words from the world

To content | To menu | To search

Sunday 28 September 2008

exhilaration at the other end of the world


Taveuni_0459-0462_T.jpg
Nadi airport on the main island of Fiji, first contact with a Pacific island. I arrive for two weeks and am going to try to live in a local way for that time, that means not looking beyond the present. In the arrival hall, a travel agent unsuccessfully tries to sell me an all-inclusive tour. Despite my stubbornness not to book one of his excursions, he keeps on smiling and gives me a precious piece of advice which will prove to be essential for the next stage of my trip. In substance, he encourages me no to stay on the main island (Viti Levu where there are the towns of Nadi, Lautoka or Suva) and get to the small islands which are the heart of the Fijian spirit.
The population is a mix of Melanesians and Indians whose ancestors emigrated to Fiji in order to work in the sugar cane fields. These workers finally stayed and today represent 40% of the total population. This racial disparity is the main cause of the political instability where each community reproaches the other one its hegemonic desires. These last years, 2 coups d'état shook the country and consequently, the tourism dramatically dropped down.
Nadi is not really appealing. The next day, I hop on a minivan and head eastwards. My intention is to stop in the village of Pacific Harbour where we can dive with sharks. Unfortunately, I haven't booked in advance and the dive center is full for the next three days. Too much waiting, I pack my bag and set off again the next day. After one hour by car, I reach the capital city Suva where I board on a ferry in direction of the island of Taveuni. A long 20-hour cruise which drops me off on one of those remote islands where I hope to meet the Fijian culture and joie de vivre (exhilaration) praised by the travel agent at the airport. The ferry moors to a mere pontoon with no building around. A few taxis wait for the passengers but I prefer to stretch out my leg by walking along the coconut-tree-flanked coastal road. On the way, I stop at a dive center where I book an outing for the next day then I take to the way again towards the village of Naqara. A short hour of stroll where I pass alongside the local dwellings stifled by an invading vegetation. Native people offer me large smiles followed by a welcoming « Bula » (Welcome or good morning in Fijian). Life serenely goes on this small bit of land.
The dive center stands comparison with the villagers, laid-back atmosphere, certain joie de vivre and contagious smiles. On the boat, the warm-hearted ambiance carries on, we talk about rugby and I state that I'm coming from a city (Toulon) where rugby resembles a religion and is the topic of countless impassioned conversations. During our chat, I says that two Fijian players belong to the team (Sissa Koyamaibole et Gabiriele Lovobalavu). To these words, Jimmy, who officiates as captain of the boat this morning, suddenly turns back and says « you know Gabiriele Lovobalavu ! ». He informs me that his elder brother Kanito lives and works on the island in position of health inspector for the ministry of Health. He takes his phone, immediately calls him and an appointment is got for the next day. On top of the exceptional seabed that the Somosomo strait and the Rainbow reef offer, I'll be able to dip into the Fijian intimacy.

IMG_0443_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0454_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0457_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0767_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0709_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0717_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0718_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0744_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0805_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0397_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0418_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0495_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0574_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0577_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0581_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0583_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG


IMG_0617_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0632_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0639_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0679_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0750_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0759_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0777_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0803_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0811_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0820_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0825_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
IMG_0829_taveuni_rainbow_reef.JPG
The next day, I go to the police station where all the team mustered around a bowl of Kava to celebrate an event I forgot the name. That's here Kanito have given the appointment to me. I sit down as discreetly as possible when someone holds a microphone out to me asking to introduce myself. About thirty of pairs of eyes riveted on me, I stand up and explain why I'm here ; Then I keep on shaking the hands of all the guests. The following of the meeting is more informal when every two minutes someone holds out to me a coconut bowl full of kava I must knock back. The kava is the national beverage, a pounded root mixed with water which has the taste and the colour of the muddy water. With friends, family or workmates, there is no lack of opportunities to meet around this elixir.
outside this celebration, I take part of the sporting events as spectator with an athletic event and then a rugby tournament where each team represents a parish of the island. Guaranteed fervour around the playground. I will finish my evening at the Kanito's house with his family. Great time of sharing and laughing around the dinner with a special feature. At the other end of the world, a poster of the rugby club toulonnais is hanged to the wall.

IMG_0693_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0703_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG


IMG_0723_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0725_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0730_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0732_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0742_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0844_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0853_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0855_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0857_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0860_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0866_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0871_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0879_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0880_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG
IMG_0883_taveuni_vie_fidjienne.JPG

Saturday 20 September 2008

In the Sydney harbour


Sydney_Harbour_0051-0055_T.jpg
Bye Bye welcoming and intoxicating Asia, I set foot in Australia for a short 2-night stop in the city of Sydney. I put down my bag at the youth hostel and go for a stroll to Darling Harbour which brings together restaurants, bars et tourist attractions such as the Sydney aquarium or the maritime museum. But my look and my steps flee northwards. I'm in a hurry to walk alongside the bank to contemplate two Sydney-symbolizing monuments. On my left, I look up and the metallic frame of the Harbour Brigde overlooks me with all its loftiness. I turn the head on the right and the blowing-up-by-the-wind sail- or shell-shaped domes of the Opera House marvelously marks the end of the bank. I sit down on the steps of the music-dedicated building and chill out, observing the boats that move up and down and distribute their flood of passengers all over the town.
I take my ticket for the other shore. From this side, the view is different. The Opera House harmoniously finishes the disjointed skyline drawn by the skyscrapers of the city. In this hushed-atmosphere district, in the north of Sydney, large residences stretch over. A taste of tranquility, five minutes from the heart of the city. As incredible as it can be, I step on a desert beach in the middle of Sydney. I worm my way in the alleyways of the detached houses towards the Harbour Bridge. The dusk is brewing, the first artificial lights switch on up to cover the town with a sparkling halo. The panorama is still more attractive, the geometric lines fade away into the night to only stand out these luminous impressions. That's lovely a city by night.

IMG_0006_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0008_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0009_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0012_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0030_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0033_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0107_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0110_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0125_sydney_harbour.JPG
Sydney_Harbour_0127-0129_T.jpg
IMG_0139_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0355_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0349_sydney_harbour.JPG
IMG_0056_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0060_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0066_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0067_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0087_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0102_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0112_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0120_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0363_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0374_sydney_opera_house.JPG
IMG_0371R_sydney_harbour.JPG
I couldn't leave Sydney without seeing some specimens of the weird and endemic animals which populate the Australian ground and waters. I get to the vivarium where a number of animals are unfortunately shut in. Even if it remains the easiest way to familiarize oneself with those living beings. Koala, platypus, kangaroo, wombat, collared iguana, everything is there. Without forgetting that Australia shelters the most dangerous spider and snake in the world.

IMG_0208_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0218_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0227_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0273_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0275_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0236_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0248_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0271_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0278_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0295_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0301_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0331_sydney_vivarium.JPG
IMG_0335_sydney_vivarium.JPG

Monday 15 September 2008

the leeches of the oldest jungle in the world

At the far northeast of Malaysia, close to the Thai border, my watch gives 6h AM. The sky is still dark when I get on the jungle train. A scenic railway which goes through and gives life to the interior of the country. A handful of villages and farms are the meagre signs of the human presence in the middle of the dense vegetation which borders the route. In the beginning of the afternoon, I get off the train in the village of Jerantut before catching a bus heading for the Taman Negara national park. A genuine jungle, older than the Amazon or the forests of the Congo, which shows an age of 130 millions years. It withstood the successive deluges, geological variations, volcanic activities and for a long time I hope the human appetite for deforestation.
A number of marked-out trails go into the forest. One of them leads to a series of swinging bridges above the canopy. Another one goes alongside the river in the middle of the inextricable vegetation. A range of plants occupy the low layers of the jungle while long trees point at the sky to catch the sun rays. En route, a myriad of insects creep on the ground. more-than-2-centimeter-long titanic ants frenetically walk on the scenic trail. My foot hesitates when it meets a 15-centimeter-long scorpion. But my most appalling encounter will happen when I will lift my tee-shirt noting a dozen of leeches kindly invited themselves on my belly and my legs. It's not painful but they remain hanged until trebling or quadrupling their volume, force-feeding themselves with blood. To make easier their pumping work, they inject an anticoagulant which puts off the healing of the injury. I will wait for several hours before seeing my tiny wounds close up. Jungle hazards.
The next day, I leave the jungle by boat for a relaxing ride on one of the river muddy waters of the park. Back to the civilized world.

IMG_8424_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8427_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8431_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8445_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8447_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8448_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8449_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8450_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8459_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8465_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8473_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8482_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8491_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8496_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8512_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8538_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8543_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8544_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8555_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8560_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8562_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8566_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8568_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8572_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8576_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8581_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8582_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8587_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8590_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8596_taman_negara.JPG
IMG_8605_taman_negara.JPG

- page 11 of 54 -