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Tahiti Vacation : French
Polinesia
Tahiti, known as “The Gathering Place”,
is the largest and most populated island, and is the
starting point for all international travelers. International
flights l and at Faa’a Airport in the capital
city of Papeete. Upon arrival, visitors receive a typical
Tahitian display of hospitality – a memorable
welcome with fragrant Tiare flowers and Tahitian music.
Tahiti is a figure-eight shaped island with a larger
part, known as Tahiti Nui (which means big) and a smaller
part called Tahiti Iti (little). With lush green peaks
reaching more than 7,300 feet, its scenery is dramatic.
Cascading waterfalls and rippling pools in the junglelike
interior provide a striking contrast to the black and
white sand beaches and turquoise lagoons of the island’s
perimeter. A circle island tour (about 70 miles) is
a great way to get acquainted with the island, including
highlights at the Tahiti and Her Islands Museum, the
Paul Gauguin Art Museum and Botanical Gardens and the
Marae Arahurahu (an ancient Tahitian outdoor temple).
In the center of town, Le Marché, the municipal
market, is not to be missed. The first floor of this
indoor market has an abundant supply of tropical fruits
and vegetables and fresh fish from the lagoon. The second
floor is dedicated to Tahitian art and crafts, and boasts
the largest selection of colorful pareus (sarongs) anywhere.
The mystique of a Tahiti vacation as a tropical island
paradise began when the first European visitors returned
to their countries with glowing reports of a gentle
climate, friendly natives, abundant food and uninhibited
love under the swaying palms. Bouganville, Cook, the
Bounty mutineers and even the missionaries helped to
perpetuate this image.
Poets, painters, writers, whalers, traders, beachcombers,
drifters, seamen, voyagers, explorers, adventurers,
filmmakers and South Seas characters spread the fame
of Tahiti far and wide. The legend of Tahiti as an earthly
paradise has filled a void for many dreamers for over
200 years.
The Maohi ancestors of today's Polynesians were well-established
in Tahiti and all the neighboring islands. The Marquesan
island of Ua Huka contains an archaeological site dating
from 300 A.D. Research reveals evidence of man's presence
in Huahine as early as 850 A.D. Historians believe the
Polynesians may have originated in Indonesia and spread
eastward in two great waves as a result of population
pressures.
Although the origin of the Polynesian people is still
unclear, they believed themselves to be direct descendants
of the Sky-father and the Earth-mother. Tahitian oral
history tells of Ta'aroa, a benevolent god who created
an entire retinue of gods and demi-gods, who were in
constant communication with man.
Long before Captain Samuel Wallis sailed into Tahiti's
Matavai Bay in 1767 and claimed the island for the King
of England, Tahiti was settled by a dynasty of Maohi
kings, the Hui Arii. Polynesian society was in full
power in Tahiti when nomad tribes were still wandering
and fighting throughout Europe. In addition to the colorful
myths and legends of gods and heroes, the Tahitians
had a well-developed hierarchy of social and religious
chiefs, well-defined customs, a complicated code of
court etiquette, sophisticated dances and drama and
high standards of craftsmanship.
In this age of jet travel, the possibility of escaping
to the romantic South Seas has become a reality for
voyagers from many countries. Tahiti and Her Islands
still hold the enchantment that mesmerized Melville,
Darwin, Zane Grey, Somerset Maugham and Nordhoff and
Hall.
Tahiti is still a place of romance, legend and magic.
Visitors can still enjoy landfalls unchanged since the
voyage of the great navigators; beaches and turquoise
waters as beautiful as Robert Louis Stevenson observed
from his yacht; welcoming faces and colors as vivid
as Paul Gauguin painted them. And such exquisite beauty
that even the most taciturn of visitors agree that Tahiti
is a state of mind.
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