Thursday, March 7, 2013

Papeete – February 9, 2013

The Ocean Princess is in port today.Maxine is planning on doing nothing, just sit and recover and read.  I have a scuba trip booked since this is my only time to dive in Papeete. People have  said that the diving isn’t the best, but diving is diving.  I was told to wait at the Tahiti Information Center which is right down the wharf from where the ship is docked,  I was looking for a car or a van to pick me up and was getting a bit concerned when they were 10 minutes late.  I happened to look out into the harbor and there was the scuba boat.  They do pick ups right from the wharf to the boat.  It was only about a 10 minute ride from the harbor to the dive site.  The divemaster provided a nice safety and dive briefing,Blacktip Reef Shark checked over the gear and we were into the water.  Our first dive was a drift dive on a site they called White Canyon.  The current was pretty fast and it was fun riding along looking at the fish.  One thing they are still doing is baiting the sharks.  They had dropped a basket full of fish heads before they dropped us up current.  By the time we got back, the area was swarming with fish and lots of sharks.  We found rocks to hide behind and hold on to and watched the fun.  We had blacktip reef sharks, gray sharks and lemon sharks as well as lots of tropical fish.  There was hardly any invertebrate life, but the fish were fine.  After the drift, the surface interval was at the dive shop where they changed tanks and divers.  Only two of us were doing both dives.  The second dive was close to the shop in an area they called the lagoon.  There were several students on board who were doing their basic certifications and the place was perfect.  To make it more interesting for experienced divers, they have sunk several boats and an airplane as reef bases.  It is working.  There were lots of interesting fish and this time there were also lots of inverts. The return to the ship was also by boat.  At 5pm, the ship left for our first leg, after of course, the mandatory muster drill.  They are sure paying a lot more attention to this drills since the Costa Concordia incident.  Weather has been perfect and seas are very calm.  Even so, Maxine is reacting to the motion of the ship.  Hopefully that will pass. 

Huahine – February 10, 2013

We anchored in a lovely lagoon at about 8am.  Huahine is actually composed of two IMG_6714islands connected by a short bridge.   It is very mountainous, lush, green, and sparsely inhabited.  We had signed up for a tour that focusedon the anthropological and archeological history of these islands.  Huahine, it seems, was the home to many of the royal families in this area of French Polynesia and therefore has the ruins of many temples and buildings, some of which have been carefully restored. 

Our tour guide, Paul, IMG_6680 greeted us at the pier and led us to a very unusual vehicle.  It has a truck cab which is attached to a bus-like trailer with backless padded benches running along the sides. We and our fellow passengers climbed aboard and Paul IMG_6681 began to tell us about himself and his qualifications, which include advanced degrees in Polynesian history and anthropology.  He has worked with some of the better known experts in his field, and by living here is fulfilling his boyhood dream.  Paul is American by birth and also a citizen of both the US and France. 

As our bus took us around the island, we learned about the government and economy of this island today before we reached the ancient IMG_6688 ruins.  Huahine has 7000 residents, it is a French protectorate and as such receives financial support from France which allows for a high standard of living.  Prices, however can be high for certain things-for example, a nice size watermelon costs $20!  People can and do raise their own food.  Medical care and education are also subsidized by France, so they are excellent.  Tourism is another important source of income, but recently has declined.  The land is family owned, so no one is truly poor.

After about a half hour, we arrived at the site of an ancient temple that has been restored.  We learned about the gods the people worshipped, the offerings they made to these gods, including human sacrifice, and how the first Europeans were thought to be gods when they arrived because they brought things with them that were unimaginable to the natives.  Metals were a huge surprise, because they did not exist here.  People used coral, shells and stones for tools, but no metal.  As Paul put it, when the people were invited onto Captain James Cook’s ship, and into his quarters, what they saw there must have seemed like a hallucination.

We spent quite some time in this area, learning more about the plants, animals and people, and especially about how the first contact with Europeans altered both cultures forever.  Paul also drew a map in the sand to show how the first humans settled in the Polynesian, Micronesian and Melanesian islands and discussed the origins of the different peoples who populate this very large but scattered part of Vanilla Vinethe world.  He repeatedly emphasized that, since the time of Captain Cook and the extreme culture shock of first contact, we are more connected and interdependent than ever as we move into this era of globalization.

We got back on our bus, and went to visit a vanilla plantation,  where we saw the plants growing and learned how the beans are picked, IMG_6711dried and packaged.  After that, we stopped at a riverbank to see the blue eyed eels that live in the river. They are long  and graceful, and are almost like pets to the inhabitants who feed them but don’t eat them!  After that we drove back to the dock, and returned on the tender to the ship. Despite the heat and humidity, it was one of the most unusual and best tours we’ve ever experienced.