onsdag 4. juli 2012


Moorea
As mention earlier, French Polynesia is a huge area, which consist of many islands. Tahiti, and the capital Papeete, is the main island. 20 kilometres from Tahiti is Moorea, which is considered as the most beautiful island, and I went there.

Every place I have been to in French Polynesia, there are a lot of roosters, and they crow like crazy. There are even roosters outside the airport hotel at Papeete. The place I stayed at in Moorea beat the records. It´s a terrible noise from 5 am. Here are many roosters who compete to crow loudest. It doesn´t help to get irritated, the roosters give a damn about me, so I surprise my self that I stand this noise without to much frustration.

Here are many wild hens and roosters. According to my guide, may be more than inhabitants (18 000 people).   


The most beautiful scenery at Moorea are the two bays: Cooks Bay and Opunohu Bay, where the last is considered as one of the five most beautiful bays in the world, and it is beautiful.

The day after I watch the same bays from a boat, and that also is beautiful. The boats went to a place where there are a lot of rays, no surprise because they get food here. 


After a while also many sharks appears, and swim around the people in the sea. Yes, Jess, this was fantastic!




The day after, I took a boat back to Papeete, and went to the airport for flying to Easter Island, but this flight was cancelled because of bad whether at Easter Island.  

I have been traveling around the south pacific for about 2 mounts, and it is with a kind of sadness that this part of my journey is coming to the end. It has been a fantastic journey, and I am special grateful that I have meet so many nice people on my way. 






mandag 2. juli 2012


Fatu Hiva
Some of you have heard about the island Fatu Hiva. It was here the just married couple; Thor og Liv Heyerdal came in 1937, and planned to stay here the rest of their life. Their stay in Paradise lasted only one year. In 1938 Thor published the book in Norwegian, På jakt efter paradiset: Et år på en sydhavsøy (Seeking after Paradise: one year at a southern island). In 1974 the book was published in English: Fatu Hiva – Back to Nature, and Fatu Hiva became “world famous”.

Since I started my journey, one of my goals was to visit Fatu Hiva. But it is not easy to get there. No plain can land there, and there is no regular boat connection. So it was a big question if I could make it. My host, Jean-Jacques, at the hotel I stayed at in Atuona (Hiva Oa), managed to find a boat, which took me there and back. (How that happened is a story in it self).

The crossing took 3 hours, in a fishing boat, and I was sitting on a wooden bench, the sea was rough, and it was very monotonous.   

Also Fatu Hiva have rough mountains. 




There are about 500 inhabitants there, and two very basick guesthouses. The one I stayed in had only one room and one bungalow for rent.

A local man, who spoke fairly good English, appeared the first night, and he explained where Heyerdal´s lived when they first arrived (not far away from the pension), and he said that Thor was not popular because he wouldn’t let the religious site alone.  

He also became unpopular when the English edition of the book was published, because there came people to the island that wanted to live the life of Paradise, like Heyerdal wrote about it. But the locals could of cause not serve those, the way they served Heyerdal´s, so those adventurers became a burden for the locals. The man also said that the wife, Liv, learned marquises, and was more involved in everyday life than Thor. If she had written the book, it would bee another, and a more authentic story.   

The most populated area is in a valley, which starts quite broad from the bay, but get more and more narrow. In the beginning, Heyerdal´s lived on a hillside up in the valley (look at the left on the pictures). 


To day it is only the foundation of stones which is left, where they had the cottage. To some degree they maintain the place clearing it for undergrowth, so it is open, and not overgrown.    


The place is quite aloft, and I think it was a nice view over the valley and the bay 75 years ago, but to day palms are closing for the view.


I wrote earlier about the fertile Nuku Hiva, and it is the same at Fatu Hiva. Especial in this valley, where it is hot and humid, all kinds of fruits are growing. My clots get wet of sweat if I move a little bit around.    

For me the island is quite inaccessible. There are few roads and paths. Even if I had a guide, I would have had problems moving around because of the steep and rough mountains. I only experience just a little fraction of the island. 

Despite many have read, and heard about Fatu Hiva, it is not a tourist attraction. When I came back to Atuona and told Jean-Jacques that I was the only tourist there, he laughed and said that usually there are 3-4 tourists a month. Unfortunately I do not speak French, so it was difficult for me to get in touch with the local people. Some times I felt very lonely.
  
My experience of the food in French Polynesia are mixed. There are no cafés or restaurant at Fatu Hiva, so I had dinner at my pension. The first night it was mussels and shrimps in gravy of coconut milk. The shrimps looked like those we can buy frozen in Europe/USA, but those were cached in the river, which flow through the valley. The second night I had delicious fried fish. My hostess, Bernadette, made very good food.   
   
Fatu Hiva is very special because it is one of the most remote places on earth, then also add that Thor Heyerdal made it famous, so I can boast that I was there!

fredag 29. juni 2012


French Polynesia – Marquees islands – Nuku Hiva
I went from Rarotonga to French Polynesia. First several days at Tahiti, and then to Nuku Hiva, the biggest of the Marquees’ islands. French Polynesia is big, almost the same size as Europe. The biggest town is Taiohae, placed by a bay, which is a volcanic crater, and the surroundings are fantastic.  


A much bigger crater covers much of the island, whereas half the edge of the crater is rugged mountains on land, and the other half is in the ocean. I went to a guided walk along a path beneath the crater edge. The walk (both ways) took 4 hours. First it was farmed land, but after a while it was quite dents rain forest, and in between we could see these very special mountains.



We had lunch by a river, en here several fresh water eels appeared, and we feed them.


The day after we had a guided tour by car, to see more of the island, among other thing those rugged mountains peaks, which are a part of the crater edge.  


I got the impression that people at Nuku Hiva are very proud of their heritage, and do a great effort to reconstruct historical sites. At this picture the stone foundation is from 12th century, but the house is quite new.


 

The fauna is very special. Coconuts, bananas and papayas are grooving all over on the Pacific islands I have been to, also at Nuku Hiva, so I am getting accustomed to those kind of fruits. But here at Nuku Hiva there are so enormous many types of exotic fruits, which both is farmed and growing wild: mango, vanilla, cashew nut, passion fruit, cacao beans, pineapple, guava, star fruit, to mentions some, and then in addition other fruits I never seen or heard about. It grows 10 different types of banana. There are also many different kind of flowers, but I am interested in what can be eaten. This is the closest I have been to the Garden of Eden. 

Mango is my favourite fruit, and it is special to see how they grow, and also pick them from the ground and eat them totally fresh.


There are fish and shellfish in the ocean, and here is a little bit of the days catch.


Yes, this is exiting, and not the least exotic.