
❤️🐠 Scuba diving Namena Island, Fiji (a no take marine reserve) in honor of David Attenborough’s 100 birthday. Thank David for for his life’s work! ❤️🐠 trillions of fish, 100% thriving, live coral! Incredible experience scuba diving In Fiji! Top dives so far for me. The colors and variety of both fish and coral amazed me. This area is a marine reserve, no fishing allowed, so no wonder it’s a divers dream!
So what else have we been doing? Simply amazing times! The water, the land and the people have been beyond our expectations. Fiji just might be the perfect South Pacific experience. If anyone was to ask us to choose an island vacation spot, Hawaii or Fiji, hands down Fiji, and I love Hawaii (but you know I don’t care for the typical tourist experience)!
We spent a week in Viani Bay which has turned out to be the ultimate divers paradise. There is a small village, a small dive operation (Dive Academy) and a quaint 5 room resort called Viani Bay Resort. It’s an authentic, sweet small spot with local Fijian villagers working the dive outfit. They all go out of their way to find the perfect dive and treat you so well. Smiling the entire time, Fijians seem to be the most caring people we have ever met. The owners of the little resort and dive shop have also recently begun a Sea Salt company. Stay tuned for more info. Then there are the Sharks of Beqa!! Wow!






We typically dive mostly off our own boat and dinghy but sometimes it’s best to have a guide and someone that drifts with you to show you the best points and who knows the critical currents. We dove the White Wall and The Freeway with the Viani Dive Academy. We were dropped off on top of the reef and had a great diver Master named Paul. We got to swim down and through a 50 yard lava tube that comes out 90 feet underwater by a wall covered in white soft corals. It’s like underwater snow! More videos for fish lovers.



Also known as the “Soft Coral Capitol of the World”
What did we do after diving?? Well, we headed back into the village for an evening of their Kava happy hour, or should we say hours, plural! The local young men and a few elders presented us with a bowl of the “good stuff” (local Kava) and we learned what this stuff is all about. Burp! Typically and nightly the men gather for entire evening and partake in this ritual, usually drinking 30-40 cups of Kava! We were up for this experience, wanted the full effect, but yuck! We managed to stomach about 7 rounds of Kava. After 1 1/2 hours, good chatter, stories, a few good laughs, and that was it for the 6 of us gringos. Tired, full and mouths tingly and numb, we stumbled in the pitch dark, minding the toads and crabs in the lush grasses, back to our anchored dingies and we all motored home-to our sailboats for a good nights sleep.






















































































