With a total of around 130 islands and atolls, French Polynesia has an island for just about every occasion – and these are no ordinary islands. According to the standards by which these things are measured - warmth, scenery, the colours of their reefs, the way their green hills leap straight from the sea to the clouds - the islands of French Polynesia are about as close to paradise as you might reasonably expect to come on this earth.
The core of French Polynesia is the Society Islands, a group that includes Tahiti and its gorgeous neighbour, Moorea, but the outright winner in any beauty contest is Bora Bora, arguably the most glorious tropical island on earth. Centrepiece of the island is a sharp green peak that is encircled by a necklace of motus - low, sandy coral atolls covered with coconut palms.
The Marquesas, the most remote of all the island groups, are in a class all of their own. What you find when you finally arrive at the end of a three hour flight from Papeete is a sprinkling of spiney, volcanic islands tangled with orchids, breadfruit, pistachio and mango trees, banana palms and coconut plantations. Waterfalls spurt from the hillsides and the island’s villages lie within the crumbling cones of extinct volcanoes. Beaches are few. For the most part the Pacific surf crashes against green cliffs that rise sheer from the sea.
The Marquesas are tropical paradise in its original state, and not for everyone, but even on a brief excursion through the islands, you will experience heart-touching moments of pure innocence. Such experiences have a powerful effect on the artistic imagination. Herman Melville wrote Typee based on his experiences in the Marquesas, and Paul Gauguin spent the final 21 months of his life here.
Tahiti has spawned a unique marine species, the overwater bungalow, which thrives in the shallow, sheltered waters of the island’s lagoon like nowhere else. Those at Le Taha’a - sprawl across the lagoon, each a small enclave of stylish good living wrapped in woven palm and thatch, with big doors that open to the breeze and the sounds of the sea. The marine life is abundant. Strap on a face mask, plunge off the front of your deck and you can expect to see turtles, eels, rays and the usual tropical marine plethora of clownfish, angel fish, wrasses and corals.
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