wico6768
Registered
WetPup.....this all sounds very good----ie fewer divers(less crowded boats???)-----cuz I'll be there for diving AND celebrating our 36 year ongoing honeymoon.....Can't beat all this with a stick......![]()
Often we are the only ones on the zodiac in Rangiroa for diving, plus the shop owner and boat driver. Often. And the other shops don't usually have a bunch of people either.
It's a very quiet place, Fakarava is even quieter.
I would say, most from North America do not stay at pensions, they stay at the resort and if you are staying at the resort you are not staying for 250/night, not even close. You are also paying separately for your meals.
Anyway, we love Rangiroa, we go every year and sometimes we add in another atoll or island. We stay at our favorite pension, dive with our favorite shop, and love it.
After we retire, and move internationally, then we will venture to some other places that are further and more expensive to get to for now. getting to FP takes us one day to get to LAX, then the overnight flight, and then the short morning flight to the atoll or island.
That's enough travel time when we consider our amount of available vacation days. We usually stay just over 2 weeks.
We need enough time remaining so we can do a couple of other shorter, closer trips during the year as well.
FP is perfect for us, and the culture there is part of what we enjoy experiencing. We get more of that staying at pensions, and, pensions make it very affordable.
I can also say, I don't know about the other pensions, but the owner of our favorite one told us about 80% of his guests are French, and the average length of stay is 3 nights. He has only a couple of American guests a year, we're one of them. So, maybe on average 1-4 american groups of guests.
I suspect, the rest of the American guests to Rangiroa are at Kia Ora (or most of them anyway)
There has never been another american couple/guest at the pension while we were there. Generally French, but also other european locations, and sometimes australian, and he had a couple from Russia arriving the day we left. It's very international and we meet a lot more people staying there than we would otherwise. Strangely, last time (march) none of the guests were divers but us. I guess they were there as a vacation destination.

We have gone diving there now at least 30 ish dives, and not one has been repetitive. The location is, but the dives have each been different, we do generally see dolphin, and we do generally see lots of shark, rays, giant wrasse, and just throngs of fish.
We cannot imagine getting bored with that. Hate to leave, look forward to return every single time. But when we go, we are not there just to dive, we are also there over our anniversary so for us, it is a vacation spot that has incredible diving, a welcoming and friendly culture, not overrun with tourists, a pension owner who is incredible at what he does, beautiful open air bungalow right on the lagoon, with a real mini refrigerator (not a cooler fridge), beautiful, clear lagoon water, yummy food, relatively inexpensive french wine available, and a unique experience that an atoll always is. If we could figure out a way to make immigration work, and find a small place to rent, we would spend the first year of our retirement in FP. Rangiroa might not be possible, but Moorea may be.