While we were on Easter Island, we had a discussion about whether it is right to travel so far and spend so much to see a little island with a few lumps of rock on it, when you can see those rocks in pictures and TV documentaries.
But if you take that approach all of the time, you would never both to leave your house. Why see a live sporting or music event when you can watch it on TV or listen to a CD? Why go on holiday anywhere?
Easter Island is thousands of miles off the coast of South America and it takes five and a half hours to fly from Santiago. It is not the cheapest place to visit either for the airfare, the accommodation or for the food and drink when you're there. For any decision you have to balance the cost and effort against the reward, and clearly at these prices the reward for this particular trip has to be considerable.
If you look at the decision purely rationally, using cost per day type considerations, and thinking about what else you could be spending the money on, then the chances are you would never do it. And I can quite understand that. If this is your only holiday of the year and the choice is between spending five days on Easter Island or having two weeks somewhere more accessible, then I would probably take the two weeks.
Of course our situation is somewhat different. We aren't limited to one holiday a year. With our plans to travel indefinitely, we expect to be able to see most of the world over the coming years, so we don't have to prioritise our trips in quite the same way as other people do. And we were already in South America, so the airfare was far less from Santiago than it would have been from the UK. Even so, this is certainly one of the more expensive parts of our travels this year and had we not come here then we could have saved quite a bit of money to use on better hotels rather than hostels, or on going somewhere else.
But Nic in particular has always been fascinated by Easter Island and its Maoi. And whilst you can watch documentaries and look at pictures, it is never the same as experiencing something first hand. We discovered that in South Africa when we went on safari. I hadn't really been sure if seeing an animal close up, but doing nothing in particular would really be so much better than watching some of the fabulous documentaries that show every aspect of their life in the wild. I was of course quite wrong. I loved seeing all of the animals, especially the big cats, and I was completely thrilled when that huge male lion looked straight at me as it passed within a metre of me. Obviously old rocks aren't quite the same as wild lions, but the principle still applies.
Clearly we had decided to take the trip, but once there, did we think it was the right decision? Our conclusion was yes. We are traveling because we want to see amazing things first hand, and have amazing experiences. For us, including some of these hard to reach places that most people never get the chance to see is exactly the point of what we're doing. And you will see from the blog that we loved the place.
Welcome to our travel blog. We are Tabitha and Nic. In 2011 we 'retired' in our early 40s and set off to travel the world. We spent our first year in South America and have been lucky enough to make two trips to Antarctica.
Our blog is a record of our travels, thoughts and experiences. It is not a guide book, but we do include some tips and information, so we hope that you may find it useful if you are planning to visit somewhere we have been. Or you may just find it interesting as a bit of armchair travel.
Showing posts with label stone heads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stone heads. Show all posts
Friday, December 16, 2011
Rapa Nui
Ahu Tahai |
Rapa Nui cemetery |
Easter Island is a five and a half hour flight from Santiago. It was evident even before we left that there are limited options on the island, as we saw all the young islanders taking back big boxes of Dunkin Donuts. Just before we landed, one of the islanders dressed up as a clown, painted face and all, and started acting the fool. I was surprised at how relaxed the stewards were, especially when he kept popping up out of his seat during the landing, but I still have no idea why he was doing it. The landing strip goes from one side of the island to the other and has a backdrop of hills and flowers. But it is apparently one of the longest runways, as it was built by the Americans in case they needed somewhere to land a plane, or even a space shuttle, if it was coming down in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Nic at our lodge on Rapa Nui |
On arriving, having passed by some of the replica stone statues at the airport, we were met by the woman from our lodge with the traditional flower garlands that she had made that morning. We drove through the main street to the other side of town, and past the very pretty cemetery, all of which took about eight minutes. Our cabin was basic but fine and had a little terrace that overlooks the garden with a view through the flowers and out to the ocean. A very blue ocean.
That first afternoon, we walked the short distance over to the first of our Moai sites and visited the island's museum. Moai means statue, but generally here, Moai refers to the big stone statues that the island is famed for.
sunset on Rapa Nui |
There are numerous sites around Rapa Nui where the islanders constructed Ahus, or stone plinths, on which they placed these huge carved figures to watch over their group. The Moai aren't Gods, they are representations of the past chiefs of that clan. There are many theories as to when they were built, over what period and how they were moved from the quarry where they were all made to their respective positions around the island.
Moai at sunset |
Equally, while most agree that the rather piercing coral and obsidian eyes were added once the Moai were in place, three is disagreement about whether they were left there all of the time or only kept in for spiritual occasions. Personally I think the pure effort that must have been involved in adding and removing them suggests the former, but perhaps they were more dedicated than me.
toppled Moai on Rapa Nui |
What everyone does agree on is that by the mid 1800s there had been a series of clan wars which had resulted in all of the Moai being toppled from their plinths. Some remain as they fell, albeit somewhat deteriorated by the rain and wind. Those sites are interesting because they show the truth of what happened then, but obviously the Moai look so much more impressive standing up.
Ahu Tongariki |
Over the years, private individuals have paid to restore a number of the main sites. They have had the plinths restored and the Moai stood back on them. The statues themselves have not been restored, so those that had no heads remain headless, and many were obviously quite damaged, but those that once again stand look proud and impressive.
Does it matter that we know that they haven't been upright the whole time? To me, yes it does a little. Like a painting that has been cleaned to restore its colours, or even a person who has had a facelift, they probably look better, but they lose something of their truth, and so to me they are less compelling.
Ahu Tongariki |
But you could not imagine the impressive sight that these statues would have been without some of them being upright, and because the restoration is honest, it does not detract as it might have done. I think they are right to have restored some of the most impressive sights, and whilst it does make a difference that I know they have been put back, I was still sufficiently impressed that it didn't matter too much.
Ahu Nau Nau |
Te Pito o The Henua, Navel of the World |
We also saw the Ahu Te Pito Kura site with Te Pito o The Henua, or the Navel of the World, a round stone that is supposedly magnetic though we didn't have anything to check that with, and the Orogo site where the Tangata Manu, or birdman, rituals took place to decide a leader, and where you can still just about see the petroglyphs that they carved into the rocks.
Rapa Nui quarry |
However my favourite site was Rano Ranaku at Akahanga, which is the quarry where the Moai were carved out of the rock. Here there are hundreds of Moai littered around the place. Some where discarded, probably because they were damaged in transport or just proved too heavy to move. Some may have been left intentionally, but noone really knows. Many are partially buried, with just their heads and perhaps a bit or torso sticking up out of the ground. And some of them are absolutely enormous; the largest was abandoned where it was carved because they believe that at around twenty-one metres, or over seven storeys high, it was impossible to move.
Rapa Nui quarry |
at the Rapa Nui quarry |
As ever, the pictures that we take cannot do justice to the reality, but I hope that they will at least give you an idea of the place and why we liked it so much.
Rapa Nui quarry |
But Easter Island wasn't just amazing because of the stone statues. It was a truly lovely place to spend a few days just relaxing in the tiny town and on the beach front. It was so relaxed and laid back that you couldn't help but chill out yourself.
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