Tavewa

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Yasawa Islands


Drawaqa
Kuata
Matacawa Levu
Nacula
Nanuya
Nanuya Balavu
Nanuya Lailai
Nanuya Levu
Nanuya-i-Ra
Nanuya-i-Yata
Narara
Naukacuvu
Naviti
Sawa-i-Lau
Tavewa
Tiliva
Waya
Waya Laitai
Waya Sewa
Vawa
Viwa
Yaqeta
Yasawa
Yawini


Islands of Fiji


Principal islands
Viti Levu
Vanua Levu

Significant outliers
Conway Reef
Kadavu
Taveuni
Rotuma

Archipelagos
Kadavu Group
Lau Islands
Lomaiviti Islands
Mamanuca Islands
Moala Islands
Ringgold Isles
Rotuma Group
Vanua Levu Group
Viti Levu Group
Yasawa Islands

Tavewa is the largest island of the Yasawa Islands, measuring approximately 3 kilometres long by 1 km wide. It is part of the Nacula District that lies north-west of the Fijian island of Viti Levu.

Contents

[edit] Tourism

Tavewa caters mainly (nearly exclusively) for the back-packing community. The island is not very highly developed, affording visitors a realistic insight into the Fijian and Pacific Islands lifestyle.

Tavewa is not connected to any centralised power grid. The resorts on the island operate their own power supplies consisting of diesel-powered generators. These generators are only used on demand, usually starting at sunset. At around 10:00 pm the generators are shut down, and campfires and lanterns take over producing light.

The few cooling facilities rely on ice-blocks, which are regenerated while the generators are on.

There are only three shared phone lines between Tavewa and the mainland. Marine radio is a common communication platform.

[edit] Island supplies and logistics

Tavewa does not have a pier, therefore all supplies have to be loaded onto small landing boats from supply ships stopping between the islands. Depending on the arrival times of the supply boats and the tides, all goods have to be unloaded from the landing boats in various places in the water in front of the beach. The residents unload and carry all goods from knee- to breast-deep water onto the beach. From there, the goods are either transferred into wheelbarrows or carried all the way to their destination.

In 2004, there was not a single motorised vehicle on Tavewa, not even a tractor. Tavewa has no roads, only paths, around the island.

Diesel for the generators is also transported this way in jerry-cans, which explains why the generators are only used on an as-required basis.

The regular supplies, together with the tourists, arrive with the Yasawa Flyer, which operates a daily water-bus service between Nadi and Tavewa.

A variety of other supply boats exists that operate either on an infrequent-but-regular or ad-hoc basis.

[edit] Drinking Water

As has the rest of Fiji, Tavewa has been experiencing a drought since the middle of the 1990s. Drinking water is a precious resource. Drinking water for tourists is brought in in plastic bottles on the supply boats. The large number of non-degradable plastic bottles that are land-filled on the relatively small island are expected to cause environmental problems in the future.

[edit] Utilisation of salt water

All resorts operate only salt-water showers. While the generators are running, salt-water is pumped into black water tanks on top of the showers. The sun heats the water in the black tanks. Salt-water is also used for laundry and certain other purposes not requiring potable water.

[edit] Resorts

There are three resorts on Tavewa:

All resorts are build in the traditional Fijian bure style. Amenities, such as restaurants and dining halls, are shared and central making the resorts resemble campuses. Tourist accommodation is either in dormitories or smaller couple- or family-sized bures.

There is a scuba-diving school on Tavewa.

[edit] Local population

The island's people support themselves mainly by tourism. In addition to Tavewa residents, the population includes many resort staff who commute from nearby islands in the Yasawa group or from Nadi. The locals live in bures like those at the resorts. Cooking is usually communal, on fireplaces dotted around the bures.

[edit] Transport

Tavewa can be regularly reached either by the Yasawa Flyer ferry or the Turtle Airways seaplane.

The vast majority of tourists and supplies arrive on the Yasawa Flyer. It takes the Yasawa Flyer about four hours to travel between Nadi and Tavewa, with several stops at the island resorts in-between.

[edit] External links

Tavewa Resort Reviews