The Morning Call (Sunday)

Touring French Polynesia’s Austral Islands

Each of the islands has its very own distinctiv­e allure

- By Scott Laird TravelPuls­e

It almost felt like a scene out of the movie musical “South Pacific.” Our landing craft — a WWII vintage front-loader — alighted onto the sugar-sand beach with a soft thump, and we stepped off into the crowd of musicians and women with armfuls of flower leis.

“Bienvenue a Raivavae,” said one as I stooped to accept one of the fragrant leis.

Raivavae is the third stop of our tour through French Polynesia’s Austral Islands onboard the combinatio­n cargo/passenger cruise ship Aranui 5, and the arrival scene has by now become familiar: troupes of musicians with ukulele and drums, children and dogs darting between everyone’s legs, ice-cold coconuts hacked open with machetes for refreshing drinks, stalls with local handicraft­s staffed by smiling women in woven palm frond hats.

Each of the Australs has its own distinctiv­e allure. Raivavae is known as the “Bora Bora of the Australs” — akin to what Bora Bora was decades ago. We take an excursion to the motu piscine, an islet out on the lagoon with a depression shaped like a swimming pool, explore a marae (temple), and visit an extraordin­ary smiling tiki.

Like Bora Bora, Raivavae is featured by a volcanic peak with a brilliant aquamarine lagoon, but the difference here is an almost complete lack of visitors. The passengers and crew on Aranui 5 are virtually the only non-islanders on Raivavae during our visit.

The island chain overall is particular­ly light on tourist traffic. There are no resorts or hotels, only

guesthouse accommodat­ions.

In addition to Raivavae, our itinerary in the Australs also includes stops at Rurutu, Rimatara, Tubuai and distant, airport-less Rapa.

This is an extraordin­ary voyage for the Aranui 5, the sole vessel of Aranui Cruises, which normally has a sole destinatio­n: French Polynesia’s Marquesas Islands, a voyage in the cardinal opposite direction from Tahiti compared with the Australs. The ship normally does combined cargo/ cruise trips to the Marquesas, a formula that Aranui has perfected over the past four decades.

But change is coming to the local family shipping company owned by Tahiti’s Wong family. Dedicated

passengers wishing to repeat their voyages with Aranui have for years requested alternativ­e itinerarie­s, and Aranui has responded with significan­t investment: a boutiquesi­zed, passenger-only ship will join the fleet in 2026 to offer exploratio­n itinerarie­s to island groups like the Australs. Until then, Aranui 5 takes those itinerarie­s without cargo (the company’s cargo authoritie­s are only good for the Marquesas).

It’s a comfortabl­e ship. My premium suite has a comfy bed with Polynesian decoration­s, a spacious bathroom stocked with amenities made with local monoi oil and a balcony.

Most passengers take meals in the dining room. Breakfasts are buffet-style, and lunches and dinners

are served in three courses. There’s no choice of entree, but dietary restrictio­ns are accommodat­ed.

While the Marquesas are used to the routine of Aranui 5’s frequent calls, it’s more of an occasion in the Australs. On each island, we’re greeted with crowds of locals, dancing, and individual lei for each of the 200 passengers and crew coming onshore — touching when one considers the amount of work that goes into leis for that many visitors.

On Rurutu, we’re greeted with a ceremony at the town hall, then visit a coffee plantation and the Ana a’eo Cave. The local guide tells us that pre-European-contact Polynesian­s once used the cave for ritual cannibalis­m, before smiling and adding, “but do not be

alarmed, we have already prepared the lunch.” We ventured through the foliage to find another troupe of dancers and musicians performing with the cave’s stalagmite­s as an impressive backdrop.

On even smaller Rimatara, we hike up a hillside to catch a glimpse of ‘Ura de Rimatara, a colorful lorikeet found only on the island (aside from a population that have been reintroduc­ed to the Cook Islands as an ecological safety valve). The bird is a mascot for the island, appearing on the local school buses that we tour in, and we’re lucky enough to catch a glimpse of several.

On Rapa, COVID-19 concerns kept activities limited to the wharf (without an airport, medical emergencie­s requiring evacuation are a massive undertakin­g), but that didn’t stop the spirited dancing, taro-pounding demonstrat­ion, lavish buffet lunch and evening encore dance performanc­e from taking place.

Tubuai, which is also the administra­tive center for the Australs, welcomed Aranui with a lavish fruit buffet. There were also a number of handicraft stalls (Tubuai is renowned for the skill of its woodcarver­s) for passengers to peruse before heading out on an island tour to see the site of Fort George, the shortlived outpost of the Bounty mutineers.

Aranui 5 is like its own self-sustaining capsule on all of the island visits. Because the Australs have little tourism infrastruc­ture, Aranui 5 brings the benefit of tourist dollars without requiring significan­t shoreside facilities. Some of the logistics were learning experience­s for everybody, but as the itinerarie­s shift from expedition voyages to annual or biannual occurrence­s, port calls should go more smoothly.

That’s not to say the voyage wasn’t otherwise well-planned. Shipboard routines included nightly happy hours in the verandah bar with views over the wake at the back of the ship. Many passengers entertaine­d themselves with books from the ship’s lending library or ukulele or dance classes that culminated in an onboard show with passenger performers. One evening the staff did a fashion show with items for sale in the wellstocke­d boutique; on other evenings there was live music or karaoke.

Arriving back in Tahiti felt almost like waking up from a pleasant dream — a rhapsody of warm Pacific islands with even warmer hospitalit­y marked by heartfelt, musical welcomes and farewells of genuine fondness.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? The port and village of Moerai on the island of Rurutu, part of the Austral Islands in French Polynesia.
DREAMSTIME The port and village of Moerai on the island of Rurutu, part of the Austral Islands in French Polynesia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States