Thursday, July 4, 2013

Viani Bay - Lovo and some more pictures

We attended a lovo or feast arranged by Jack to raise funds for his daughter to study over-seas. The food is cooked in a pit lined with hot rocks and covered with leaves and, these days, blue poly tarps. Delicious food!

Lovo food - the coconuts contain a mix of taro leaves and onions cooked in cocunut milk - pasalmi. The pan contains taro and you can see breadfruit to the left side.

Rani helps move the food out of the oven.

Ubiquitous dogs

Charming little Tupo blows bubbles 

Jack shows us how to de-husk a coconut. He is a former champion at this.

Taranui III - Tony, the skipper gave the fleet a briefing on visiting the Lau Group of outer Fiji islands.

Lovely blossom drifts toward Ladybug. Note Ladybug's new red paint.

Blossom (Barringtonia Asiaticaup close


Blossom in place with seed pods
According to Wikipedia, these trees are also known as Fish Poison or Sea Poison Trees. All parts of the tree contain saponin, which apparently can be used to stun fish in freshwater streams. The seeds can float for up to two years on the ocean and like the coconut are great island colonizers. They were among the first seeds to arrive when Krakatoa emerged from the ocean (see http://www.naturia.per.sg/buloh/plants/sea_poison.htm). They line the waterfront near our boat.

Viani Bay

We have been here in Viani Bay for a couple of weeks now - much longer than we had first intended. This is a very fine base for snorkeling and SCUBA diving. We have made several trips out to locations on Rainbow reef including 'Fish Factory, the 'Cabbage Patch', and the 'Great White Wall'. We have also finished painting Ladybug's sheer stripe and I have repaired a weak area in the coaming where one of the stanchions was not correctly backed up. Rani has spent quite a bit of time visiting with the family on the small island off which we are anchored and we have had a couple of hikes into the hills around the bay.

The snorkeling has been wonderful - many varieties and colours of hard and soft corals as well as plentiful reef fish and a few sightings of larger fish on the edges of the reef. Rani has made three dives including a spectacular dive of the Great White Wall, which is famous for its huge wall of white soft corals. These are most beautiful when viewed from below against the light. The dive began by descending through a lava tube and took Rani down to about 100 feet. We have Helena and Kari on 'Merilelu' to thank for Rani's renewed enthusiasm for diving. Helena is a dive instructor and she gave Rani an excellent refresher and lent her the SCUBA equipment and tanks at a very reasonable price. I free dived down through the upper part of the lava tube and had a brief glimpse of the lovely white fans and corals at the start of the wall, but it was too deep to stay down for long (about 40 feet).

While Rani was off diving, I prepared and painted the large red stripe that Ladybug normally wears. We have been without this stripe since before we left New Zealand and our friends have remarked that they do not recognize us without it. I used a single part polyurethane by International called 'Toplac'. This is supposed to give about 5 years of service as opposed to the fancier two part polyurethanes that promise 10+, but it can be rolled on more easily and does not require mixing. Our friends Holger and Roz, professional painters, recommended we use a mohair wool roller for this, with no need for tipping via brush. The results are quite good - a nice gloss and even finish, but not quite as smooth as we could have achieved by spraying. The stanchion repair required grinding away damaged glass, re-glassing, and adding a layer of mat followed by 1/4 inch plywood followed by 3 layers of glass cloth on the inside of the coaming. The glass I worked around both edges of the coaming inside a cockpit locker and this should stiffen things considerably. We need a good solid backing for the stanchion here because this is one of the posts holding up our solar panels. In the event of a sea sweeping the boat, these panels can take a lot of force.



Rani enjoys a swim at one of the falls at Bouma park


Nice views from the falls hike at Bouma park


Rani also traveled across the Somo Somo Strait to Taveuni island where she replenished our supplies and went with a van-load of cruisers across the island to Bouma National Heritage Park. Here she hiked to and swam at a series of three waterfalls. She had enough sense not to dive off the falls, recalling her back-breaking experience doing this in Australia, but had little success dissuading other cruisers from abstaining. Thanks to Craig and Bruce from 'Gato Go' for the pictures from Bouma Park. I forgot to put the memory card back in our camera.


Steep trail to the higher falls


A cooling swim


The falls are impressive with some people for scale.


We are just back from an arduous hike up onto a viewpoint through jungle and bamboo forest. We invited Amy from 'Morning Glory' to join us. Amy is a fellow pharmacist and she and Rani had a good chat about their respective experiences. Morning Glory is a family boat with two teenagers who were attending school on board today in between diving and other more enjoyable pursuits. The hike started with a walk along the sand and mud flats at low tide and then climbed up into the forest following a wild pig trail. We had received rough instructions from one of Rani's island friends, but were soon quite lost, scrambling up a long ridge, dislodging rocks and stepping into ants' nests with predictable consequences. We were soon breathless, sweat bathed, and ill tempered. The ant bites were remarkably painful and we all regretted our choice of footwear - open sandals and water shoes. Despite this, we wanted to reach a view point and when our way was barred by a dense forest of bamboo, Rani lead the way on a traverse that eventually brought us out into a clearing riddled by boar trails. Clearly the pigs had taken another way up, but we failed to find one of their trails leading down.

Nice start to the hike along a beach.

Amy swings from a vine as we climb along a traverse.

Rani leads us through the bamboo

You got us into this! No - you did!

We snapped a few pictures and Amy then took over and lead us down via a stream bed. We hopped and scrambled over slippery green boulders and crashed through barriers of fallen bamboo trunks until the terrain leveled off and opened up into a sparse forest with copra planting. Amazingly we arrived back at the bay within 100 meters of where we had entered the jungle. Amy's son Stephen was shocked by the appearance of his mother when we dropped her off at Morning Glory, but Amy claimed that the experience had driven the last vestiges of a cold from her system and she seemed quite cheerful about the whole thing. A swim in the sea has rarely felt as good, washing away sweat, mud, and grime and soothing the scratches and ant bites.


View from look-out. Ladybug is the left-most boat

Bamboo barriers across the creek bed.

We  found this highly poisonous sea snake near the dinghy. It's head is inserted in a hole in the sand, eating its dinner.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Hiking and Snorkeling at Viani Bay

Well we had a break from all our fun yesterday with a heck of a thunder and rain storm. Collected 80 liters of water from the scuppers and had one lightening strike in the bay a few hundred meters away - Yikes!

The day before we had a strenuous but rewarding hike through very tall (2 meter high) grasses along a ridge above the bay and back down through a forest and taro plantations to the shore. Today we snorkeled again at the Cabbage Patch and also at a deeper spot called the Fish Factory. The latter had a current running at 1-2 knots, but gave us some good sightings of sharks and even a turtle. Pictures follow.

Rani and Pat from 'The Rose' in the grasses at the top of the hill above the anchorage.

Pat from 'The Rose' had been up the hill once before and was our leader on this hike.

The grass was very tall and in places we followed what we think are wild pig trails.

Come out with your hands up.

View from the grassy ridge looking out to Taveuni Island - taken with our new Olympus camera's panorama mode 

View from the forest edge on our way down

The path to the first look-off is in the center. We landed our dinghy near the white house to the left.

This island is leased by the families that live there from the government. It has been occupied by the same Fijians for 80 years and we met four generations who lived there.

View from our anchorage - the island above is to the left.

Rani and Jona. Jona is a civil engineering student in Suva. He was visiting Jack, our guide for the snorkeling trips. 

Outrigger dugout canoe.

More lovely corals - the red ones are soft.

Parrot fish.

Lovely shell

Long-nosed butterfly fish

Jack called these ''bait fish". They are used by fisherman to catch bigger fish and are themselves about 25 cms long.

Bait fish feeding/

Somewhat grainy shot of a white tipped shark - about 1.75 meters long.

Peek-a-boo. I think this is a type of damsel fish?

Rich from "Legacy"uses his 'James Bond"style  hand-held sled. This uses an electric motor and propeller to pull you along , permitting deeper and longer sessions under water.

Rani goes for a shallow dive with  Kari from "Merilelu"

Butterfly fish.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Snorkeling on the Cabbage Patch at the Rainbow Reef

Following are some pictures taken on our first snorkel on the Rainbow Reef off Viani Bay (Vanua Levu, Fiji). This was also the first time we took our new Olympus Tough TG-820 camera under the water. It is not easy to capture fish pictures, but the camera worked like a top and the colours it reproduced are quite true to what we saw.

We motored out to the reef on 'The Rose'with Jack, a local guide, steering. Seven of the passengers dived and the rest of us snorkeled.

Lovely corals right beside the sand shelf where we anchored the boat

Giant clam - about a foot across

More lovely corals

Rani swims down over the cabbages for which the patch is named. These are huge hard corals many feet across.

Christmas tree worms filter their food from the water at the face of a coral

This shows how close to the surface much of the reef is. There was quite a surge at times over the reef.

These blue fish use the pronged coral as a hideout when danger approaches.

Anemonefish in its anemone home.

Anemonefish warning me off. Note a glimpse of its baby below.

I love the textures of these corals.

Fiji has many soft corals - these are quite small but colorful.

Hard coral with stunning pattern.

Parrot fish - this one is about 10 inches long, but we have seen them over two feet.