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Destination:
VANUATU
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Untouched paradise
Vanuatu, a South Pacific country formerly known as the New Hebrides,
is an archipelago of 83 islands about 800 km west of Fiji and
about three times as far northeast of Australia.
It has all the attributes we in the West think of in the
South Pacific: long, empty beaches; the purest white sand; coral
atolls fuzzy with coconut palms; ferocious-looking (but friendly)
males; sultry females; warm weather year-round ....
Vanuatu has all that. But it has more: rugged volcanic landscapes,
dense tropical rainforests, relics from the Second World War,
all in a natural environment that will be a dream for ecology-loving
tourists.
And there aren't many tourists - only about 50,000 tourists
a year - because of the distance. That's one of the reasons you
should go there now, before it gets too crowded and too spoiled,
as it well might.
Surely, like many people, you've dreamed of leaving the
rat race, escaping to the South Pacific and finding your own island
- at least, an island you wouldn't have to share with many others!
Surely you've dreamed of an idyllic existence; of living
in a thatched hut, near water teeming with fish or under trees
loaded with fruit; perhaps of living like Paul Gauguin, painting
the natives whenever you felt like it or doing little else when
you felt like that, too.
Actually, there's much to do in Vanuatu - snorkelling, diving,
sightseeing, swimming, some shopping, trekking, boating, visiting
volcanoes ... how could I ever forget flying over one of them
at night, looking down from the tiny Vanair plane into a fiery
red mouth spitting ashes and lava into the air?
But those are just the normal pursuits. In Vanuatu you can
also seek out wild horses, dive into sunken warships, practise
Bislama, the pidgin English that's the common language among 115
different languages, and explore age-old villages full of cargo
cult followers.
What's a cargo cult? It's centred on the belief that ancestors
or gods will return bearing huge cargos of western goods - like
the first Europeans did in the last century.
One village worships a Coke machine that's been empty for
50 years; another thinks Prince Charles will come and marry one
of their women, bringing many presents, of course.
It struck me as fascinating.
For another reason, so did Efate, the island with Vanuatu's
capital, Vila.
Wandering around its bayfront main street; through its 24-hour
fish, fruit and veggie market, also on the waterfront; up and
down this hilly, small town; in and out of its museum-cultural
centre, I sometimes thought I was back in Canada.
I was struck by the unusual number of signs in French and
English, and initially I thought the signs were for the tourists.
But I was wrong. They were a remnant of the old administration,
in which the French and the English shared administrative power.
This unusual arrangement ended in 1980, when Vanuatu became
independent. But many of the country's 160,000 Melanesian residents
still are bilingual. In fact, they're quadrilingual if you count
their tribal language and the pidgin English, sometimes phonetic.
One brand of beer, for example, is called Nambawan (number 1).
So, as you can see, a good translator might come in handy.
The French-English years, which included those of the Second
World War, when the Japanese and the Allies fought each other
all over the South Pacific, including Vanuatu, have left behind
a host of fascinating tales.
BOTTOM LINE:
GETTING THERE: You go to Fiji
on Air Pacific, a 10-hour flight from Los Angeles, or later this
year, from Vancouver. Then it's a two-hour flight on Air Vanuatu to
Vila. Vanuatu is a member of the Commonwealth, so Canadians don't
need a visa. No vaccinations are required, either.
MORE
INFO: Contact the National Tourism Office of Vanuatu, Ground
Floor, Lolam House, PO Box 209, Vila, Vanuatu, South Pacific. Fax:
(678) 23-889.
CURRENCY: $1 Cdn equals 80 vatu.
DEPARTURE TAX: 2,000 vatus.
VOLTAGE:
220-280, with three-point plugs.
BEST HOTEL IN PORT
VILA: Le Meridien, but there are others, in other islands as
well.
www.Summer Holiday.info
www.Vacaciones de Invierno.net