Visit to Bounty Island, Fiji

Eric and Christi took a taxi over to the hotel where we were meeting Christi’s dad, John. The hotel is at the other end of Denaru, so we got to see more of the island. From what we understand, part of Denaru is natural island, part of it is reclaimed swampland, and part of it is man made land from the swamp dredging. There are several gated communities filled with fancy custom homes on finger cays that all have private docks in their back yard. The taxi driver said the homes range from $750,000 to $3 million Fijian dollars. There is a golf course and a large number of exclusive resorts.

Much to our surprise, when we pulled up at the hotel, John was waiting for us out front. He had made great time getting through customs and baggage.

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Welcome to Lautoka and Nadi, Viti Levu, Fiji

Eric navigated the pass into the lagoon this morning at 0400. It is a somewhat narrow pass and it was pitch black outside, so he couldn’t see anything other than a reef marker and two small flashing direction markers in the distance. If the direction lights are lined up from top to bottom, then you are supposed to be on course through the narrow channel through the coral. So it was a careful steering job to stay lined up in the moderate seas, which where swaying the boat a bit. Also the charts are not very high resolution, so the whole experience was a bit disconcerting for him. Thankfully radar, depth measurements, lights, and chart all lined up and everything went smoothly.

We pulled into Nadi this morning at 0630, ushered in by a lovely sunrise.

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The mainland area looks like Southern California, with rolling, dry mountains. There is quite a bit of construction on the flat land along the shore and virtually no buildings along the mountains. There are several islands dotting the horizon all around the main land. We pulled up in front of the hotel that is the rendezvous point for meeting Christi’s dad, located on an island called Denaru. Like Coronado Island in San Diego, Denaru is right off the coast of Nadi and is connected by a bridge. Our plan was to anchor the boat and take a bus into Lautoka to notify the officials we had arrived. It seemed to us that there was no need to take Kosmos to Lautoka since we had already had an onboard inspection in Suva. Continue reading

Yacht Club Dinner and Suva Check Out

Last night, after running our errands, we headed back to Kosmos to get ready for the Royal Suva Yacht Club’s 75th anniversary celebration, which was taking place all week. This night they were having a dinner and jazzmusic. We arrived at the yacht club shortly after 1800 (6:00 pm). We wandered around, in hopes of mingling.

Sadly no one spoke to us, beyond to tell us “those seats are probably taken”. In fact we felt quite awkward at the whole event. Interesting how everyone on the streets of Suva were so friendly, but in the yacht club, no one was. We thought there might be some other visiting cruisers around, but everyone appeared to be part of the yacht club. Too bad we did not ask about this when we got our tickets, and we wonder why they even sold us tickets without checking our membership. Continue reading

Suva Check-In and Tim-Tam Restock

This morning the air raid siren briefly went off at 0800. It goes off at regular intervals, almost on the hour, so it probably is a bell of some sort. The officials were to Kosmos at 0900. The customs boat pulled up and five Fijians boarded Kosmos, each with a battery of questions and forms to fill out. The whole process took an hour and the officials were very nice.

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Once they left, we moved from the quarantine area to the anchorage in front of the yacht club and got Kosmos situated. 23 hours after arriving in port, we were ready to go to land. We ran a variety of errands checking in with the yacht club, going to an office to obtain duty free fuel request forms, to another office to request a cruising permit, bank, produce market, grocery store, etc. Our errands took us all over downtown, so we saw a lot and got a good feel for the city. Continue reading

Welcome to Suva, Viti Levu, Fiji

18-07S by 178-25 E – Fiji is made up of 332 islands. Two islands are quite large, and the rest are relatively small. Like the Marquesas, before the arrival of Europeans, Fiji had a thriving population. Tribal warfare among the inhabitants was vicious and cannibalism was a common practice. Also like the Marquesas, the introduction of modern weapons by the Europeans brought warfare amongst the tribes to a new level, causing devastating amounts of death. European diseases added to the death toll. Continue reading