Rapa - Description

Not to be mistaken for its elder sister Easter Island (Chile),
the legendary Rapa Nui (big Rapa), situated more to the west.
Little Rapa, "Rapa Iti" in Tahitian, is the most far-flung
of the Austral Islands, some 1,420 km to the south of Tahiti.
It rises up from the midst of the ocean with its nearly 600m high
Mount Perehau in a much cooler air.
With its peaks wreathed in clouds and its long dark green folds
crenellated into deep bays, it seems so mysterious. Its ancient
ruins, its many fortresses, its proud "pa"surrounded by
the beautiful dry stone walls that crown its volcanic ridges have
not yet yielded up all their secrets.
Rapa's temperate climate is not warm enough for corals to grow,
nor for coconut trees which are not to be seen on its shores and
where the Australs' winter temperature in July and August can
go down as low as 5°C.Yet how many fruits vegetables, either
familiar or unknown elsewhere, grow on her fertile soils! Sweet
oranges, pears, figs, passion fruit. Coffee bushes which produce
an excellent coffee, but also a huge variety of taro, succulent
root crops and with "mungu" which are plants with pinkish
flowers and sugary tastes that children love to suck for candy.
Goats and wild cattle live in the mountains.They augment the daily
menu of the islanders alternating with salmon, crayfish, seas slugs,
oyster and sea urchins that are in great abundance near the shore.
The 521 inhabitants of Rapa are incredible fishers and hunters.
They are also farmers. As owners, all holding common title to the
island, they live mainly at Aore, which has a Mayor's office,
a church, a post office, a school, an infirmary and a cooperative.
Some families live over at Area, a very tiny village.
The only link from Rapa to the outside world is the cargo boat
Tuhaa Pae III which drops anchor in Haurei Bay every
two to three weeks. And sometimes the odd yacht or a scientific
research vessel stops here just long enough to take on board fresh
provisions. Entry permits are only granted for a very short length
of time.
Source :
GIE Tahiti Tourisme
http://www.tahiti-tourisme.pf
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