Fulaga has a unique custom – on arrival at the village all visitors are
assigned a host family. Your host family takes you under their wing, showing
you round and acquainting you with the village. After church on Sunday lunch is
at their place, in fact anything you need they will try to find for you. Tedi,
Ma and young Josua became our Family for the duration of our stay. We shared a
delicious lunch on Sunday which included fish, cassava, taro, Fiji cabbage
cooked in coconut milk, noodles with corned beef and even cooked pawpaw.
Although not essential it is traditional to bring gifts to your host family so
before going to church we packed up some toys for Josua, clothes, flour, sugar, rice, noodles
and canned food for them.
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Looking along "the Spit", we anchored inside on the right
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Monday it was up anchor and off to the Spit – a sheltered
anchorage inside a long narrow sandspit which uncovered at low tide where we
walked around and found a heap of fossils clearly visible in the rock, then a
bonfire party for Lauren’s (Revilo) birthday along with a further dozen other
cruisers in the evening.
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An incredible view from the site of the old village - you could see for miles and miles
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Back to the landing Tuesday and we watched as the
supply boat arrived, and unloaded, with all the village people coming out to
collect goods in their long boats (all powered by 40hp yamaha engines). We had
a couple of days there, walking to the other village with Ma and Josua where I
spent the afternoon making a traditional Fijian broom, and watching mat
weaving. On returning to the village we detoured up the hill to the site of the
original village – situated at the top of the hill with perfect view of any
invaders, and saw the cave which still has many bones from the past cannibal
days.
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Cave of bones
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Later in the week we left for another anchorage,
Yanuyanukalau, still inside the Fulaga reef, where we had fun walking around
the island, investigating the ruins of an old village and peering into caves in
the rocks. I asked Jamie to venture far back into one so I could get a photo
showing its depth but he declined upon spotting a nice striped sea snake had
taken up residence!!
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The calm before the storm!!
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On the weekend we took Tedi, Ma, Josua and a couple of
other villagers out for a days fishing, trawling outside the reef, but to our
great disappointment we only managed to hook a fairly small tuna – oh well, it
was fun anyway and interesting to see how close to the reef we could go as it
dropped sharply into deep water. We had a nice sail back too rather than
motoring all day. Deciding not to attend church the next day we left for ‘Big
House Bay’ so named by us as the only place in the bay was an abandoned but
very European two storeyed house – the only one we have seen here. The weather
packed up in the afternoon and we were treated to a storm which came up from
nowhere, rain and some lightening but even then, was gone in just three hours. Next,
we moved to Hurricane Shelter, a bay so named as it is protected from all
directions and although no hurricane passed through we had a very peaceful two
days here.
Back towards the Landing we stopped in ‘Twenty Island Bay’
or ‘Alternate Track Bay’ where we explored some of the many small islands and
walked to the village via a steep track over the hill, passing by the old
village and bone cave. Today we took some reading glasses and sunglasses back
with us to give to the villagers, they are so appreciative of these and you
know they will be well used.
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Farewell feast before leaving |
Being school holidays, the village had organised a beach
picnic to be held Friday at the Sandspit for all the cruisers and families, so
in the morning we ferried our family and some of their friends there and on
reaching the spit we lowered the paddleboards into the water and within minutes
they had been commandeered by many young children all vying, very politely, for
turns. They had a ball; the paddleboards were not left without a child or three
aboard for the whole day. We along with the villagers all took a plate to
share, and I even helped weave plates from coconut leaves – we were picnicking
island style!! A super day with beach volleyball and touch rugby as well as
frisbee. A very tired couple of children slept all the way back on SOL to the
Landing.
Sunday was church again, then lunch, and as we had decided
to leave Fulaga Tuesday we had our family farewell meal on Monday afternoon,
with delicious food, once more, kava, singing along with some other villagers
who had come to say goodbye. The men of the village do the most terrific wood
carving which they send to Suva for sale, we found a pile of sandpaper on the
boat which we donated to the men and we asked Tedi to make us a Kava bowl, and
Ma to weave me a mat, (which we paid them for and were very surprised, and kind
of disappointed, to learn they gave most of the money from us to the church).
At our farewell they also gave me a woven bag and Jamie a beautiful carved
bowl. Such a generous people who have what seems to us to be so little, but
they appear to be so happy and are certainly ever so generous. We have learned
so much – thank you Fulaga, three weeks spent there is not nearly enough to see
all and experience all Fulaga has to offer.
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At the top is the Kava bowl Tedi carved, the pointy bit faces the chief.
Below is another bowl they gave us as a farewell gift
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Anchored out by the Spit in just a couple of metres, water so clear
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A lucky find amongst the rubbish as Jamie had left his jandals back on SOL !!
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A fish fossil, my father would have loved this place |
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