These are the last of my Fiji pictures. This blog is weighting more in favor of pictures than stories, and I hope to make up for that later. At any rate, here you can see the sandbar adjoining the islands. A few times a day the motorboats would get stuck on the sandbar. All the passengers would pile out and push the boat up and over the bar; they'd get in and resume their journey. Every day at 3 or 4 in the afternoon, however, the high tide would cause the sandbar to completely disappear. I would be up to my waist in water while standing on the sandbar -- and up to my neck in water while standing slightly over the edge of it. Interestingly, I was the only one swimming in the water at this time. Most travelers would sit inside or sunbathe, rather than swim or risk getting caught in an undertow. Compared to Florida waters, I found the waves mild and pleasantly bouncable. The neat thing that happened on the sandbar during high tide was that the waves from the north and the waves from the south would crash against each other, creating a "ravine" effect. Swimming into this dip in the water while the waves broke upon itself was really fun. It was like lying down stomach-first in a crazy hammock made of water. Plus, I had the ocean to myself, especially when it rained.
Every night we sat in the common room and drank Fiji Bitter or Fiji Gold. I preferred Fiji Gold, which tasted like a cheap yellow American beer, while Fiji Bitter tasted like goat vomit. You can see Alex in the back; she is from England and had quite a few stories to share about Laos and Africa. The four travelers in the foreground are from Denmark and Sweden. I mostly made friends with the travelers from Sweden, who all happened to attend the same university but who hadn't met each other before Fiji -- very coincidental for them.
Nessie, not the sea serpent, organized nightly activities for us. He and his cohorts performed a fire dancing show, in which one dropped a burning poker near a traveler from Holland and then burnt his own hand, which was comforting. Anyway, they did their best to entertain us, and the Fijians have such open and warm hearts; it's as if each one of them is Mother Theresa embodied. They haven't been ingesting Mother Theresa, though, because cannibalism was a custom in their old religion, before missionary influence. Here we are dancing during the Card Game. A sign for each suit was placed in each corner of the dance floor (the floor being just sand), and when the music stopped (nearly always that "shake your ass, girl" song from the "About a Boy" film) we all scrambled to a corner so as to indicate our suit choice. Nessie would choose a card--clubs, spades, diamonds, or hearts. And, if our card was picked, we had to leave the dance floor. The winner and runner-up won a bottle of free beer.
Every day there was a volleyball game, including tourists, villagers, and sailors. (At any given time, two or three sailboats would anchor off the island. They'd come ashore to drink beer with us. One was from California, one from France, and one from Holland. One admitted to be living on a boat for eight years. Also, whenever they dropped anchor, they had to get permission from the village chief. They'd have to offer kava as a gift and then drink loads of kava with him.)
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4 comments:
Your spontaneous change in plans seemed to work out perfectly. You look beautiful drinking your kava. I hope my travels are as invigorating.
Daphne, this place is absolutely beautiful! Reminds me of the "Lost" island, but much friendlier -- no mysterious monsters crashing around in the woods. (Unless you count the dog. :-)
All those Swedish students, but only one Novocollegian?
Are the Fiji islanders as nice as the people we met in Turkey? And is the food as good?
Oh sure, try to awaken my desire to sail around this world. I read Fiji part 4 and decided to go pick up one of my sailing books. I just got back in from the garage looking at my boat. It's a little small to sail that way, but once I get a few more miles under my blet I know I must follow Slocum, and now apparently you.
Chad, the Fijians are probably the nicest people in the world (aside from the Tibetans). The food is best in Turkey, though. :)
Brett, yes, you must take me on your sailboat once you finish building it (and must take Lisa, too). Did you know that sailors seem to be able to get e-mail over the radio? Check out sailmail.com
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