Monday, March 24, 2008

Doing Holidays Right


March is a very special time here in Fiji. They’ve made it so that three weekends in a row they have a holiday weekend. The first two are three day weekends and the third is four days. For each holiday Monday we went to the beach out off the Hibiscus Highway with our Fijian friends. The second holiday Monday we were treated to an Island retreat where there was development started for a high end community but has since been abandoned. The island now sits peacefully again with a lagoon and beaches for locals to enjoy. Our friend Tima Wong knows some families from the village that officially own the island so we were allowed passage across the flat bridge (almost a kilometer long)and enjoyment of the beach. A few women from the village came out to fish and after a few hours they had a few dozen in their baskets. Soon they cleaned and cooked them, then placed them in salty sea water with chopped chili peppers. Incredibly savory and extremely satisfying.

The last holiday Monday we again headed out to another beach off the Hibiscus Highway. That day I decided to walk out to the surf. The interesting thing about Fiji is that it has its own built in breaker wall that pretty much surrounds both islands. When you walk out into the water from all points of the island you’ll find yourself in shallow water that gets no deeper than your waist. It’s clear and beautiful, but the bottom is of very rough volcanic rock bed and, once you’re out far enough, coral. So either way you need water shoes and you must tread carefully and slowly. It’s easy to lose your footing and fall into the rough volcanic rock and you certainly don’t want to be responsible for stepping on and killing coral that has been struggling to survive for hundreds if not thousands of years. So you move along gradually and patiently. Carefully placing each step and swimming where its deep enough. Out there I saw huge starfish as blue as velvet and massive mounds of coral in royal purple. As you walk out you see that the volcanic rock levels off in platforms. The farther out you go the smoother the rock is from thousands or millions of years of constant and relentless beating from the ocean waves. These platforms are kilometers long and have smooth edges. The water they contain gradually overflows back into the ocean all along the platform wall like a tiny eight inch waterfall with the serenity of a summer stream. I saw a fish of silver and black skip out of the main platform and down the levels to the ocean. It was obvious it was enjoying itself.

Finally you make it out to the surf line. The edge of that natural volcanic breaker wall. When you turn around back to face the beach you realize you’re easily a kilometer out, likely more. Those pounding surf waves that looked remarkably mediocre from the shore, suddenly you realize they’re averaging eight to twelve foot swells. And those swells are a brilliant and translucent turquoise green and ocean blue and they curl over in a frothy rage before they pound the sloping wall. As the wave swell pulls back down the slanted rock and into the ocean, you see the depth drop out like an abyss and it feels like your standing at the edge of the world. Not thirty feet from the surf is a spot that’s raised again, a platform head you can stand on that only remains above water until one of those waves swell up and pass over it and into the lagoon-like platforms. And you prepare yourself because that oncoming rush of water is fast and heavy and shows no discretion. As firm as you plant your feet you can feel the powerful drag attempting its best effort to sweep you away. And it humbles you. So you meekly begin to make your way back after tempting fate and the coming tide for so long.

After making the long walk back to the beach to Tara and Eugene and Tima and their kids we feasted. Tima cooked the lamb chops Eugene had marinated the night before in salt, garlic and soy sauce. She cooked on a flat open iron skillet placed on rocks over an open fire. She threw on some sliced onions and dalo and our mouths watered at the smell of the sizzling meat and the smoke. Finally we ate and drank and relaxed.

On the drive home we watched storm clouds over Savusavu almost blot out the sun. By the time we got home the storm was almost on us, lumbering across the bay like Thor was personally out on a holiday afternoon stroll. It was so thick that the opposite side of the bay wasn’t visible. The cloud and rain were like a slate grey curtain that rumbled thunder so loud it shook the house and lightning strobes replaced the sunlight. Then came the inevitable deluge. But eventually the storm and its clouds passed and the evening came and the sun set like a slow motion explosion.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Just Another Perfect Day In Fiji


It is yet another perfect day here. In fact since Cyclone Gene 41 days ago the weather here has been stellar. A month ago there was one week of rain during the daytime, but its hardly worth remembering really.

We went back out to Malcolm and Filo's place and helped rebuild the pool in the natural spring water creek. It had been washed out by a flash flood and it was a simple matter of collecting back those large stones and rebuilding a wall to damn the creek up a little. Little Victoria and William helped out in their own way too. It was a welcome task on such a hot day playing in that cool clean water. When we were done we enjoyed a lunch of fresh fruits and vegetables, chicken curry and dalo soup. We had brought some roti with tuna curry and the kids squealed and yelled 'Roti!' with excitement and gobbled them down. Filo snipped some lemon grass on the property, cut it down and boiled it for tea. After lunch we enjoyed the fruits of our labour by taking a swim in the little pool we had created.

The Joker Draw was the hottest ticket in town. For weeks a huge crowd gathered at the Planters Club to win that draw. There was a lot of excitement in the air and finally last week the woman who owns the Pearl Farm in Savusavu bought 200 tickets and had the good fortune of turning over the joker card and winning the $6ooo jackpot. There was an explosion of cheers and then the crowd gradually dissolved. All those deflated expectations sobered everyone up. It will be some time before there's a jackpot that big again.

A drive out of Savusavu, the road to Labasa (lam-basa), is inspiring and humbling. The beauty of the mountains and the view from their beckoning mist cloaked tips forces you to sit down, focus and take clarity on life and the world in general. This is an incredible place. We need to behave as if we deserve it. The road to the northern town treks though the mountains and a vast forest of towering evergreen trees that reminded us of home. And along the way there are water falls and spring water creeks that taste every bit as sweet and cool as the bottled Fiji water. We're looking forward to returning to hike the mountains more and standing under those waterfalls to cool off.

We had a chance to go to Suva, the capitol of Fiji. It was interesting to experience the pulse of a surprisingly cosmopolitan city again for the first time since we arrived. Suva is an old colonial city with beautiful parks and incredible markets. It was a treat to walk into a completely modern coffee shop and order two Americanos that were served in what amounted to soup bowl sized mugs. That strange and familiar sensation we were experiencing was what's known as 'air-conditioning'.

Tara and I were invited out by friends Penny and Greg to their yacht. They had sailed out and dropped anchor out by Cousteau Resort at the point of the bay. We brought our snorkeling gear and swam for a few hours around Split Rock, an enormous coral head that stands about 30 feet off the ocean floor, and along the reef line about 1oo meters off the beach front. Its a whole other world down there, all those fish of every colour you can imagine and the coral itself glowing with a soft phosphorous luminescence. The fish seem to be just as curious about us as we were about them. After the snorkeling we enjoyed a late lunch out on the yacht until the sun began to set. We decided to get out to that spot as often as we can before we leave.

Speaking of leaving, each day blends into the next in a blur of sunshine and hospitality and a sense of well-being and now we're only two months away from our departure date. We thought six months was so much time when we got here. It wasn't. And six months more wouldn't be enough either. The friends we've made are already starting to tell us how much they'll miss us when we go and how much they hope we not only return for a house-sit but maybe even buy a piece of land, build a place and join their community.

This is not going to be an easy exodus.