Category Archives: Fiji

Lao Group Island Tour: Part I

The Lao group consists of about 25 islands surrounded by reefs.  Entering through passes in the reef to access the interior of the lagoon can be “easy to very difficult” depending on the island, number of passes, tides, winds, current, lagoon size, etc…

The Lao Group (both Northern and Southern) are in very remote areas and far away from the tourist track.  However, they have become a very popular cruiser destination.  There is good fishing, great diving, rich cultural experiences, and beautiful scenery.  

The Fijians in this region follow a subsistence lifestyle not greatly different than their ancestors.  There are rarely different races in the outer islands.  In addition, land is rarely changes ownership from its original indigenous ownership.

The outer island life is very simple, and the people are poor in material terms, but rich in so many others.  Most villages have a small store, but it is rarely full and often empty waiting for the supply ship (which comes once per month).  There is no wifi in the Southern Lau and very little wifi in the Northern Lao.

This group of islands differs from the Tuamotus in French Polynesia in that they typically have islands inside the reef. In the Tuamotus, they had islands on the reef and rarely inhabited islands in the center.

Lau Group Tour

Wayne wanted to see the outer islands in the Lau Group which spread across hundreds of miles.  Unfortunately, our sail plan is dictated by the weather which typically has winds from SE.  Making going East or SE very challenging.

As you know, we picked up Wayne in Vanua Levu, Savusavu.  After spending a few days here, we got a light weather window to make a short passage.  So, we took him NE to Taveuni.  It was a short passage of about 40-45nm. 

We picked up a mooring at the Paradise Taveuni Resort and went ashore to enjoy sunset by the pool.  They allow cruisers to come enjoy the resort services including the beautiful, negative edge pool.

The sunset took our breath away.  Here are some photos of the sunset lighting up the anchorage.

Then the colors shifted and created a rainbow of colors in the sky.

Matt got a little artsy behind a bench and the effect is fabulous.

We stayed here two nights and allowed Wayne to get his sea legs.  But it was time to leave as the weather was perfect to make a bee line for the Southern Lao Group.

Southern Lao Group

Ideally, we would have sailed to the Northern Lao Group, then slowly make our way down south.  This is a much easier jump off point to Kadavu, then Viti Levu the island where we will drop him off.  But the weather would not allow this sail plan. So, we will make a figure 8.  We will sail South, then back up North, then back down South, then west.  Sound like fun?

Our trip from Taveuni to Ogea is about 165nm and is an overnight passage.  We left around 0800 from Taveuni and enjoyed a nice and easy sail for the first 5 hours!  Then fish on!  The boys had 3 lines out and a teaser line.  As luck would have it, the largest lure caught the fish.  We all rushed to bring in the other 3 lines, slowed the boat down (we were doing 8-9kts and had to slow it down to 2-3kts).  Wayne started bringing in the fish, but tired after 20 minutes of fighting with the beast.  Matt took over for 10-12 minutes, then handed the reel back to Wayne.

He brought in a 60kilo, 1.5-meter yellow fin tuna!  He was a fighter!

Before he took his last breath, he gave Wayne one more present…a leg full of pee (see upper right photo).  He was a beast and will feed many, many people!

The boys have some fun with Charlie before he was cleaned.

It took 3 of us, 3 hours to clean and stow this bad boy.  He filled up our 40liter Engle freezer!

Trip Details (Taveuni to Ogea)

Our next destination was Southern Lao Group, specifically Ogea.  

  • Total Miles: 165nm
  • Passage Time: 24 hours (hook to hook)
  • Max Speed: 11.2kt
  • Average Speed: 6.8kt

Ogea (pronounced Ongea)

Ogea is a rather large island with a few places to anchor.  We found a super beautiful, albeit shallow bay and had it all to ourselves for most of the day.  Our friends on Scooter came in and anchored later that afternoon.

The next morning, we all made the hike to the village to do our sevusevu (offering to the chief in exchange for permission to anchor in his waters and visit his village).  The place to catch the path to the village is tricky to find.  Lucky for us we had a way point and found it behind a large rock.  The tide varies about 1.5m each day so we came in at high tide and returned to very low tide.

The path is a mixture of rocks and dirt.  Lots of critters around to entertain us.The Ogea village has about 80 people currently living there.  We came during low tide and the town was flooded.  Some of the water came up and over the ill built sea wall, but the majority of it came up through the ground which was limestone.  It was so unfortunate as most houses sit slightly over the water, but the path to and from the houses are across 1-6” of water.

This is a photo taken after church as villagers were making their way back home.

Our host, Lolo invited us to church, which is obligatory, so we accepted.  We donned our sulus (like sarongs) and headed to church.  The drums (upper right corner) are played 15 minutes prior to church and then 5 minutes prior.

The primary school is absolutely lovely!  They have math equations on each side of a cement water well (bottom right), and beautiful words on each pillar (upper right).  They teach this at a young age which is truly why Fijians are such friendly, generous, and kind people.

The Chief

Usually the chief’s are fairly welcoming and happy to see cruisers as we come with gifts.  However, this chief seemed rather perturbed that we were interrupting his carving and even “barked/yelled” at a little girl making her cry.  Not sure what was going on, maybe just an “off day.”  None the less, our headman “too ranga nee koro” proceeded with the short ceremony, presented our kava and gift of tuna, and welcomed us into the village.  The chief is the master carver of the village and even his tikis are a little grumpy.

Carvings from the Chief

Carvings from the Chief

Our host, Lolo then took us around the village, showing us the church, the school, and the path to a different anchorage.  We ended up walking across many dry lands which are typically covered in 1m of water.  Global warming is taking its toll in Fiji!

Exploring Ogea

Exploring Ogea

We act a wee bit goofy holding up rocks.

On the way back, another local named “Mess” was kind enough to give us each a coconut.  This was well received as it was super-hot and a long walk back to the dinghy (45-minute hike).  As you can see the tide went out again so the dinghy was grounded.  Luckily we took Scooter’s dinghy which is a lot lighter than our girl Sweetie.

On our last night, we decided to do a beach BBQ with Scooter (Thomas and Marieke).  Matt grilled some tuna, and Thomas prepared some tasty potatoes.  Super pretty views.

Beach BBQ

Beach BBQ

Ogea Lovo

After Sunday service, our host family put on a lovo and provided a massive feast for us. We were so surprised by the amount of food!

Lovo with our Host Family

Lovo with our Host Family

Tons of food, fish, taro and cassava (starch like potatoes), noodles, and more.

A super friendly cat kept us entertained.

The top photo is our host with our group and the bottom photo is Humberto who has become an official Fijian.

An excellent way to end our time in Ogea!  Tomorrow we head to Yagasa.

Yagasa (pronounced Yangasa)

Yagasa is an uninhabited island in the Lao Group frequently visited by locals from neighboring islands for fishing.   There is no way to go to shore unless you have rock climbing gear and know how to repel up the cliff.  There is a Boobie bird colony on the towering hillside by our anchorage.

But the anchorage is peaceful, calm, and beautiful.  The birds sing to us periodically, and make great bird watching.

Lakeba (pronounced Lakemba)

Lakeba is the “capitol” island of the Lao group.  We did not stop in the main village because the pass is precarious at best.  Instead we anchored in a small “indent” in the reef.  At first, I thought it would not be very protected, but as it turned out we had a lovely evening at the base of an enormous, lush and well populated bird mountainside.

We thought we were being stealth by coming here with the hopes of getting internet.  We were able to get internet two different times when we sailed past the island.  However, our lovely mountainside blocked the signal and we had zero connectivity while anchored here.  Good thing we were only here for one night.

Stay tuned for Part II of our Figure 8 tour around the Lao group.

Events from this blog occurred in the first two weeks of July.  Our blog posts run 8-10 weeks behind actual events.   In our last blog, we take Wayne on a tour of Savusavu.

Savusavu Tour

We decided it would be best to see the island with an official Savusavu Island Tour.  Matt, Wayne and I hire a local guide, Alla and a taxi driver to takes us around to some of the key sites of the island of Vanua Liti.

Our first stop is the natural hot springs where many residents of Savusavu prepare their meals.  You can cook an egg in less than 2 minutes, boil soup, cook chicken and oh so much more.  They keep large plastic tarps near the edge of the hot springs so you can heat or steam your food.

Pearl Production

Our next stop was the J Hunter Pearls of Fiji.  We did not take an official tour, but we did peak around the facility where they clean the oyster shells, graft, and do some carving. Nothing on the same scale as French Polynesia.

It was super interesting to see the different colors in Fiji.  They tend to produce white, off white, yellow, gold, and pink colors vs the dark colored pearls of French Poly.

In my opinion, the pearls were ridiculously expensive and a far lower quality than what I am used to seeing.

Copra Plantation

Originally, I was not too excited to see a copra plantation as we had seen so many in French Polynesia.  But what this really turned out to be was a coconut oil plant.  They make a variety of coconut oil including extra virgin, cooking, and beauty oil.

First, they manually husk the coconuts and separate them into batches. Talk about hard labor!  Then they dry them using large wood burning ovens.  The Polynesians just laid them out in the sun for weeks to dry them!

Once they are dried, they separate them yet again and prepare them for squishing.  Yes, I climbed on the top!

We visited the oil making divisions and boy was the floor slippery 🙂

Urata Overlook

We pass by a small village that has the most beautiful view!

Vuadomo Village and Waterfall

Today we will see two waterfalls.  The first one is at the Vuadomo village.  We must pay homage to the chief but he is out for the day.  So, we visit his wife who works at a small artisan market.

The waterfall is not super tall, but it is wide.  We happen to visit when two other vans pull up which sort of stinks. 

But we were the only ones who actually got in the fresh, cold water so we had the pools and falls to ourselves. 

Nagawaga Falls

Our next visit was the Nagawaga Waterfall.  We pay a quick trip to the chief of the lands and head to the path.  It is a nice 30-minute hike through the forest to get to the secluded waterfall.  This one is a lot taller and super private.  We were the only ones here and I can see why. Parts of the rock side were precariously hanging on to the side of the mountain. 

Savusavu has lots of beautiful flowers growing around this area.

And there was a gorgeous view of the valley and river below.  Savusavu is very green as they get lots of rain.

On the way back we stopped at the Grace Kitchen Farms to pick up some fresh produce.  All in all, it was a fabulous day.

Here is a fun link with descriptions of some of our adventures. 

Events from this blog occurred in early July.  Our blog posts run 8-10 weeks behind actual events.  Did you read about our River Tube and Mud Bath adventure in our last blog?

Adventure River Tubing and Mud Baths

We take an adventure on the first day that Wayne arrives in Fiji.  Sure, he just flew for 24 hours, but why not?  We join some old friends Mani & Thomas (Scooter), Andreas (Pico) and new friends Olivia (Juniper), Holly (Gecko), Natasha (chef at Surf and Turf), and tour operators Sharon Wild and Sami.

We pile into a large 5-ton truck with benches and tarps over the cage siding.  Really loud and bumpy ride, but fun none the less.  The tubes followed in a separate truck.

The tarp was down so we could only see the view from the back.  What we could see was super lovely.

And it just kept getting better as we went up the mountain side.

We all grab our tubes and make our way to the Nagawaga River’s edge.  We were unsure as to whether or not we would be able to tube because it had been raining all day.  Sharon, our guide, said that we may have to abort due to rapids and debris.  But, lucky for us the river was perfect!  The river was super lazy and slow with very minor rapids in a few places.

Nagawaga Fresh water

It is a fresh water river that runs through the forest.  It is a wee bit chilly!

We had a great time goofing around.

At one point, we started a long train down the river (even across a few rapids and a corner in the river).

Everything was so lush and green!  We even saw a cow enjoying his lunch by the river.

We end with lunch on the river’s edge.

Several of us wore wet suits in preparation of the cold water.  I was super comfortable with what I wore even though I look like the Michelin Man in black.  Matt and Wayne only wore t-shirts and shorts – not sure how they did it!

Hot Springs and Mud Bath

Sharon, our guide, took us to a super cool hot spring / mud bath.  We all gingerly climbed in as it was pretty warm (jacuzzi warm).  As you moved around the muddy pool (which had clear water even though it looks brown), you find little pockets or holes where the heat rises from.  It gives you toasty toes.

The ladies give each other a super mud facial to cleanse our skin.

What a spectacular day we had tubing down the fresh water river through the forest.  The hot springs and mud bath were the toping on the day!

Events from this blog occurred in early July.  Our blog posts run 10-12 weeks behind actual events. We sail from Southern Lao to Savusavu in our last blog post