Sunday, February 14, 2010
Zipline by Koen
Today I went Zip lineing, it is a sport. My legs felt weird because I was scard. First they strap you up. Then you hold on until the end. I heard a 'Ziiip' sound! I say lots of trees and a river. It was raining out and we got soaked. Zip lines are scarey but fun, even in the rain. Just hang on!
Fiji Post by Saige
Fiji is a Awesome place and its warm and dry almost everyday. While we were there during the rainier season but everyone of the locals insisted that it would never rain but near the end of our time in our Beautiful in Rakiraki, it was windy and rainy and really fun to play in. The food was really good and the there was a church in every village. The people sing better than Anyone I have ever heard before. They all harmonize eachother very lovely. I am getting really used to the heat and I got burnt on the first day. We only went to one of the other Islands but you can't even see it on the map. Near the end of our Fiji expedition we went to the best "theme park" in Fiji! ZipFiji!! :) It was really fun zooming down the line and getting pelted by Borneo rain and hardly being able to breathe you are going so fast! A t the end of our trip we went to the Uprising Resort. I t wasn't as good as our private house but it was beautiful and there was hardly any people there. I was so upset to be leaving but I wouldn't mind coming back for a bit when I grow up. Onward to Austrailia! <3
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Bula
Bula from Fiji. We have not had the internet access that I thought we would have. Sorry to all of you who have been checking up on us. We arrived on Saturday after a long and uneventful flight. The first thing we did was head out in our rental to the Sabeto hot springs, and mud baths, which was beautiful and interesting. We headed then to the town of Lautoka and got some water and groceries and then headed to the nearest church. We met some wonderful people and they fed us lunch, which was interesting. We then moved on to our rental house in Rakiraki. We are staying at the Bularangi Villa, which is amazing. We are right on the ocean and we have our own pool. In looking around at some of the resort and backpackers around here we have made a wise decision. We are paying just a bit more than the shoddy backpacker place around here and we have a whole beautiful house, housekeeper and the pool all to ourselves. We are spending our days doing school by the pool, swimming, snorkelling (there is a beautiful reef just out front with tons of coral and fish), eating, walking and talking, reading, and generally relaxing and spending some well needed quality family time together. We spent some time in the town of Rakiraki, and had dinner at the Volivoli resort (which has wireless internet) and took a boat ride over to the island of Rananu-I-Ra, where we walked to the other side of the island and built sand castles, swam and had a nice lunch with some people in the backpackers lodge.
The other night I realized all the things that we have been doing here that we would NEVER consider doing at home, and especially in a foreign country. Here is my list of 'unsafe-ness'
1. Renting a vehicle with only 5 seats because we needed 4wd. (Koen is wedged between the front buckets)
2. Barrelling down the rock roads with Devin riding in the back of the truck with Kamlesh (our caretaker)
3. Picking up a large strange man in Lautoka and letting him give us directions to the church.
4. Buying and eating $1 Roti, wrapped in newspaper from a lady on the street. (It was delish)
5. Drinking 'kava' out of a coconut bowl given to me by a man in the market who assured me it was not alcohol - wrong.
6. No sunscreen, No seatbelts.
7. No watch. (the only one we had broke on day one - oh well, we are on Fiji time now)
8. Swimming with jellyfish.
9. Sleeping with the doors unlocked and open.
Well that's all i can think of now and Koen has to do some school work while we have internet...
The other night I realized all the things that we have been doing here that we would NEVER consider doing at home, and especially in a foreign country. Here is my list of 'unsafe-ness'
1. Renting a vehicle with only 5 seats because we needed 4wd. (Koen is wedged between the front buckets)
2. Barrelling down the rock roads with Devin riding in the back of the truck with Kamlesh (our caretaker)
3. Picking up a large strange man in Lautoka and letting him give us directions to the church.
4. Buying and eating $1 Roti, wrapped in newspaper from a lady on the street. (It was delish)
5. Drinking 'kava' out of a coconut bowl given to me by a man in the market who assured me it was not alcohol - wrong.
6. No sunscreen, No seatbelts.
7. No watch. (the only one we had broke on day one - oh well, we are on Fiji time now)
8. Swimming with jellyfish.
9. Sleeping with the doors unlocked and open.
Well that's all i can think of now and Koen has to do some school work while we have internet...
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