Makemo à Fakarava 7 avril 16° 18.3'S 144°21.2'W

Canopus 3 on the Blue Water Rally
Jean Michel Coulon
Tue 8 Apr 2008 11:29
The visit to the pearl farm this morning (7 April) was much more interesting than I had expected.  Called Teanuanua Beach Pearls, the farm is part of a family-owned mini-conglomerate that includes the only Makemo pension mentioned (for excellent food) in my guidebook and, back in the village, a grocery and hardware store along with several studio apartments still nearing completion that are intended for tourists.  The farm and pension are located near the other pass (Tapuhiria) into the lagoon, the pension along a lovely beach and the farm perhaps half a mile out into the lagoon.  To get there Jean-Michel and Michel had arranged transport with co-owner and, as we eventually concluded, primary driving force Nadia Muller, who, as you doubtless have guessed from her name, is not only the wife of Jean-Claude Muller but a tatooed Polynesian whose features suggest some Chinese ancestry.  Our instructions were to meet at 0930 at the market near the boulangerie, and among the first indications that we were not dealing with typical laid-back locals was the punctuality of our hosts--as we walked into the market's dirt parking area Jean-Claude hustled over from the adjacent house, introduced himself, and off we went, with a brief stop at the airport to pick up newspapers (the atoll receives four flights per week from Papeete).  Jean-Claude, incidentally, is impressively tatooed but, judging from his accent, grew up in metropolitan France.
 
The farm, a square wooden structure built on pylons secured to a reef by heavy cables, consists of two rooms (not counting an alcove where a doorless toilet faces south across the lagoon) some eight feet above sea level plus a large area facing north built of planks with wide gaps between them. 
 
 
Strings of oysters that have undergone an impressively precise insertion of a pearl-inducing irritant hang in the water between the planks--think of it as an aquatic recovery room for the oysters before they are moved farther out in the lagoon, where they will (in most cases) eventually produce a marketable pearl.  In one of the two rooms were three work stations and two young workers who turned out to be the Muller's daughter and son-in-law.  His job consisted of taking one oyster at a time from a bin, inserting a metal clamp to keep the shell sufficiently open, then inserting what looked like a yellow plastic ball (the irritant) the size of a BB that actually was made from giant freshwater mussel shells from the Mississippi River, and finally inserting a tiny slice of graft tissue cut with surgical precision by the daughter from the coat of a (probably involuntary) donor oyster.  The graft tissue determines the color of the eventual pearl.  When she is not preparing the tissue, the daughter performs the same tasks as her husband.  Another young man's primary task (in the other room) seemed to be drilling a hole along the edge of each post-surgery oyster shell near the hinge to facilitate adding the oyster to a string of its fellows; ideally his job is more varied than that, but I did not ask.  Once back in the village we were shown a variety of pearls by Nadia, and I must confess to a rare temptation to buy a particularly beautiful (and expensive) bracelet, but fortunately for family finances I resisted.  After all, I would look silly in pearls.    
 
We are now motoring to Fakarava--the true wind strength is a meagre five knots, and it is coming from a very strange direction, mostly west, while the trades blow from the east, southeast, or northeast.  Fakarava has two passes, and the one on the southeast side we will use to enter the lagoon is supposed to be superb for snorkeling as well as diving.  We should be there early tomorrow.