Ah, the Cook Islands … great climate, nice people, nice beaches but way too far to get to from the UK.
Just four hours from New Zealand – marvellous!
Just back from a week spent blobbing out on the wonderful beaches and can’t wait to go back – and we will be back, but for longer next time. It was the first flight we’ve taken since arriving here 8 months back and it was almost novel to be on board again.
The island itself is rather nice and somewhat unique amongst tropical islands in as much as everything works well, nobody is on the poverty line, the locals all have some very fertile land (only the islanders can buy it) and since the temperature varies from 22 to 30 degrees all year, nobody is going to freeze to death. Given the amount of fish we saw, the locals can feast on such wonderful stuff as Parrot fish (no, it doesn’t repeat on you) and all kinds of other fruits of the sea for free – my favourite price.
The idea behind the holiday was to give my poor wife a rest from the marathon study-fest she had just undertaken. Yes, it was literally a few weeks of cerebral excercise for her exams (she passed with flying colours of course) and who would argue with a week in paradise?
Would we like to live there? No, but I’d take a couple of months …
This is one of me sitting in the place of the chief at the tribal meeting place (morai). He wasn’t using it, on account of having died a few hundred years back. It was in a stunning location, but it could get a bit draughty there if the wind gets up, as mine tends to after lunch.
We didn’t have far to go from bed to sun bed, as you can see. The marquee at the end is where they serve lunch and in the evening, dinner if it’s warm enough (and it is for about 300 nights a year).
This little chap is a hermit crab, and I added it because it shows off what a smashing camera I’ve bought. He was smaller than my finger nail …
How’s this for a used car showroom?
A nice shot of the grounds at the hotel where we stayed.
This is the beach on the Eastern side of the island – not quite as nice as Muri beach where our hotel was.
This is the inlet (or outlet) where the original Maori boats set sail for New Zealand from, a few hundred years back. It hope they took enough butties with them for the journey, it’s over three hours on a good day by aeroplane.
Some of the buildings were painted nice bright colours. Others, like this one, were like the inside of a sick baby’s nappy.
The main street … well, there’s only two main roads (the inner road and the coast road, both pretty much circumnavigate the island) and this is the busy coast road. It was almost two lanes wide in parts …
Muri Beach, just outside our hotel. Busy as ever …
… and this is the view in the other direction. Emptier than Dubbya’s cranium, but no less interesting.
An arty shot, designed to emphasise the tropical climate by the sharp shadow of the palm tree cast by the bright sun onto the bleached sand and the carefree spirit of the traveller in paradise. I can smell that from here 😉
One of the islands in the lagoon, about a minute or two from our hotel, where the snorkling was superb.
Despite it being winter (no, really) there were plenty of flowers still on show.
Just in case you liked the last shot, here’s a close up.
So, that’s it for now … who knows when we’re going to get another break. Perhaps in July when we go skiing 😉