TRAVEL TALES
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Diana Warner went “island hopping” with her husband Rick last month to
celebrate her birthday.
Leaving their home in Balboa Island, they flew to 500-acre Turtle
Island in Fiji. They rolled up their pants before de-boarding the sea
plane that shuttled them from the main island of Fiji to their smaller,
more remote destination, where they stayed for 10 days. The plane floated
up to a dock and the couple was greeted with coconut drinks almost
immediately.
“It was whatever you want, whenever you want,” said Diana Warner, who
chose Turtle Island as the place to celebrate her birthday because her
brother insisted she needed to visit it at least once in her life. “It’s
kind of like Hawaii 75 years ago and very pristine. You’re very
pampered.”
Turtle Island is scattered with 15 thatched-roof huts and is run by
150 employees. All 500 acres of the place runs as one resort, by one
owner. He transformed the island from barren terrain overrun with goats
to a paradise of sorts.
Each guest is treated like nothing less than royalty.
“You get to go to your own, private, remote beach for the day, you can
have dinner at the end of the docks, you can have dinner on the mountain
top, it was kind of like a fairy tale,” Warner, 46, said.
The couple found it easy to relax because the mood of the place -- its
distance from Newport Beach and lack of high rises and anything
reminiscent of corporate responsibilities -- forced them to let go of
worrying about work and the kids.
“The purpose for me was, we’ve been raising our kids, our oldest is
21, and it was a time to come up for air. An opportunity to reevaluate
our marriage and make memories, because the minute we come back, we’re in
the frying pan,” Warner said.
She and her husband went horseback-riding on the beach, lay in
hammocks and read, went fishing for yellowtail and other deep-sea fish
and had dinner on a mountain top. On some days, they had lobster for
breakfast, lunch and dinner.
They were waited on -- in the bungalows, on the beach, on the
mountain, everywhere and anywhere -- by resort staff members who came
from nearby islands only 10 minutes away by boat.
On a Sunday during their stay, the couple visited a church on one of
these islands. The tribe members there asked them to sing a song, so the
Warners did.
“They were so encouraged that we got up and sang,” Warner said.
Rick Warner, who works in commercial real estate, said his favorite
part of the trip was meeting the people.
“They have a very happy spirit and they really do show genuine love
toward people,” he said. “They really like Americans.”
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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