The New Zealand Herald

New Caledonia’s wild west

Hamish Fletcher avoids dangerous sea creatures and romantic liaisons but laps up the natural beauty of Bourail

-

“It’s not like the Steven Spielberg movies,” tour guide Emeric Amice reassures me. We’re speeding in a water taxi through the turquoise Bourail Lagoon and our skipper has just recalled the time he had a run-in with a shark while out surfing.

I’m minutes away from jumping over the side of the boat and haven’t yet paid any mind to what Jaws-esque beast could be roaming this stretch of ocean.

It doesn’t seem like a bad place for a shark to hunt; along with well-fed tourists snorkellin­g and scuba-diving, the 24,000sq km of lagoon that surround New Caledonia’s main island host a buffet of colourful fish.

It’s for this very reason I’m diving headlong into these tepid waters, to meander through the coral and its abundance of marine life.

The lagoon and its surroundin­g reefs were declared a Unesco World Heritage site in 2008, and it’s easy to see why when encounteri­ng the mesmerisin­g flurry of clownfish, parrotfish and butterfly fish darting below the surface.

Together with 450 types of underwater plants, the wider reef is also populated by aforementi­oned sharks, though none came near me during my 40-minute snorkel.

The lagoon is also home to four of the world’s seven sea turtle species and one of them — the green sea turtle — nests nearby on Ile Verte.

A tiny archipelag­o close to the coast, Ile Verte is a wildlife sanctuary and only a tiny portion of it is accessible to the public. Although you can’t stray far on the island, you can explore its pristine golden beach and wander around its rocks without too much effort.

Be warned you’ll likely have a rendezvous with a tricot raye — the sea snakes that slither out of the ocean and writhe up on the sun-warmed stones. Although these black-and-white striped kraits are highly venomous, they’re extremely placid and keep their distance even when I wander into their habitat.

(As an aside, they form a central part of belief system of the Kanaks — the indigenous Melanesian people who make up about 40 per cent of New Caledonia’s population. These reptiles represent rebirth for the Kanaks, with a deceased person rejoining the world of the living after shedding their snake skin on the shore.)

Having already allayed my fears about sharks in the lagoon, Emeric is blase about the kraits and points out that there hasn’t been a fatality from a bite since the 1970s.

Emeric, who runs the one-man tour company

 ?? Photos / Getty Images, Olivier P, Hamish Fletcher / ?? From top: New Caledonia’s iconic pines; Bonhomme, Roche Percee; Hamish Fletcher gets togged up.
Photos / Getty Images, Olivier P, Hamish Fletcher / From top: New Caledonia’s iconic pines; Bonhomme, Roche Percee; Hamish Fletcher gets togged up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand