This is part of the fourteenth section of our around
the world trip.
Complete Trip Overview & Map
Coming from Fiji
13/12/07 The plane left Fiji at 7.30 am, an early start. An uneventful
three hour flight and Air Pacific had us landing in Kiribati, just north
of the equator. It seemed all the island was out to welcome the flight's
arrival, held back by the airport fence, and with relatively easy formalities
immigration gave us just a two week entry, tied to our onward ticket which
was checked thoroughly. There were quite a number of white faces on the flight
but all were met by friends, business partners or their missions. We were
the only tourists we saw and without a hotel booking were approached by a
representative from the Otintaai Hotel with an offer of transport and a discounted
room. The Tarawa atoll houses about half of Kiribati's 100,000 population
strung out along its long narrow strip of land where the road is rarely out
of sight of either ocean or lagoon on one side.
14/12/07 We had visited the nearby airline booking office yesterday
afternoon to see if there were any flights to the Marshall Islands. No luck.
Air Marshall
used to fly but stopped the route when a couple of pilots quit and they
ran short of planes. Air Nauru also used to do this route but the government
airline wasn't paying its bill and its one aeroplane was repossessed. Air
Nauru is now back flying as Our Airline but no longer goes to Marshall Islands.
So we felt stuck, the only option to return to Fiji for an onward flight
to Samoa, until the booking office owner advised of a special charter flight
from Nauru to Marshall Islands on the 28th of December. If we could put
the motorcycle onto the flight we could visit Nauru on its weekly flight
from Kiribati on the 21st and then fly on to Marshall Islands. We had rejected
the proposal of flying the motorcycle on 737's before because air freight
companies advised the cargo door was too small to handle the motorcycle.
But, as you can at a small country's airport, we walked out onto the airstrip
this morning to measure the cargo door of the Our Airline's flight at 6am,
after it had arrived from Nauru, the once weekly flight we might be taking
next Friday. The cargo door is just 90cm high and 120cm wide, turning the
motorcycle inside the aeroplane might also be a problem, as the cargo door
is near the front end of the plane where it narrows, however we calculated
if we remove the front wheel, the rear carry box, loosen the handlebars,
by lying it on its side, it could fit, and by removing the panniers, it
should reduce the weight to about 300kg, as it has to be human lifted into
the plane. The plan is to also dismantle the shipping crate and fly it with
the bike to be used for future shippings. That was all thought through by
9am and we caught a public minibus along the 30km's road to Betio, the port,
where the incredibly helpful port authority prepared paperwork, helped at
customs, and after much discussion with special approval from the finance
department, they allowed the motorcycle's entry for a week without needing
to put up a refundable bond. The motorcycle's shipping container had only
arrived this morning and the "Kiribati Chief" was still unloading offshore,
the port is too shallow for it to come alongside and the containers needed
to be barged to the wharf. Our container was lifted down from a stack, the
doors opened and there was the motorcycle right in front, as promised by
Williams and Gosling, but on top of it were boxes of heavy bibles, pushing
the top of the crate out of shape and ended up denting the tank slightly,
another trip memory. We had the crate opened just in time for customs to
inspect the motorcycle's panniers before weekend closing time and rode out
into Kiribati an hour later, after reassembling the motorcycle, its 181st
country.
15/12/07 The V
shape land area that makes up the Tarawa atoll stretches for over 80 km's
in its ribbon across the ocean. South Tarawa's islands are connected by
man made causeways, a bridge and then heading more onto Northern Tarawa
people catch an outrigger canoe, modernised by an outboard motor, in the
adaptation of old and new technologies, or walk at low tide, starting the
series of smaller and more remote islands heading further north. The population
is concentrated to the south, people coming in from more remote atolls looking
for better prospects in life, but putting pressure on water and food supplies.
We rode as far north as possible, sat and watched people net fishing, rode
around the airport to the Taiwan gardens where fresh, mostly green vegetables
are grown as a community education project. The only other supplies of fresh
foods come in on the same ship as our motorcycle, normally monthly but this
time it was almost six weeks since the last boat, so there was a bit of a
luxury of oranges and pears for sale today.
16/12/07 The three Pacific island countries we have visited are vastly
different. Fiji's Indian population along with traditional give an unusual
mix of cultures. Tuvalu's size and isolation has kept many of its traditions
observable in everyday life. Kiribati's, much larger island and community
has also kept traditions but seemingly a poorer nation, traditional building
and sleeping dwellings still remain dominant. Still haven't seen another
tourist. Many people are here on a mission, whether it is religion, Peace
Corp., NGO, donor projects, they all seem to be keeping the country going,
in whatever direction? Sunday today, and quiet. Back to the book writing,
pondering news on the chances of our onward flight to Nauru, and small motorcycle
maintenance.
17/12/07 Pacific World Travel is trying to look after all our onward
travel movements, motorcycle flight, our flight, and our visas for Nauru
as well as onward from there to the Marshall Islands. This morning, Monday,
there was no progress as a response to their request for information from
Nauru had not been received. We went ahead with the plan of still flying
there in four days time, no option, and had the motorcycle's shipping crate
collected from the port and taken to our hotel. Also picked up a 2.4m x 1.2m
sheet of plywood, cut it into lengths, to help with loading the motorcycle
onto the plane, and to spread the motorcycle's footprint on the cargo hold
floor as it won't be crated. We have a pretty generous reserve of cash we
normally carry but not anticipating two onward flights we were at the bank
trying to get more. The maximum
ATM withdrawal on either debit or credit card in Kiribati is A$ 200.00,
an expensive, repetitive process to take out a few thousand dollars, and
only two of the five ATM's on the island are currently working, our mobile
phone doesn't work here and the government seems to have a monopoly on internet
use, Skype (internet phone), is banned as it was affecting telecom revenues.
Part of our problem is Nauru, the latest information we have is that there
is currently no operating bank, no foreign exchange, no ATM, bring in any
money needed.
18/12/07 By days end not a lot had been achieved. There was no concrete
reply from Nauru regarding our visas. We did however get a confirmed price
for our flights, to Nauru, $US 255.00 each, then to Majuro $US 170.00 each,
quite an amazingly reasonable price considering comparable airfares in the
region. The motorcycle should go for about $US 630.00 for each leg, including
the packed down crate, also reasonable. Some slow internet, Christmas emails,
and planning. Kiribati straddles the equator, and also straddles
the, 180 degree, international date line, its vast expanse of islands and
water covering their intersection. Until 1st of January 1995 it was the
only continuous country trying to operate on different days of the week,
separated by
the date line, when the government decided to move the date line eastwards
to give the country one date, meaning the 31st of December 1994 disappeared
from eastern Kiribati's history, it never existed. Eastern Kiribati now
breaks each new day first in the world, an hour earlier than any other country,
and even though you might fly west to Samoa you end up arriving a day earlier
than leaving Christmas Island on Kiribati.
19/12/07 We were at the airport at 7.30am for the one day late flight
from Fiji to talk with customs officials regarding exporting the motorcycle.
An easy going process, one form, signed in quadruplicate, and the paperwork
was done. The helpful Pacific World Travel agent here phoned the travel
agent in Nauru chasing up our visa applications, the only sticking point
to at least attempting the flight. It had not yet been approved. Nauru is
the only Pacific country that Australians now need a visa to visit. Nauru
gained a lot of bad publicity over the boat "refugees" that Australia rescued
and housed on the island. Immigration procedures were tightened to discourage
media and protesters. Visas are not issued by their embassies, they only
have a couple, a pre approval letter must be
received directly from Nauru's immigration before flying. With only 40
hours till the weekly flight and we were told to check back tomorrow. Continued
with our preparations to go. The metal crate was disassembled and roped
together in two packages. Panniers, windscreen and luggage box was removed,
battery disconnected, and we wait.
20/12/07 More attempts at phoning Nauru over our visas started at
11am and continued all day. There are limited lines into the country. It
wasn't till 3.58 pm that an email was received giving approval to ticket
us, visas would be issued on arrival. The semi rush started, booking the
motorcycle freight, dangerous goods certificate, tickets to Nauru and onwards
to Majuro in the Marshall Islands. The office staff were to take the company
truck to town, an hour away, for Christmas shopping, then the motorcycle
would be loaded on their return at 7.30pm, by 9.30pm, island time taken into
account, they were late, the truck returned at 11.30pm and under the headlight
of a motorcycle we loaded the motorcycle, now stripped down and ready for
a 5am departure.
21/12/07 When the truck driver hadn't arrived at 5.15am I walked
to the office and woke him. Not sure why, but he asked me to drive the truck
to the
airport, he rode in the back, where, after flight check in we wandered
around, both sides of security, waiting for the Our Airline flight, which
arrived at 6.50am. The truck, not allowed to be driven to within three metres
of the aeroplane had to be pushed closer, by hand. A last minute change by
the captain, to put the motorcycle in the rear luggage compartment rather
than the front, meant a quick rethink, and loading the rear of the motorcycle
first, not the front, and with about half a dozen staff it was manually
lifted and squeezed in, the fairing scraping the door as it entered. Unable
to sit upright, it rested at about a 45 degree angle. A small amount of
oil from the gearbox leaked when the motorcycle was turned a bit upside
down, cardboard packaging absorbed most of it, but otherwise the whole procedure
went smoothly and we flew out, the aircraft spending only 50 minutes on
the ground.
Move with us to Nauru
Story and photos copyright Peter and Kay Forwood, 1996-
|