with a long
handle at each place setting. The answer was that the traditional dinner of
Poisson Crue is served rather like fondue. Each table had a large platter of
fresh fish cut into chunks and slivers. Vegetables were to be mixed with the
fish pieces and quickly seared as the wire basket is dipped into a candle
heated pot. The mixture is then eaten hot sprinkled with coconut shavings
and delicious fruit sauces. Every basket produces a different mix but the
outcome is always crispy, tender and delicious.
Being the earliest
riser among our group, the next morning I spent some time chatting in my
rusty french with our captain and his wife. I learned that we were headed to
a black pearl farm on Raiatea that day, We would travel inside the lagoon to
Motu Tau Tau. Michel and Fabienne told me a bit about the black pearl farms
in the region, describing the strings of oysters hanging in the water, the
farmers checking on each oyster every day. I could envision the large black
irregular shapes clinging to the silver strands twisting in the shining
lagoon 30 feet down, quietly making dark pearls. I could picture the strong
brown swimmers diving in the clear sunlit water with to tend the current
crop.
We set out to the
west and then north along the lagoon towards Raiatea that over time has come
to share a barrier with Tahaa, creating in the end a figure 8 shaped lagoon.
Cabin charter offers flexibility of schedule not possible on a cruise ship
so Michele took a detour up a large inlet called Baie Hurepiti. He told us
that it was a place where we could see the homes of fishermen on the island.
The terrain is so steep that it appears like a fjord with palm trees. The
houses were all on the beach with a variety of watercraft tied up in front.
Dense jungle rose up steeply behind them and I wondered if the only access
to these homes was by boat. We saw typical working boats, dozens of
outrigger canoes and a few large sailboats along the way. There were swings
hanging from the branches of palms, and sandcastles along the shore, bright
pareos drying on lines in the breeze and flowering gardens everywhere. All
the signs of people who take time to enjoy their lives.
Then back out into
the lagoon for the trip to the Motu Pearl Farm. The pearl farm was a casual
riot of flowers and shells with gardens everywhere and a lovely beach.
Unfortunately we did not get to see the tending of the oysters, but we did
see them opened and the pearls removed. Black pearls each shine with a
distinctive hue, the colors spanning from gold, to green to purple. A
fabulous explanation of the process of growing, tending and harvesting
pearls was given to us by our host. This farm had been in his family for
eight generations. I couldn't help noticing what a peaceful and graceful
lifestyle these farmers had.
The next day was
about exploring the reefs around Raiatea. Many guests wanted to walk on one
of the barrier islands so Michel took them across in the raft. John and I
preferred to snorkel in the beckoning coral heads that we could see below
the surface of water so clear as to make determining depth impossible. There
was no loss of light as we dove 35-40' down to come up with a beautiful
conch shell. The natives called it "sept doigts" or "seven fingers", named
for the slender points that extend from the shell. Live ones are protected
but since there was nobody home in this one it lives on my desk now as a
reminder of peaceful living.
The following day,
we crossed through another passage, this time on the western side of the
twin barrier reefs, onto the deep blue for a four hour crossing to Bora Bora.
Approaching the island we were silenced by the twin towering pyres,
vibrantly green as they jutted into the luscious blue of the sky. There is
only one passage into Bora Bora. It is on the western side. The barrier reef
had huge rolling aqua waves which traveled as a luminous curl for miles
before crashing down. The passage through them was very narrow, and gave a
stunning view down the curl. As if internally lit is seems like a gigantic
continuous emerald siphon with a frothing white trim on the interior side.
Our native stewardess, Jese, did a graceful dance to her traditional music
as we sailed through the passage.
At the village of
Viatapea we disembarked for a short shopping trip. John and I wandered the
streets and bought presents for our friends at home. As had become our
custom, we had a beer at an open café, and watched people go about their
lives. Children walked or rode bikes chatting happily among themselves or
with us as I tested the boundaries of my improving French. They seemed
unconcerned about our language skills and were much more interested in these
two blond and blue eyed visitors appreciating their black eyes and tattooed
bodies.
After re-boarding
Nemo, we set sail to put out a hook for the night. All evening, my eyes kept
drifting up to those two huge slabs of rock jutting up into the sky that
create the distinctive silhouette of Bora Bora. As the light faded and the
boat rocked gently I asked Jesse about the meaning of her dance. She told me
that sea travel was full of legends about these island passages. Her
reverence for this island was profound and unmistakable as she told me that
Bora Bora was such a sacred place that one should never enter the passage
without a gift. This dance was hers.
After breakfast, we
headed to the Lagoonarium on Motu Tofari. It is a charming small barrier
island, which appears to contain only a few small houses for the people who
tend the pens used to contain turtles, sharks and tropical fish in shallow
water. We were able to swim in the pens for a close up look. The pens were
large enough to really travel with the animals, and in a funny way they
seemed interested in us too. When we emerged from the fish pens, the owners
brought us a huge tray of fresh fruit cut up into finger sized chunks as we
rested under the palms.
When the dinghy
came, Michel took us to a place locally known as the coral garden. It is
unmarked, simply a turn in the lagoon. We plunged backwards over the side of
the dinghy, and by the time we surfaced we were 100 feet from it riding the
5-6 knot current. We held hands, and raced over the coral 2-4 feet below us.
The yellow and orange coral heads, black and brown snails, brilliant jewel
like fish, and neon colored scallops flashed by for about a mile and a half.
Traveling at such speed it was like watching an Imax movie right in front of
your nose! This was one of the most sensuous and exhilarating experiences I
have ever had. Michel picked us up with the dinghy in the wash where the
current slowed, and took us back to the headwaters so we could do it again.
It was a stunning show, a truly exotic insight into the life that exists
within and under the coral beds.
On one of these
races over the coral John began to do lazy somersaults in the fast current.
Twisting and rolling weightless in the turquoise water, flying over the
brilliant display of color and sparkle from the coral he looked for all the
world like one of the ebullient native children. I think each of us
recognized that the child within sometimes demands expression in this place
of innocence, and we were watching his now. If I had to summarize what
French Polynesia had to offer, it would be the reverence for simple
pleasures made of water, sunlight and flowers. French Polynesia wraps its
friendliness and beauty around you until you view its charms with the
uncomplicated eyes of the child within.
Nemo Polynesia -
Cabin Charter
Launched: 1995
Length of deck: 83’
Width of deck: 30’
Cabins: 10
Heads: 10
Type: Sloop rigged
catamaran
Nemo carries masks,
snorkels, fins, windsurfer & a kayak
Location of Nemo
Polynesia:
Year Round: French
Polynesia
Casual clothing and
bathing suits make up most of your wardrobe. Soft luggage is necessary.
Currency is the Coeur de Franc Pasifique, but US dollars & credit cards can
be used in larger stores and restaurants. Sun block (at least spf15) is
important. There is plenty of light, so slower film is preferred.
Travel Information
Fly into FAAA
Airport, Papeete on Tahiti
Airlines: Air
Caledonie Int, Air France, Air New Zealand, AOM French Airlines, Corsair,
Hawaiian Airlines, Lan Chile and Quantas
From Tahiti you can
get to the other islands by small plane or boat.
Entry Requirements
You can stay for up
to a month without a visa, and everyone who is not French needs to have a
passport.
Charter Contact:
Richleigh Yachts
800.578.8800
rich63@ix.net.com
To see other
Richleigh yachts visit www.richleighyachts.com
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