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French Polynesia travel agents packages deals

Acteon Group

The Actéon Group pertains to the four atolls of Matureivavao, Tenararo, Tenarunga, and Vahanga,  in French Polynesia.

Categories: Acteon Group


Ahe

Ahe Atoll's ring shape is broken by only a single small passage into the lagoon. Ahe Atoll has 441 inhabitants. The only village in Ahe is Tenukupara with approximately 100 inhabitants. It is located on an island in the south side of the Atoll.

Categories: Ahe


Amanu, Tuamotus

Amanu is a uniquely shaped coral atoll that is shaped like an oval. Visitors may arrive by boat or inflatable craft and explore the atoll and enjoy snorkeling in the beautiful lagoon. The villagers of Ikitaki offer visitors a warm welc...

Categories: Amanu Tuamotus


Arue


Categories: Arue


Austral Islands

Straddling the Tropic of Capricorn, the Austral Islands, 600 mi/966 km south of Papeete, enjoy a cooler climate than the rest of French Polynesia. For those looking to get away from the tourist hustle and bustle, this is the place to go. The islands ...

Categories: Austral Islands


Bora Bora

Bora Bora is considered one of the most romantic places anywhere. Dominant from the moment of arrival are majestic Mount Otemanu and Mount Pahia, two towering volcanic peaks of black rock jutting out of the center of the emerald-green island. Often s...

Categories: Bora Bora


Faa'a

Faa'a is located on the island of Tahiti, near Papeete. Faa'a International Airport is located in this commune, as well as the largest luxury resort on the island of Tahiti. Experience traditional Polynesian charm, panoramic views of Moorea o...

Categories: Faa'a


Fakarava

An hour and a half flight from Papeete, rectangular-shaped Fakarava is a charming village, home to most of the atoll's 248 inhabitants. The only other - sort of - settlement (10 people ) is on Tetamanu Motu Islet located opposite the lagoon next to ...

Categories: Fakarava


Gambier Islands

The Gambier Islands are a chain of islands in the South Pacific. The cradle of Polynesian Catholicism in the nineteenth century, these islands hold more than one hundred historical stone buildings from that time period, including churches, convents, ...

Categories: Gambier Islands


Huahine

Less visited than the other Society Islands, Huahine maintains more of the traditional pace of life. There are ancient temples to explore, vanilla plantations to view or drives into the hinterlands in 4-wheel-drive-vans. The coral reefs offshore are...

Categories: Huahine


Mangareva Island

Mangareva is the largest islands in the Gambier Island group in French Polynesia. Mangareva is famous for its pearl farms and visitors have the opportunity to visit the pearl lagoons. There are an array of significant sites on these islands including...

Categories: Mangareva Island


Manihi

Manihi is a string of islets, white sand beaches and palm trees surrounding an emerald lagoon. It was on this atoll that the first South Seas black pearl farm began. The gentle trade winds and forever sunshine create a fairytale ambiance.

Categories: Manihi


Marotiri Islands


Categories: Marotiri Islands


Marquesas

The Marquesas, or Henua Enata (Land of Men), are seemingly lost at the end of the earth. Even now, some of the islands are virtually untouched since the era of European exploration. Their isolation from other lands has created an immense pride among ...

Categories: Marquesas


Marutea Sud

Marutea is a beautiful atoll belonging to the Tuamotu group in French Polynesia. The majority of visitors to the island are those looking for peals or maintaining pearl farms. Visitors have the opportunity to ride a power boat across the lagoon and w...

Categories: Marutea Sud


Mataiva

Mataiva is a beautiful atoll surrounded by clear blue waters and coral. While in the area you are encouraged to visit "Mataiva navel," a small rocky island in the center of the lagoon. Nearby, visitors can visit the Isle of Birds to se...

Categories: Mataiva


Maupiti

Visitors looking for a peaceful vacations spot will  not be disappointed by tranquil Maupiti. The island is in its atoll phase, thus, you will find white sandy beaches, a clear blue lagoon, and nothing but quiet. For picturesque view of the lago...

Categories: Maupiti


Moorea

This magical island is what inspired James Michener to write about mythical "Bali Hai." The rugged mountains rise dramatically from the ocean and stand guard over this lush island that features everything from white sandy beaches to pineapple plantat...

Categories: Moorea


Pukarua

hen viewed from above, Pukarua has a peculiar oval shape of white against a deep blue sea; this land formation is actually composed primarily of coral islets, with splashes of wildlife here and there. The coral outcropping encircles a lagoon. There i...

Categories: Pukarua


Punaauia


Categories: Punaauia


Raiatea

Tahitians believe Raiatea to be the sacred birthplace of their gods and their religious and cultural beginnings. The most important and well-preserved religious site in all of Polynesia is here. It is from these shores that ancient Polynesian explore...

Categories: Raiatea


Raroia


Categories: Raroia


Reao


Categories: Reao


Taha'a

There is a large, protected lagoon around Raiatea and its sister island Taha'a, which produces wonderful beaches and the perfect location for sailing, big game fishing, and diving. Tahaa is only accessible by boat and has little tourism activity,...

Categories: Taha'a


Taha'a Motu Mahana

Enclosed in a common lagoon with Raiatea and accessible only by boat, Taha"a produces about 80% of all vanilla in French Polynesia. Taha"a is the only island in the Society Islands that can be completely circled by ship inside the protected lagoon. W...

Categories: Taha'a Motu Mahana


Taha'a Scenic Cruising

Taha'a, with the rich aroma of vanilla lingering heavily in the air, offers a glimpse of the traditional, tranquil life of the Tahitians. The flower-shaped island's simple beauty is charmed by soft mountain shapes and surrounded by tiny motu with bri...

Categories: Taha'a Scenic Cruising


Tahanea


Categories: Tahanea


Tetiaroa

Tetiaroa is an island in French Polynesia, approximately 30 miles north of Tahiti. Part of the Society Islands, it is best known for Marlon Brando's luxury private island eco-friendly resort. This secluded private island paradise combines environ...

Categories: Tetiaroa


The Islands of Tahiti

The islands of Tahiti, crowned by a circle of majestic peaks, towers over the ocean with a mountainous green interior of deep valleys, clear streams, and high waterfalls. The flat coastal lands are home to fields of tropical flowers and most of the ...

Categories: The Islands of Tahiti


Tikehau

Tikehau, one of the most beautiful atolls in Polynesia, forms an almost unbroken circle, creating a unique ecosystem and the highest preponderance of fish of all the atolls. Here it is possible to discover the true Tuamotu way of life.

Categories: Tikehau


Tuamotu Atolls

The 78 Tuamotu Atolls are green rings of coral reef surrounding a turquoise lagoon, scattered over several hundred miles of the eastern Pacific Ocean. Some main atolls are Rangiroa, Manihi, and Mataiva. Colors seem brighter here and the water is incr...

Categories: Tuamotu Atolls


People come to French Polynesia to live it up in stylish resorts, scuba dive in lagoons teeming with tropical fish, gorge on the unique mix of French and Polynesian cuisine and, basically, experience a little French chic mixed with South Pacific charm.
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French Polynesia


It's surprising how close a visit to French Polynesia comes to fulfilling the ideal of paradise. The islands, which include Bora Bora, Tahiti and Moorea, are still largely quiet and move at a slow pace outside Papeete, Tahiti's busy capital city. The lagoons of French Polynesia are still amazing shades of blue or green; the mountains still rise dramatically above the sea.

And though the residents of French Polynesia may spend more time buzzing around in SUVs than paddling outrigger canoes, they still gather for a Hinano (a local beer) and a song, and many wear flowers in their hair.

But as with most things beautiful, French Polynesia isn't easily had as a travel destination. A (decidedly chic) thatch-roofed bungalow there can cost 70,000 CFP a night or more, and there are few bargains to be found in dining, activities or transportation. However, those who can afford a vacation in the islands of French Polynesia aren't likely to be disappointed. And were it not for the travel price tag, you might be tempted to stay forever.

Must See or Do

Sights—Ancient sites near the village of Maeva on Huahine Nui; Taputapuatea Marae on Raiatea, one of ancient Polynesia's most sacred sites; black pearls and scuba diving on Rangiroa; large ceremonial sites and tiki on Nuku Hiva and Hiva Oa; white-sand beaches and French Polynesian culture on Maupiti; Tiki Theatre Village on Moorea; stunning scenery and a fabulous lagoon on Bora Bora; Tahiti's Papeete Municipal Market.

Museums—The Museum of Tahiti and Her Islands in Punaauia on Tahiti; the Paul Gauguin Cultural Center on the south coast of Tahiti; the James Norman Hall Home in the Papeete suburb of Arue; lessons in pearling at the Robert Wan Pearl Museum in Papeete; Atuona's Paul Gauguin and Jacques Brel Cultural Center on Hiva Oa.

Memorable Meals—A meal cooked in an earthen Tahitian oven; raw fish marinated in coconut milk, called poisson cru; slices of tuna or parrot fish that have been macerated in sea water, called fafaru.

Late Night—Cut loose with the locals on a dance floor on Papeete's waterfront; dinner and dance shows at Tiki Theatre Village.

Walks—A tour of the Harrison W. Smith Botanical Gardens on Tahiti; the three-hour walk right around Maupiti; a guided hike through the mountains and valleys of Tahiti and Moorea.

Geography

The entire French Polynesian territory is often referred to as "Tahiti," but it actually consists of dozens of islands and atolls spread across a wide swath of the South Pacific, roughly midway between South America and Australia. Five archipelagos make up the territory, and each has distinctive cultural and geographical features.

The Society group, which includes Tahiti, is the most populous of the island chains, with about two-thirds of French Polynesia's total population. They are "high islands"—volcanic peaks surrounded by a coral reef and a calm lagoon. To the northeast are the Tuamotus, a large group of flat coral atolls often made up of a thin strip of land ringing a very large lagoon. Beyond the Tuamotus are the distant and mountainous Marquesas Islands.

South of the Society group are the Australs and, to the southeast, the Gambiers, both containing a combination of atolls and high islands. Travelers primarily frequent the Society Islands (especially Tahiti, Moorea and Bora Bora) and to a much lesser extent, the Tuamotus and the Marquesas.

History

Anthropologists theorize that seafarers in great canoes landed in the islands at least 1,200 years ago. The ancient Polynesians probably came from other Pacific islands—Fiji, Tonga and the Samoas—to the west of French Polynesia. European explorers passed through the islands as early as the mid-1500s, but it wasn't until the 1700s that extensive contact took place.

The accounts of the 18th-century English explorer Capt. James Cook and others described Tahiti as a place of beauty, abundance and, perhaps most intriguing, few sexual prohibitions. The islands' temptations may have played a role in the famous mutiny aboard the HMS Bounty, when the mutineers cast Capt. Bligh adrift and returned to the pleasures they had enjoyed on Tahiti.

Whether or not they truly were an unspoiled paradise, the islands quickly lost their allure after Europeans introduced new diseases and weapons. By the mid-1800s, the population had plummeted, and the islands were wracked by warfare. In the colonial wrangling of the 19th century, France laid claim to the area, and today it remains semi-autonomous administrative division of that nation.

In the 1960s, France moved its controversial nuclear testing program to the remote Tuamotu islands of French Polynesia. The resumption of testing in the 1990s sparked riots on Tahiti, but with the dismantling of the test sites in 1996, things returned to a relatively tranquil state.

In 2003, French Polynesia became a full overseas collectivity of France, and French Polynesians vote in the French presidential elections. Edouard Fritch was elected as the president of French Polynesia in 2014, and re-elected in 2018.

The income of the average French Polynesian is high by South Pacific standards, but the islands also have a very high cost of living. Tourism is the biggest part of the private economy. Black pearl and copra (coconut) production also serve as important sources of income. Nonetheless, the islands receive a lot of support from taxpayers in France.

Snapshot

The islands' foremost attractions are relaxation, spectacular scenery, scuba diving, surfing, snorkeling, yachting, archaeological sites, mountains, music, dance, fishing and luxurious, uncrowded resorts.

French Polynesia is for travelers interested in the classic South Pacific experience: clear water, gorgeous scenery, quiet surroundings and friendly, interesting people. French is the common language, but visitors confining themselves to the major tourist islands will find English widely spoken.

A more serious obstacle is the cost. French Polynesia is an expensive place to vacation, though some budget options exist.

Potpourri

Black pearls are an important industry in French Polynesia, and, as visitors quickly discover, they are heavily marketed to tourists. On the busy islands, every shop seems to be selling pearls. Many islands offer pearl-farm tours where you can see how they're created and, of course, make a purchase.

Polynesia is the birthplace of surfing, and the wave at Teahupoo, Tahiti, is one of the most famous and scary waves in the surfing world. An international surf contest is held in the village annually.

The private island Motu Tapu is the most-photographed isle in the South Pacific.

About 10% of the French Polynesia population is Chinese. This is a result of the Chinese going to the area in the mid-1800s to work on in fields and plantations.

"PK" (pointe kilometrique) on an address refers to the red-and-white stones placed alongside roads every kilometer to mark the distance around an island.

Prior to World War II, few outsiders had ever heard of Bora Bora. The arrival of thousands of soldiers shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor changed all that. Although never involved in actual battles, Bora Bora owes much of its infrastructure, including its airport, to U.S. construction crews.

Hinano beer is named after the flower of the pandanus plant, which smells somewhat like beer. The leaves of this same plant are used to weave local hats and baskets.

The overwater bungalow was created in French Polynesia in the 1960s on the island of Moorea.

Tahiti was the setting for the 1961 production of Mutiny on the Bounty with Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard. Moorea appeared in the 1984 retelling of the tale, The Bounty, with Mel Gibson and Anthony Hopkins.




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