Monday, August 18, 2008

The MALDIVES blog...

Salaam!

No, you aren't expected to read everything (or even anything!). Just look at the pretty pictures and read the Summary entry below. The rest of the blurb is for family and if you're bored and looking for something to read!

Only two pictures I'm happy with from a composition / aesthetic point of view - the dhoni (boat) and the one of the jetty looking through the fringe of thatching. With some more sunlight I'm sure the colours are stunning - we got a glimpse of how pretty it *could* be. 

Shukirya!

The SUMMARY – 2.5 stars

Overall a relaxing trip sure you cant help the weather, thats in the lap of the Gods but it confirmed I prefer holidays with a bit more to do and see rather than just snorkel, eat and sleep. My final quote for the Maldives trip was "overrated and overpriced". We paid for four-star when their standard would only barely make three-star back here, seriously. 

If you paid twice as much and stayed in one of the five-star resorts then Im sure it would have been gorgeous  but then you should also pay the five times more and go in peak season when the weather is good. Ultimately, great for honeymooners where you can stay in your room a lot and surface to see some nice scenery, before returning to your boudoir for more activities *wink* and you're not there to do anything else.

We wont be back partly as I want to keep exploring new places and new cultures, partly because I think we just did all the Maldives had to offer. Would I recommend it? Only if you paid the big bucks for better, and went in the better weather. Id offer up the islands in Fiji first.

take me with you!

Musashi didn't want me to leave!

The ROOM – 2.5 stars

I guess it wasn't such an auspicious start, having travelled for 25 hours, arriving late at night, thrashed, just wanting a hot shower and a nice bed. There were no towels whatsoever in my room. Okay, I thought, I won't bother with reception at this hour (1.30am), I'll just wait to get my bags and then use my beach towel. I waited 40 minutes for my bags to arrive – eyes hanging out of my head – got my towel out and ran the water. No hot water whatsoever. Stuff it... crawled into bed.
It took another 24 hours to receive both towels and hot water. The double bed was really two single beds pushed together with a hard mattress seam in between (and this happened in the other Villas too - wasn't just because it was the surfer's end of the island). Drew's feet well and truly hung over the edge! There were no blankets; the towels, pillows and all the bed linen were all stained; ratty furniture; poor lighting. 
Our bathroom was open air, but was less than half the size and not as nice as the other Villas, as they had a bath and separate shower, one of which was undercover. The open air thing was very quaint, except with the wild weather we experienced, we ended up with a lot of debris, tannin-tainted water pooling at your feet when you went to the toilet, and sodden bathmats.
Ah well! it's all an experience, isn't it!

Our bungalow

Our bungalow nestled amongst the trees, a short walk from the surf break called Lohi's. The restaurant was five minutes or so away, and the snorkelling beaches 15 minutes walk through a tree-lined canopy.


The Garden Villas


There were a number of styles of villas / bungalows available - although ostensibly there were only two prices - the higher-priced Ocean Villas, and then the rest. But despite paying the same as the rest of the plebs, the "surfers'" villas were a little lesser quality than the others. 

Meeting up with another couple who were positioned on the other side of the island, we found their accommodation reasonably different - still the two single mattresses stuck together, but a bit more room, more storage, a better bathroom arrangement etc. 

It seems they paid what we paid, but we got a lesser room? Perhaps because we were on the surfers side of the beach? Surfers are only there to surf and don't worry about quality and comfort? Odd.

Mind you, when the other couple arrived (Hi Glen, Maureen and Casey!) they didn't have all their towels either, and no hot water as well. We all had the regular power blackouts too.


The Ocean Villas

The Ocean Villas were on an 'arm' jutting out from one end of the island. Ocean Villa residents could walk the length of the jetty and then to the restaurant (20 minute walk apparently), or the resort provided bicycles for use (I believe). A little golf cart was utilised by the staff for arriving and departing guests only. 

Beach Bungalow residents were not permitted onto the Villa jetty - a security officer and a locked gate made sure of that! I'm sure in summer it would be just beautiful to swim off from your own steps to the sea... but in the wild weather we had, they were quite exposed and I reckon their villas would have rattled!!

We heard one story where the parents had booked an Ocean Villa and put the teenage kids in a Garden Villa - not realising that the kids were not permitted to visit the parents at all! You could pay US$30 for a half hour visit though, to an untenanted room, presumably so you pined for their opulence and booked those rooms on your next visit!


stormy weather...

You can see the bend in the palm fronds, the dark clouds, and the damaged jetty to the picnic island (just to the side of the island jetty). The picnic jetty was damaged in one wild storm while we were there.




Thursday, August 14, 2008

The ACTIVITIES




The weather kyboshed many of the watersports available. There were huge winds every day except for one, which whipped up the swell and made for choppy gusty conditions. This made is too rough for the catamarans and windsurfers if you weren’t already experienced with that equipment. I’m not a jet-ski girl anyway. Then there was surfing (leave that to Drew), which was also not for the novice, and then there was the snorkelling and the diving.

I’d asked, the first day, about the diving. Yumi, the Japanese dive guide there, said the visibility was very very poor, bad conditions and there weren’t any manta rays about. Maybe later in the week she said. I asked two days later, speaking to a German woman behind the counter, who was lacklustre and either bored or pissed off, or perhaps both. 

I didn’t get such a great feeling from the dive centre, and hadn’t seen anybody gearing up except two learners who were jumping in with Yumi, to the side of the jetty. The whole diving idea didn’t seem to be on the cards – aside from the crappy weather, I just didn’t get a good feel from the staff and the centre, and wondered about the upkeep of the equipment etc if they had a constant stream of transient foreigners in charge who stay for a few months before moving onto the next resort.

We did snorkel around the island - literally – and we found a nice spot where there was a bit of coral and lots of fish. The resort had 'bombed' three deep holes... otherwise the water depth was only about 1-1.5m, which is great for snorkelling!! The holes didn't have a whole lot of coral in them, but you could tell that they would improve in the future, given some time to regenerate from the shock. Lots and lots of little fish, and some middling sized ones. A few 'Bruces' (reef sharks) around - from little ones about a foot and a half long, to one that I reckon was 5 to 6 ft long – all in the just-offshore snorkelling area. 

So I figured we’d try out the snorkelling excursion as a test of the watersports department, and see how that went! The excursions were every 2-3 days, so we signed up for the next one, which was cancelled due to rough weather. We duly signed up for the next one and this time it was a go! Our german snorkel guide, Marianna, had been on the island for three weeks. She hadn't even snorkelled at the island?? Okaaaay. Maybe she was busy?

We all checked in, signed a form (only in English) saying we were competent swimmers and able to swim for 15 minutes unaided without buoyancy aides, in inclement weather. I noticed a Japanese couple had no idea what they were signing. We tumbled on the dhoni (boat) and found our positions. Finally, a sunny day too (the only one) - although the wind was blowing and the whitecaps were telling us the swell was up.

A rough ride to our location - the dhoni's have a shallow draft and are designed for inter-island jaunts as I understand it, not deep water or long distances. We lost a jerry can of fuel and one of water overboard in the choppy conditions, so a crew member jumped overboard, while the boat doubled-back to haul them and him back on. No boat briefing, no safety briefing, no numbered roll call. Okay... so slightly different safety standards! And one guide only, for the whole group. No minimum ratio I guess.

We arrived at our location - two coral bombies. Marianna simply said, if you are in trouble wave one hand above your head. If you are in big trouble, wave both arms over your head! Twenty four of us splashed into the water, one by one, after Marianna. I know, because I counted! The six asian tourists all wore life jackets - which Drew said wasn't good. One, because it meant their swimming skills weren't that good and therefore shouldn't be there in those weather conditions - two, the life vests form a bit of a sail and they would be more prone to getting carried further away with the wind. The dhoni had no tender (small runabout boat), so in the event of someone being carried off to the other reef area, the dhoni wouldn't be able to motor in to pick them up. It would rely on a strong swimmer making it there and towing them back against the current.

The guide seemed to toddle off and expect everyone to follow her. She'd pop her head up here and there, but certainly wasn't able to keep an eye on everyone. Sure enough, two of the life-jacketed tourists got into trouble - Marianna signalled the boat. Except she wasn't able to get high enough - so Drew finned upwards and caught the eye of the crew, who then motored over.

I won't go into too much more, except to note that Marianna hadn't snorkelled this reef either! My, what has she been doing?? They gathered everybody on board. Except then she realised we didn't have everyone. They look around and find three. Okay, we're ready to go. Uh no... I said we're still missing two. Oh, okay she says (obviously not having done a head count and realising this??). Luckily Drew spotted the missing couple a few minutes later... the crew were all looking in the wrong direction, and the pair had taken off by themselves anyway.

A rough trip back - Drew and I the only ones smiling - many sea sick, some lying down looking very ill. Hmm... no, I think I'll leave the diving - crap weather, poor visibility and suspect safety standards. Argh!!



The view out from our side of the island

The jetty... before and after the storms






When the storms come and wash away parts, you just grab some more dead coral, whack it in, and coral-cement over it... until the next storm!


Pristine beaches?

Despite the picture postcards, the pristine white coral sands of the Maldive beaches are not always *ahem* pristine!

A lot of building crap, food scraps, and assorted stuff gets washed up or dumped on the shoreline. This happened more on one section of the island than the rest (the nicer-room side was cleaner, but perhaps it was just tidal / current actions?). Hmm... considering wages, and considering what prices are charged, we thought a regular clean-up crew wouldn't have been a financial burden, but everyone has their own standards, right?

The Island






There was a mix of shorelines – from the rocks on the surf side, to strips of coral sands held in place with regularly-spaced groynes. The paths were raked beautifully every morning – we felt for the raking girls, with all the wind debris making their job harder!


The Coconut SPA – 2.5 stars


I was looking forward to the spa and the promise of a few massages, so we tried out the Coconut Spa Signature Massage – four massage types in an hour and a half for US$110. Their prices overall were reasonable – a bit more than in Australia but I’d expected that, and besides, it’s a holiday! The 4-pack consisted of a standard (?) massage, followed by some shiatsu, followed by some hot rocks, followed by a little foot reflexology. The girls were Indonesian, presumably for cultural reasons. Although nice enough, it was a very ‘textbook’ massage with no heart in, no specific attention to problem areas. Four strokes left, four strokes right, two strokes left, two strokes right and so on. Overall nice enough, but a bit too generic for me to want to pay the extra bucks or go back for more.

The Coconut Spa took a bit of a battering with the wild winds too – the thatching was very much in disarray (after this pic was taken). All of their rooms have an open window with just a canvas shade, and some open straight onto small decks with a sunken bath so you can see and hear the sea.


more wildlife



Wildlife






Despite having some strange animal scamper (heavily) back and forth on our bungalow roof two nights in a row ... we were told that there was nothing bigger than a cat on the island, and really, no-one had seen it. On dry land there were fast lizards and a large number and variety of hermit crabs. In fact, our foot-washing pot on our bungalow porch sported a nice large white hermy... I wondered whether they used them as a single - two people, two crabs, therefore two towels. But alas, my white guy disappeared after two days.

See the snorkelling section for more underwater wildlife info - but at the water line there were always masses of crabs on the rocks, lots of hermit crabs, lots of fish... including this one strange parrot fish who came in only a metre from shore and noodled around in the coral sands. He was quite happy sticking his head in the sand and fins in the air!


The Languages

The tourist makeup was a large percentage of Russians (old hairy guys with young svelte Svetlanas in tow), then Israelis (generally surfers it seemed), then Germans (ditto), then Brasilians (definitely there to surf), a smattering of Poms (definitely not surfing), a handful of Aussies (yep, surfers), and even a French couple or two. 

Most of the Maldivians seemed to speak a bit of English and German. We tried out our sparse collection of Dhivei language phrases, met either with no response or shy but warm smiles. At first I wasn't sure if I was saying things right due to minimal feedback. I stopped, in case I was saying something bad!! (yes, Cat, I still laugh at your Thai 'turn penis' taxi directions!).

Once Drew was with me, from his 10-day boat trip, they seemed to warm up a little more, so maybe it was just the female thing (i.e. men talking to a single female in Muslim countries not the norm, but sometimes necessary for the tourist industry). 

But we found we did have the pronunciations right (thanks Digi and Dad!), it's just that it wasn't normal for the tourists to try to say anything, and the Maldivians really wanted to try their English! A select few thought it wonderful that we cared and respected them enough to try and learn some phrases. Always fun!

THE STAFF – 4 stars

The Maldivians were wonderful people – quiet, reserved, bashful, always trying to be helpful. You get allocated a waiter for your stay, with the hope that at the end of the stay you can tip him accordingly. We ended up with two waiters for our stay (partly as I moved tables before Drew got there), so we had Nias and Saimon – both smiling, helpful and exceedingly polite nice young men. 

Everyone's English was adequate, although sometimes (due to being a bit reserved/shy?) they could be hard to understand from speaking too fast but too quietly. We tipped our 'room elf' too – the man who came to tidy the room and make the beds every day.

In keeping with their culture / customs, the overwhelming majority of visible staff were male, with one strong-minded out-there female manager (short hair, western clothes), and the daily 'rakers' – the women who raked the sandy paths every day (full garb including gloves, head scarves). Many of these women would not make eye contact and I felt a bit odd wearing shorts, even though most of the other female tourist wore much skimpier clothing!

Before Drew arrived, there was a little bit of hesitation from the staff when talking to me – I'm sure I was extremely odd on this surfers / honeymooners resort, being there alone! Overall, the staff were lovely.

The Sunset Restaurant

Sometimes stormy, you can see the weather whipping into the face of the Sunset Restaurant, washing down the deck area, pushing the palm trees back. The roof thatching of all the buildings suffered from the wild winds, regardless of the wire mesh trying to keep everything in order!


THE FOOD – 3.5 stars

We were on the all-inclusive package, which technically meant all meals for free and drinks free from 10am. If you wanted to eat outside of the allocated meal times (0700–0930, 1230–1430, 1930–2130) then there was the option of US$8 Pringles from the souvenir shop, or the really expensive Sunset Restaurant (eg US$18 club sandwich, US$36 mains). 

Initially the range of food provided was great, and tasted fine; some little oddities to get used to, but nothing wildly weird. After nine days it all started to blur and we wished we had other choices as well. I guess that's the good thing about not being isolated on an island where you have other options available. 

The main restaurant has a sand floor which was novel and a bit different. We heard one couple being a bit horrified by it, from a hygiene point of view, but then they had a kid with them – it didn't bother us at all, and it was quite nice to slip your shoes off and push your toes into the sand.

The Main Restaurant




SURFING – Boat 4 stars – Resort 2.5 stars

Drew went to most of the surf breaks around the North Male' atolls - his favourite being Chickens, a great left-hander for him, with good height (double overhead) and not too crowded because it was a bit bigger than most of the others.

The surf at Lohi's was a bit temperamental - wind either helped the swell, or was pushing into your face making it too much hard work. A few days there it flattened out even. One of the main issues was that the resort was supposed to control the number of surfers permitted to surf the resort break (Lohi's) as they were charged extra for the pleasure - letting the casual guys, who just turned up with boards, take the surf boat (US$30/trip, two trips a day). This didn't happen - resulting in up to 26 guys (yes, and two girls on the odd occasion!) in the water. Some groups weren't interested in the surf etiquette and waiting their turn, and there was some distinct aggro between two countries.

Drew was glad he'd had the surf boat time with the great weather and hours upon hours of surfing every day. I must say... he certainly put on some great muscles :D