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Easter |
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Service over, there is an atoll-wide feast on the lawn. On one side the chiefs, the general public sprawled about, and us in another bunch. Fried Taro puree, smoked fishes in banana leaf, fresh coconuts and bananas (not quite a novelty!). The feast however is just symbolic, sure that back home a real feast of rice, pork and turtle awaits.
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Marc is Ifalikese, but has fished on Japanese ships, so he can actually speaks Japanese. He is welcome aboard, someone articulate, polite and curious about things is always a pleasure. We hear the old story of the youths going to work abroad but magically always opting to go back to their remote island...stories of navigators and their magic powers, customs, and even a little gossip on island politics. Chief Manu apparently fell from a cocoanut tree and was never the same since, so other chiefs keep him a bit in check.
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We coast the reef up and down, a big wahoo is on the line, and the kids (me and Marc are the oldest) haul it in among singing shouting and laughing. We follow groups of birds, logs, patches of flotsam to better the chances of swooping a fish from the sea, but for the rest of the day is just sailing as fast as possible, criss crossing with the larger canoes encrusted precariously with whole singing families and bundles of lines. One old man still fishing with the aid of a kite is the lone master of the forgotten technique, and we see him pulling in decent sized catches. I manage to film most of this thanks to Michela's "waterproof" camera which luckily pretended to be well long enough after the experience, to clear me of any responsibility...at least was used for something worthwhile. Days go on with Nobina's fever going on and off, but will be alright. We bathe every evening at a public well, eat, snorkel, deal with the visitors. With a file I resharpen a saw, and with epoxy I fix one of the canoes' pointed bow, which earns me a highly valued meal of boiled chicken in the canoe house with another clan chief and his family. At some point a medium sized cruise ship anchors outside the atoll, and we fear our pace might be shattered. The cruise director is though very nice, paying us a visit right away, inviting us to attend the traditional dances paid for and in honor of the cruise ship clients. Luckily, this sort of cruise ship is a relatively "rough" one: it follows alternative routes through the Pacific with a penance for cultural contact and exploration rather than pointless lascivious luxury. This makes it so that the elderly clients aren't just the average cruise ship gambling fat wobbler, but a special breed of nice old farts that the least are trying their best to get into something a bit unique rather than being just packages to be shipped around. Seeing that they're trying their best at an age where in no way they could get to something like this on their own, we can't hold the stinkpot over there in too much antipathy, also considering that we'd expected to be ignored as a spoiling nuisance, while instead everyone was really courteous and cordial. So much so that we also get invited to have lunch on the cruise ship! (after all ourselves are an unexpected diversion/addition to the 'experience'). We get a quick tour of the ship, us and the chiefs' delegation (still carrying trinkets in the hope of a few last minute sales), but only after a lavish meal with delicacies such as cold soft rinks, fresh salad and tomatoes, hamburgers and even chocolate cake! Pretty fun and interesting experience, even though I wasn't shown the engine room which could have been a true highlight for me. Cecilia also gets to play on a full sized piano (in her sarong and flowery crown), while we get some printouts of the latest weeks worth of world news, a very generic weather forecast, some new sudokus. The day after the ship is gone. Thanks bye bye!
Days go by in a bliss (although sometimes a very crowded busy bliss) that we'd like never to end, but end it must and after a final exchange of gifts (Marc comes by with shells, necklaces after I tried hard to fix a couple hand-held GPSs) we're leaving for Yap, where Andrew and Nobina will catch a flight to the US to go work again on super yachts while Cecilia will strike another mark on her list of historic diving destinations.