Making Friends With Musket Cove, Part Three (Malolo and Malolo Lailai, Fiji)

July 7 – 13, 2015

It didn’t take long for us to discover that there is something really special about Musket Cove. It’s not the things people usually talk about (the bar, the grills, the poolside restaurant, the cafe, the social scene). It is, in fact, the evenings: no place does sunset better than Musket Cove. I don’t know if it’s the way it’s angled to the sun, the light haze from burning sugarcane on the main island, or some other factor, but as the sun starts to head for the horizon, the place just becomes magical.

One of our favorite ways to spend an evening here is to go ashore to the island bar, order a drink, and sit somewhere in the area outside it (I especially like the fire pit) to enjoy the warm air and beautiful evening light.

Musket Cove. Click image to enlarge.
Musket Cove. Click image to enlarge.

Then it’s time to take a walk along the palm-lined path that runs between the beach and the resort’s bungalows. At this point the evening often takes on a golden hue, and there is just something about walking on this soft sand path lined with large palm trees that brings out the contented sighs, a feeling that moments don’t get much better than this.

Soon, we arrive at Dick’s Place, the resort’s poolside restaurant. We sit outside on the deck that surrounds the pool and enjoy a drink while we enjoy the surroundings. It doesn’t matter at this point if the tide is high or low–it’s beautiful either way. The oranges, yellows and pink hues of the setting sun make a spectacular backdrop behind the large palm trees along the beach, spaced widely enough so there’s a clear view of the bay in the distance.

As the night deepens, candles are lit at the tables, and it’s time to order dinner. The food here happens to be pretty terrific, and while it’s not cheap, it does make for a special evening out. –Cyndi (Click to enlarge/scroll in galleries above and below)

Musket Cove, Fiji. Click image to enlarge.
Musket Cove, Fiji. Click image to enlarge.

Making Friends With Musket Cove, Part Two (Malolo and Malolo Lailai, Fiji)

July 7 – 13, 2015

Musket Cove is so popular that some cruisers like to base themselves there for the season, which ended up creating some issues this season. The main problem lies in the fact that there are only 25 or so moorings, which aren’t nearly enough. The leftover free area is an anchorage, but it’s deep. When you have a lot of boats in a deep anchorage, it’s inevitable that most of them don’t put out the proper amount of scope (anchor chain), which makes things unsafe for everyone.

The other issue is that this area is prone to having windy afternoons. Those at the moorings will have a rather wet dinghy ride to and fro. Those further out in the anchorage will often get soaked. The moorings do cost money, but if you’re on one you’ll have a much shorter ride ashore, and you can feel confident about leaving your boat unattended when those winds get going. Naturally most people would much prefer a mooring.

It seems the powers that be got the idea that it might be nice to allow some cruisers to rent particular moorings for the season. As far as I understand, this meant that while the renters were here; they got the mooring, but when they went off cruising to other places, Musket Cove could go ahead and rent the mooring out until they came back.

This seems like a workable idea in theory, but there’s a major fly in this ointment. Namely, it’s that people generally don’t know exactly when they’re coming back. It depends on the weather, and a two-week trip can quickly turn into a 2-day trip, or vice versa. No one wants to come back and to find a boat on their mooring, either because the owners might be ashore or worse, just won’t move (some cruisers behave very badly when it comes to vacating a spot). It’s easier just to attach a buoy with your name on it to the mooring and “forget” to tell the office you’re leaving. The result is a slew of empty moorings that can’t be rented and a full anchorage.

Meanwhile, a small group on the front moorings (closest to the resort) had formed what I call the Musket Cove Mooring Cartel. The cartel had a kingpin, a very popular and influential boater in these parts, and his neighbors would guard his mooring like a hawk, yelling out to anyone picking it up, “That’s so-and-so’s mooring! You can’t be on that!”

One windy afternoon some friends of ours arrived. They had gone to several moorings, two of which were unmarked but a worker rushed out to make sure they didn’t pick either up because they “belonged to someone.” Finally the office, knowing the kingpin was gone awhile, granted our friends his mooring just for the night. Sure enough, the neighbor came out and yelled, not really caring that Musket Cove had granted them the mooring.

Things came to a head a few days later. Conditions had gotten windier, and people were coming back to get on their moorings. Someone picked up the kingpin’s mooring. The neighbor yelled, but they wouldn’t leave, saying no, this was their mooring. It seems two boats had rented the same mooring for the season, and somehow had not yet been there at the same time. In came the kingpin, and soon began The Big Fiji Catfight of 2015, which took place on the VHF radio for all to hear. The kingpin demanded his mooring. The other boat would not back down. Things escalated, and the lady in charge was called. Amazingly, she backed the first boat and told the kingpin that, in fact, this was not his mooring.

This was one of those tense moments where everyone knows the shit is about to hit the fan, and hit the fan it did! You do not tell the kingpin that he cannot have his mooring! A tirade ensued, which probably reverberated throughout Fiji. Someone actually offered to move so the kingpin could have a good mooring, maybe afraid this incident might upset the status quo. But it was too late: the kingpin had lost his temper. He anchored long enough to (I assume) get the refund he demanded; then left, probably for good.

In the end, I don’t know how much this incident had to do with it, but this season will be the last for long-term mooring rentals. Maybe without the stresses of managing this situation, the staff will be more easygoing? Who knows.

Meanwhile, we went ashore a few more times and found that when the tide is in, the bay is actually really nice. After seeing it at its worst, seeing it at its best was a pleasant surprise. Below, a gallery of photos that sum of the feeling of afternoons at Musket Cove. –Cyndi

Making Friends With Musket Cove, Part One (Malolo and Malolo Lailai, Fiji)

July 7, 2015

Musket Cove is both a major tourist destination and a haven for yachties. In fact, it may well be the number one yachtie destination in the South Pacific. Whether fast-tracking around the globe, cruising as a lifestyle, or anything in between, pretty much every passing cruiser visits Musket Cove.

Musket Cove’s mooring and anchorage area is nestled between two islands joined by a mostly-submerged isthmus. Malolo is the larger, hillier island. Malolo Lailai is much smaller and flatter. They join at an angle which forms a harbor large enough for both a mooring area and an anchorage area.

There are three resorts on Malolo Lailai, but Musket Cove Island Resort is the one that created the famous haven for yachties. It provides the moorings, a small marina, a nice cafe onshore and a poolside restaurant down the beach. There’s also a grocery store, washing machines, and most popular–a thatched roof, open-air bar built on its own little sand island, connected to the resort area by walkway where the boats are docked.

(The larger Malolo Island also has resorts, but nothing within convenient walking distance and not part of the Musket Cove “array.”)

Cruisers love to extol the virtues of this Shangri-La; so we’d been hearing about it for years. One young Aussie man, hearing we’d been to eastern Fiji but not Musket Cove, shook his head and pretty much said if we haven’t been to Musket Cove, we’ve haven’t even begun to see the best of Fiji. Then he did what many male cruisers seem to do: rhapsodize about the grills around the bar where you can cook your own food. What is it about men and these grills? You’d think this was the most amazing thing ever invented! I always feel like informing them that they have just such a device in their own boat galley which can also perform this miracle of heating and preparing food.

I guess it’s just the social aspect of being next to the thatched roof bar, on a beach with other cruisers milling around. The grills used to be wood-burning but have since been replaced with electric grills where you have to drop money in to make them work. You would think this would kill the romance, but no, guys seem just as excited about these magical electric devices that heat meat.

We were excited to finally see the famous Musket Cove, but there was one issue. We were warned and advised before we went that the woman in charge of the moorings could be difficult, someone with whom you should make an effort to “get on her good side.” We’d heard a lot of names used to describe her, none of them very nice. Friends of ours said to just call her, mention their names, and ask if we could reserve a mooring before we came over. We called, and she flatly told that it’s first-come, first-serve only. Fair enough.

We headed over the next day and were thrilled to see a few empty moorings, then let down to see names attached to them. We finally spotted one with no name and grabbed it. We called the office and got the same lady, who proceeded to tell Rich that she had promised this mooring to another American boat. Rich reminded her of what she said yesterday about first-come, first-serve. He had her with that and she knew it; so she angrily said we could stay but had to come in immediately and fill out their forms as she was leaving the office in a few minutes. It was apparent we had not gotten on her good side.

We went ashore and filled out the forms. Meanwhile we found that everyone connected with running the place seemed strangely cranky in that way people get by season’s end in busy tourist hubs. We’ve certainly seen that before, but never in Fiji. In their defense I’d have to say dealing with lots tourists and cruisers can burn anyone out quickly.

After filling out the paperwork, we took a walk around. It didn’t do much to offset our bad first impression. I knew these west islands were much drier than on the east side, but I was still surprised at just how dry they were. There’s greenery provided by palm trees and planted shrubs, but the backdrop is dry, scrub-covered hills. It’s more like a desert oasis than a tropical paradise.

We walked around to take a look at the bay, and it wasn’t love at first sight. The wide arch of the beach was nice, but there’s a huge coral shelf here. When the tide goes out, which it currently had, it looks like a giant mudflat. As I took this in, I noticed a tractor driving across this dried out reef. Thinking back to the Aussie man, I sarcastically thought, “You’re right, my entire life has meant nothing until I saw this tractor on this mudflat.” At this point our impression of Musket Cove was suffering from our inflated expectations.

Below, a gallery from our initial visit to Musket Cove, including a shot of their tractor. As it turned it, we hit it at a bad time. It generally looks much nicer than this, but this post is about our first impression.

We did walk out to the bar area, and found a very simple thatched roof structure over a sand-floor, the only seating choice either the stools along the bar or bench seating along the wall. The area outside was nice, though. I liked the fire pit and the seating carved into the side of a sand mound, but the electric grills seem kind of cheesy.

We walked further out on the island and it was quite nice. An expanse of grass with daybeds shaded by palm trees overlooked the mooring area. So far this little island was the nicest place we’d seen here, which wasn’t saying a lot. Below are some pictures of the bar’s island. –Cyndi

From This to This

July 8, 2015

We went from this evening view in beautiful, wonderful Vuda Marina…

vuda-evening

To this morning’s view in Musket Cove…

musket-morning

Life is good. -Rich


P.S. Here’s where this stuff is on the map. Vuda at the top right, Musket Cove in the lower left. (You can zoom and pan on the fully functional Google map above.)