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Tahuata
2
Hapatoni - Bay of
Dophins

The welcome by the village
youngsters was a complete treat, totally excited and hugely enthusiatic
waving and screeming hello, it's so nice to be back on a small island
again. Having dispatched half a forest on the
dock we were then expected for lunch 'toot sweet', only our out board
decided to give up the ghost. only 2 hours latter we limped into the quay
with our rather over worked little engine. Lunch with Rose, Frederick,
Tafeta, Frederick jr., Evangelo all Marquesans are given 2 first names the one
we find almost unpronouncable with more vowel then constanents, and others of
the family was a delicious range of meat in coconut. Nothing here
is purchase if you can't grow or hunt it you go without bar the rice
and sugar. Eating with this wonderful family alway leaves us shamed
for one plate of food I'm able to squeeze in, they can demolish 3. By the
end of lunch plans were afoot to have Fredrick, big daddy take us on a tour of
the island the following day followed by lunch up the hill at DoDo and
Helens house the other folk on the beach.
Staying longer turns into a bit of a
good thing. Not only was Colin and his village friends able to recover our
precious outboard engine, it meant we've been able to spend more time with Coco
and Arnaud our very special young French friends. Plus the day after
Coco's birthday we wake to find the bay full of dancing
dolphins. Despite the water being rather murky and full of
stinging micro organisms it's worth ignoring it to be able to swim with dolpins
for an hour. They stayed with us all day, so much so the children found
the spectical really rather dull with in a few hours. Taking a dinghy was
really rather excillerating being chased by these incredibly fast agile
mammals.
So the day started with Dolphins and
then we where treated to a treasure of a trip in search of hidden
Petrogliphs, Dudu and Tafeta were completely wonderful driving us and
talking about many of the histories of the island. By the time we left we
had eaten well where loaded with more regimes of banana's than Waitross sells in
a week and the proud owner of many beautiful bead and bone jewels all given to
us as friends.
Dolphins around the boat in their
hundreds. Gave a display of jumping and twisting like we have never seen
before.

We take a tour up to the petroglyphs
which we would never have found if we had not been with DuDu (an old French dude
who has settled in Marquesas for 20 years) and Tafeta who led the way into the
jungle up an unmarked path. Lots of tales of Marquesian history from Dudu
who interestingly said that mostly the local people do not show an interest in
their history - they live for the day and dont look back or forward. This
is very much in our understanding when we had been told that Marquesians start
the year with an empty freezer, then fill it and fill it until it is full.
then they eat fresh meat and fish for a year until it is time to defrost the
freezer, when they just feed it all to the pigs, and then start to refill
it. Marquesians have a deep fear of not having enough - just look at all
the meals we have had with the table groaning under the weight of food, most of
which remains untouched. So much for not wasint food that could go to the
third world.
Will Colin be brave enough to get one of these? Watch
this blog.....
We where told before we arrived that
you where unable to barter things in the Marquesas anymore! Well this
statement seems to be correct all we seem to be experience is things being given
to us, We'll treasure them forever.
Hanamoenoa - Deserted Bay
on North Tahuata
For a bit of a break, and the
weekend, we pottered up to the North East of the island to a deserted bay with a
single coconut tree.
Playing chicken
in the dinghy with a huge water spout
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