Return to the Blue Lagoon Beach Resort (Nacula Island, Fiji)

September 14 – 19, 2015

Blue Lagoon Beach Resort anchorage. Click image for larger version.
Blue Lagoon Beach Resort anchorage. Click image for larger version.

After doing the Sawa-i-Lau cave, we headed back to our favorite anchorage at the Blue Lagoon Beach Resort. This place has it all: beautiful scenery, a resort with a great restaurant, a dive shop, great snorkeling, scenic hiking, good protection from the wind, a sand bottom for easy anchoring, lots of activities, and the endlessly-entertaining sea plane. We like every place we’ve been in this general area, but the BLR anchorage is our favorite and feels like home. (Click to enlarge and scroll photos below).

And below, some more pictures we found on our other camera…

Dinner at Blue Lagoon Beach Resort. Yum!
A curry feast at Blue Lagoon Beach Resort. Yum!

We did two dives with the shop: The Crazy Maze and the Nalova Pass. The Crazy Maze has a lot of swim-throughs, canyons and tunnels, and the Navola Pass has lots of coral, tons of fish, and sea turtles. Both were wonderful dives and well worth doing.

(Just a note: None of the dives we’ve done on the west side have been in the same league with the dives on the eastern side of Fiji, but they’re still terrific dives.)

After the dives, a couple of wonderful meals ashore, and a long hike (see next post), we felt we’d done all we wanted to do here. Not that we wouldn’t have been happy to sit there forever, but we were starting to run out of provisions. With a week of cloudy weather coming, we decided this would be a good time to return to the marina and restock our food, wine, propane, clean laundry, etc. It was time to head back south. -Cyndi

Caves at Sawa-I-Lau Island

September 14, 2015

We made it! Despite a turn in the weather for the windy, we headed back to Sawa-I-Lau Island (Yasawa Islands, Fiji) for the cave tour that Cyndi was not willing to pass up (and I’m so glad she was determined!).

Below, a gallery of photos from our time at the cave; you can click to enlarge and scroll through them.

Here are some of the details…


Click to zoom or pan the Google map above. Click on the markers to see what they are.

Even if you come into the bay in your own boat, there’s still a $20 Fiji per person charge, plus another $20 for the two guides that lead you through caves ($60 Fiji total for the two of us). You also need to do a bit of an abbreviated sevusevu – you present your kava to the guy who greets you on the beach when you land and he does somewhat of a ceremony.

Warning: the caves are not part of the village that’s prominent when you’re anchored in the bay. If you do sevusevu at that village, it’s possible you may still need to present your kava to the guardians of the cave.  (Note from Cyndi:  We’re not sure about this, but our friends might be putting this to the test so we’ll find out what happens.)

There are two areas to the cave structure (or more, but we were shown two). You descend a rusty stairway into the water of the open-topped first pool. We took masks and snorkels but not fins. Fins might have been handy to get into the second area, but they would have also stirred up the bottom and might ruin it for others. The water is salt water and about the same temperature as the bay. It’s very clear and we really enjoyed swiming around the small pool and taking in the sights.

The second cave area is through an underwater passageway. The guide told us we’d have to hold our breath for 2 seconds. He lied. It was more like 15 to 30 depending on where you come up. Watch your head! (I always swim through things like this upside down, facing up, so I can see what my head might otherwise run into.)

If you don’t want to do the underwater swim into the inner cave, don’t worry. You’re not missing anything life-altering. It’s fun, but assess the risk-reward ratio for yourself.

The inner cave is small and dark. The guide has a flashlight and that’s almost the only light in there. There’s a chimney to open air and light at one end. You can look back once you’re in the cave and the light coming in from the swim-through is really pretty. The guides seem to think that the “1 – 2 – 3 yell Bula!” game is pretty fun. The duration of the echo is pretty neat.

We saw no fish in either cave. We’d heard tales of sea lice and both of us had an unexplained little round cut – sea lice? We may never know. We didn’t see them and with what we’d heard, we tried to avoid touching the walls and bottom as much as possible.

All the nearby resorts bring guests to the cave. It can get a bit crowded. We went about an hour before the noon closing time and were mostly going in as the last tour group was coming out. The disadvantage is that the guide was cold and eager to finish for the day. Maybe right at the 9:00 AM opening time – before tour groups arrive would be better. Cruise ships also visit. I wouldn’t want to see that crowd!

All in all, this was a fun thing to do and we felt it was well worth the money. It might be one of those life experiences that seeps through my golden years dementia. I feel sorry for anyone around me that has to hear about it for the ten thousandth time! -Rich

Gorgeous Makalati Bay (Nacula Island, Fiji)

September 12 & 13, 2015

We made the 5-mile trip to Malakati Bay in 20-plus knot winds. It was a bit of a wet ride in spite of all the land protection we had, but it was worth it.

As we headed into the bay, I could see our friends weren’t exaggerating: this has got to be one of the most beautiful bays in Fiji. The water was a clear bright blue, the white palm-lined beaches postcard-worthy, and the tall hills surrounding this bay providing beauty and good protection. I think most cruisers never come here, and I can’t imagine why. I’d never heard of Malakati before researching our cruise to the Yasawas, and I’m surprised it’s not one of the “destination” bays in Fiji.  (Click to enlarge photos.)

malakati-1

malakati-2

malakati-3

Below is a gallery of photos of the amazingly beautiful beach and clear water at Malakati Bay. Click to enlarge and scroll.

There is a village here, and we needed to do a sevusevu. We went in with our friends and made our kava presentation with the interim chief (the main chief was away) who was very low key, just doing it right where he sat while we stood and watched. The village was lovely, but wanting to avoid getting strong-armed into going to church, we left fairly quickly. Bright Angel stayed behind to look around the village; so church the next day was inevitable for them.

The next afternoon was one of those glorious sunny, clear days and would have been perfect for going back up to the cave, but we assumed it was closed on Sunday. With that, we enjoyed snorkeling (which was excellent), swimming, and beach combing while everyone else was in church.

The next day, we planned to head back up to Sawa-i-Lau to do the cave tour, then head back to our Blue Lagoon Resort anchorage with plans to do some diving. –Cyndi

Namataya Bay on Yasawa Island (Fiji)

September 12, 2015

After fleeing the surprise winds at Sawa-i-Lau, we ended up going to an anchorage on the west side of Yasawa Island: Namataya Bay. The anchorage is formed by a long peninsula that reaches out from the southwest tip of the island, its northerly angle creating a huge bay. The area along shore is reef-strewn, but in between the reefs are a few spots where a boat might anchor and get some protection. In today’s winds, it took going all the way to the very innermost corner to get out of them.

We dropped our anchor into pretty blue water with a sand bottom, just far enough away from a finger of reef to be safe, yet close enough we could swim over and snorkel. This area looked familiar, like some of the places we visited in the Sea of Cortez in Mexico. The hills were so dry I’d pretty much call this a desert, and it has that same remote Baja feeling. There were a several beaches amid the headlands, but many had coral shelves, making them hard to reach.

We settled in and had some lunch, then planned to go snorkeling at the promising-looking reef nearby. Then the winds picked up more, putting some chop in the water, and the idea lost its appeal. In fact listening to the wind blowing through the rigging in this large desert bay made the place feel so remote that I felt a little uncomfortable. I imagine other people would love it for exactly this remoteness, but it made me uneasy.

We got a call from our friends on Bright Angel saying Malakati Bay (on Nacula Island just south of us) was absolutely beautiful with blinding white beaches, palm trees, bright blue water, and so well protected there was almost no wind. It sounded a lot more appealing than where we were, but the wind was blowing a good 20 knots; so we figured we’d stay put for the night. Then Linda e-mailed us a picture. We both said to each other, “Well, we could leave now . . . ” It didn’t take long before we were pulling up our anchor and heading away.

At the entrance to Namataya Bay we passed a small island (Vawa Island) that was on fire, adding to the strange (and for me almost creepy) feeling of this place. I could see all the way up the long, dry and windswept coastline of Yasawa, and I lost all interest in exploring this island further. With just this anchorage, we had already gone further north in the Yasawas than most cruisers ever go. There didn’t seem to be much reason to go further. –Cyndi