SOUTH PACIFIC PARADISE
Aitutaki islands a study of perfection
GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO
AITUTAKI, COOK ISLANDS Swaying in a hammock hung from coconut trees, floating down a cyan-blue channel or swimming in a cloud of tropical fish, all I could think was, this place is too perfect to be real.
Aitutaki consists of a handful of small islands encircled by a lagoon in the middle of the South Pacific. It’s the paradise you always dreamed about but never quite believed could exist: uncrowded, inexpensive, safe and friendly, and stunningly gorgeous around, in and under the ocean.
THREE’S A CROWD
Here’s the catch on visiting Aitutaki: it’s not that easy to get to. First you fly to Rarotonga, the largest of the Cook Islands — 15 volcanic islands and atolls scattered over an area the size of the Mediterranean. There are flights to Rarotonga from Los Angeles, Tahiti, New Zealand and Sydney. From Rarotonga’s open-air airport, I walked into town for the quintessential Polynesian souvenir, black pearls, then hopped on the city bus that circles the island in an hour to snorkel off Aroa Beach.
A 50- minute Air Rarotonga flight took me to Aitutaki, which has about 2,000 inhabitants and only 229 rooms for visitors hidden among the palms. When three couples from the luxury hotel next to my cabin took out kayaks, the miles-long white beach felt packed.
THE BEACH HUT
For Bora Bora-style overwater bungalows at over $1,000 a night, check in at the Aitutaki Lagoon Resort and Spa. For 1/20th of that price, at Matriki Beach Huts, I got a cabin on the sand with private outdoor shower and deck exactly 19 steps from the lagoon surf. Bright red petals were on the bed, but manager Lisa Green also shared a jar of peanut butter, drove me to three tiny grocery stores for picnic lunch provisions, and let me pick star fruit in the garden.
For about $20, including cold beer, I had just-caught tuna steaks with homemade passion- fruit marinade at Puffy’s Beach Bar and ika mata, raw tuna cubes in coconut cream, at the Boat Shed on the eastern tip of the island.
WHAT LOCKS?
I went to the Boat Shed on a rented bicycle from Matriki and was told that if the half-hour afterdinner ride was too much, I could just park it outside the restaurant (no locks) and any driver would get me home. I decided to pedal instead along the pitch-black road through the fragrant night, but I cannot think of anywhere else that I would have considered either option safely possible.
Although I visited in early July, during the Southern Hemisphere winter, Aitutaki was bursting with palm fronds and luxuriant blossoms of bougainvillea, hibis- cus and frangipani. Many of the latter ended up around my neck in an elaborate “ei” (what leis are called in the Cook Islands) after I passed by a health conference in a village hall. I was invited to stay for opening prayer, with a rippling polyphonic Maori hymn and to return for that night’s party.
UNDERWATER
Within wading distance of my bed, I snorkelled among cobalt blue starfish and creatures in silver, black or yellow patterns with
names like Moorish idol, threadfin butterfly fish and lemonpeel angelfish. During a daylong cruise to uninhabited motu — tiny reef islands — on Lisa’s husband’s fishing boat, I saw purple coral and football-sized, sapphire-blue clams. But the colours were even more surreal above water: transparent over the sandbars, periwinkle in the surf, swirls of turquoise, green and aquamarine in the lagoon, while the lapis-lazuli Pacific roared against the reef.
It struck me that Aitutaki sits blissfully inside its reef like the best vacation amid real life: sharks, capsizing waves, and cold abysses are still out there, but they can’t get at you here.