Our
replacement chartplotter and tillerpilot arrived on Wednesday so there should
have been nothing holding us in Tahiti. We had however booked tickets to see
the Heiva finalists on the Saturday night, so we stayed on in Tahiti for them.
To make it easier to get to and from the Heiva, we motored Brio the 5 nm back
up to the town quay from where we had been staying in the mooring field off
Marina Taina. To do this one has to pass the airport and is required to radio
the Port Captain requesting permission to go past. Presumably so one’s mast
doesn’t tangle with the undercarriage of an ascending or descending plane. Both
times we did this Louise used her best radio enunciation and listening ears,
but still found the Port Captain’s instructions confusing. Suffice to say, both
times we made it past the airport without connecting with a low-flying jet.
As with the
previous Heiva performance we saw, this one was also spellbinding. The dance
and singing troupes who performed were the winners of their categories, so they
were the best of the best. The ‘singing sunflowers’ were back again! It rained
a little during the show and a kindly woman in front of us held her very large
umbrella so we could shelter under it. The rain didn’t stop the show though and
even enhanced it as the rain slick stage area reflected the colours of the
costumes wonderfully.
Before the
Heiva we had Lindy and Michel aboard Brio for drinks. Lindy and Michel’s son,
Lio, was in one of the Heiva groups and we had met him at a rehearsal. He is
Tahitian, but has lived in the US for 12 years and is studying there. Lio had
given us his and his mother’s phone number in case we needed any help while in
Tahiti. We actually rang Lindy, not for help, but to find out if Lio had made
it into the finals. Lindy was one proud Mum of her boy who was just now
starting to show an interest in his culture. Michel is a politician with the
Independence Party that is currently in power. While we weren’t able to spend
long with them it was great to meet them and learn a little more about the
French Polynesian culture and Franco/Polynesian politics.
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What Ivan would look like if he was in the Heiva |
The next
day, Sunday, we readied to sail to Huahine Island, approx 100 nautical miles
away, so an overnight sail. By the time we got away it was well into the
afternoon and with little wind we motored, deciding to go the few hours across
to Moorea and stay the night there before continuing on to Huahine. As we
entered the pass to Opunohu Bay, Moorea, the wind picked up, rain started to
fall and the light was fading. We dropped the anchor among about 15 other
yachts, not far from where we had stayed when on Water Musick for the Pacific
Puddle Jumpers weekend. We spent the next 3 days at anchor due to there being
big seas and winds outside the island. Much nicer to wait for some settled
weather. It also gave us a chance to explore Moorea and do some ‘must do’s’.
The main ‘must do’ was a trip to feed the rays. James and Sophie on Paramour
III kindly offered us a lift in their dinghy as it was too far for us to row
(our dinghy outboard is kaput). There is a certain ambivalence in feeding the
rays: it’s nice to feed them so they come up close and brush their soft bodies
by you, hanging around like a dog waiting for pat, but they are becoming more
and more habituated to humans feeding them, so ultimately it is not good for
them. I had to cast my biological morals aside as we offered the rays tinned
sardines. While they would come up to us for sardines, anyone who offered them
fresh fish pieces was soon surrounded by frenzied rays. It was quite an
experience watching them and the black-tipped sharks that hung around the
edges.
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Ray whisperers |
The next
day we did the ‘Three Coconuts Walk’. We hitched a ride with a local woman,
Tooria, who dropped us not too far from the start of the walk. She was an
interesting and articulate woman, keen to give us her view of the
French/Polynesian political situation, and insisted on our return we drop into
her place for a beer. Was it not hot and are we not Australian?! Of course we
said we would drop in! Three Coconuts Walk was a shaded path winding up the
mountain through enormous and vibrant green ferns, huge mape trees, a forest of
bamboo big enough to use as scaffolding and across a creek. The 1½ hr walk
ended on a ridge where we could see one side down to the bay where we had left
Brio and on the other side another bay. After baguettes for lunch we walked
back down to the start of the track and hitched a lift back to Tooria’s house,
recognising it by the blue pareo (sarong) she said she would leave on the
hedge.
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aiming for that on the 3 coconuts walk |
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Louise checks out the bamboo |
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Mape trees |
Tooria
introduced us to her husband Laurance, an art dealer. Laurance only spends 3
months of the year in Moorea, their home base, while the rest of the year he is
either in Paris or New York for work. The sort of art that Laurance deals in
has names like Picasso, Matisse and Gaugin attached to it! We spent a lovely
couple of hours in Tooria and Laurance’s beautiful waterfront home, covering
all sorts of topics, including the fact that Tooria’s first husband was good
friends with famous sailors such as Bernard Moitessier and Eric Tabarly. For
those of you who hero worship him, Ivan and I can now say we have met someone
who washed Moitessier’s underpants!
As with
meeting Lindy and Michel, we felt very lucky to have met Tooria and Laurance;
to have spent time with ‘real’ people who live here and gain a further insight
to life in French Polynesia. It’s not all coconut milk and hibiscus…..many
people are feeling the pinch of constantly increasing prices and unemployment.