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Tahiti(Papeete)

Elizabeth on the rocks in the sandy bottom pool at the
Beachcomber in Papeete.

Leaving Tahiti for Taha'a. The hotel on the penninsula is the
Beachcomber we stayed at.
Taha'a
Arrival by boat at Le Taha'a, a resort on the northern motu of the
Island of Taha'a.

Our bathroom at Le Taha'a. Elizabeth was impressed.

Joey relaxing in front of our bungalow at Le Taha'a.

Elizabeth video taping (and not swimming in) our private pool.

Our somewhat private beach.

Joey in our hammock
.
Joey getting ready to snorkel after we kayaked for all of 10 minutes.
(it was windy!)

Coconuts are everywhere in Tahiti.

Elizabeth snorkeling.

Joey Snorkeling.
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Elizabeth en route to our Motu Picnic.

Our first Motu Picnic.

Elizabeth bicycling on Taha'a.
Bora Bora

Sheraton Bora Bora's private Motu.

Bora Bora sunset.

The pool at the Bora Bora Sheraton with some Overwater Bungalows in the
background. Our Bungalow was on the other end of the resort.
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A Jackfish seen from a six person submarine outside the Bora Bora
lagoon.

The feeding frenzy that resulted when the pilot of the sub chummed the
waters.

"Black tipped shark, big! big! big! five meter! five meter!" as the
French sub pilot put it.

Mullet fish or bread fish as we called them. Huge packs would
converge whenever bread was thrown in the water.

View out of our overwater bungalow in Bora Bora.
Moorea
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Elizabeth hiking in Moorea. Finally at a resort on an island
instead of an outlying motu, we figured we could just
walk to the grocery store. It was unfortunately 3 miles
away. We took a cab back.

Mount Mouaputa (on Moorea) - The Pierced Mountain - Profile looks like
a woman praying to the sky.

The best of the 30 pictures we took trying to take pictures of
dolphins. They only spend a 1/2 second above the
surface and they surface in random spots. I got the sense they
don't much care for tourists.

Joey petting a stingray.

Our Daewoo rental car. No A/C and stick shift. Only $75 for
4 hours. Such a deal!

A Marae on Moorea. As we later learned the ones close to the
water were used primarily for sacrificing members
of the losing tribe in battle. The ones up in the forest were
used for marriages and animal sacrifice.

Lookout stop on our 4x4 tour.

Us riding horses in Moorea.