ADVENTURE
GUIDE
THE Outdoors
"Adventure Guide" for world travellers
Taveuni Island, Fiji - May 2003
Story
by Jochen Kiess, Owner & Managing Director of Maravu Resort

They
call it Fiji's "Forgotten North" but once you've been there,
you'll find it unforgettable.
Many
international travellers are familiar with the glamorous resorts of the
Coral Coast of Fiji's main island of Viti Levu, where the capital and
international airport are located, and the castaway getaways on the
offshore Mamanuca Islands.
Unfortunately,
most miss the persuasive and insidious charms of the northeastern part
of the archipelago.
Eco-tourism
and "soft" adventure seem to be the current sweetheart
notions
of every third world nation-in-the-sun as the first world’s travel
consultants hustle to provide increasingly offbeat answers to their
affluent customers' increasingly strident cry: "Where is there
that's new to go? And what shall we do when we get there?"
Different locations provide different responses. In some places,
eco-tourism does more harm than good. The well-meaning hordes scramble
across virgin territory in pursuit of elusive rarity.
But
here, in a country whose population is increasingly dividing into
"urban" and "rural" Fijians, is where you'll
experience what many tell you is the real Fiji. Here you will find no
crowds, but pure nature & real adventures.
At
5,500 square km, Vanua Levu is the second-largest island in the Fiji
chain, but despite a couple of luxurious resorts it has none of the
international hustle and "sophistication" of Viti Levu.
Visitors are still rare enough to be welcomed as guests, and quickly
become friends.
Even
further off the beaten South Pacific tourist track is Taveuni, just east
of Vanua Levu. About 42 km long and 15 km wide, dominated by a central
spine of volcanic cones, Taveuni is a lushly verdant island rich in
indigenous bird life and exotic flora, deemed one of the most important
of all the South Pacific islands in terms of biology and conservation.
What draws many visitors is the scuba diving and its proximity to what
many claim are some of the world's finest dive sites.
Attractions
for visitors emphasize the outdoors, though you shouldn't miss the
stained glass windows at the old Catholic mission at the village of
Wairiki and the world famous ‘International Dateline’.
Maravu
Plantation Resort, on Taveuni, is a boutique-style marriage of intimacy,
immaculate quality and attentive, unobtrusive staff.
Each
of the 10 well-appointed bures that lie scattered about the working,
54-acre copra plantation is named for a flower. Vuni Tarawau (one of
three honeymoon bures) has an outside shower, made private by a stone
wall surrounding a lava-rock floor and a sunning deck with its own
banana tree.
The
white-sand beach (where the dive team awaits to guide you to some of the
world's best coral) is a pleasant downhill walk through a grassy palm
grove (signs warn walkers to beware of falling coconuts).
You
are summoned by traditional drums to lunch and dinner at
the recently-renovated Wananavu Restaurant beside the pool. Dinner can
be local coral trout or an exotic Fijian take on international cuisine.
The service, primarily by girls from the nearby village, is enormously
willing.
The
resort is a good base for eco-exploration (bird-watching,
flower-spotting, and rainforest hiking).
Various
Specials and Packages available all of 2003. From Eco-exploring, over
romantic Honeymoons or Weddingmoons to Adventure & Diving Packages.