Tahiti is part of French Polynesia
(meaning many islands). The island’s
population is 130,000 and the population of all of French Polynesia is 230,000.
Papeete is the main shipping and distribution center of Tahiti. The port
facilities were expanded in the 1960’s. Between 1962-64 nearly 35 acres of land
was reclaimed at the northern end of the harbor and is now an industrial and
military area.
Polynesia
geographically is the largest of the Pacific’s culture areas and distances
between island groups is great. Polynesia lies mostly below the equator and
includes the Hawaiian, Cook, Society, and Easter Islands as well as Samoa,
Tonga, and the Marquesas. Fiji is borderline between Polynesia and Melanesia.
Moorea, 16 miles
across the bay, has a land mass of 50 square miles. Nine of the Tahiti’s
islands are volcanic and five are atolls. Mt. Orohena towers 7321 feet above
sea level and is Tahiti’s highest point. Mt.Tohivea on Moorea is 3975 feet.
Papeete’s
streets were crowded with sport cars, motor bikes and the island’s cheap,
public, picturesque transport, les truck.
Many of the
Society Islands as well as Rarotonga in the Cook Islands are high volcanic
islands. Volcanic islands are usually surrounded by fringing reefs varying from
a few to several hundred yards from the shoreline. These areas most often offer
good fishing and the fringing reefs are essentials for the formation of coral
atolls.
Shallow, clear,
warm salt water allow both coral and calcareous algae to thrive and eventually
build a reef. The coral can reach extreme depths. In the 1950’s holes were
drilled to a depth of 4222 and 4600 feet through the coral on Enewetak in the
northern Marshall Islands.
Tahiti’s islands
are divided into two groups; the five windward islands include Tahiti and
Moorea, the nine leeward islands include Bora Bora. French Polynesia is the
farthest East of all the South Pacific Islands. The climate is warm all year
and being consistent makes it an anytime paradise.
Indigenous
Polynesians represent 70% of the population, those of French extraction 15%,
mixed Polynesians and French 8%, and Chinese 7%. One half of the population is
Protestant. The French are mostly Catholic. Education is compulsory until age
14 and is free in small neighborhood government schools.
The main islands
of Tahiti, Moorea, and Bora Bora have one road around the perimeter of the
island. There are no roads over the mountains. The thatched roofs last about
8-10 years. I noted many metal roofs which of course last much longer. The
houses were small and almost without exception on the mountain side of the
road. The road tends to follow the coastline and there is very little land
between the road and the water. The houses are often strung out side by side in
a single row, and not clustered together, as again there is not a lot of land
at the base of the mountains. The mail boxes along the side of the road are for
the daily delivery of French bread, not mail. The north shore has a cold
current, therefore very little coral and is good surfing with good waves. Small
concrete markers are every kilometer along the road and the number
indicates how many kilometers it is from
the court house in town, making finding addresses easy.
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