More than a decade ago, the American Dan Grenier opened a dive shop on Nananu-ira,
a small isle on the north tip of Viti Levu, Fiji’s main island. While he served
divers at the resort Wanavanu, on the main island, he also put together packages using
the few private accommodations on the isle. Sadly, Dan and one of his charges disappeared
while diving in 2005; he was so skilled a diver that no one else on the boat was
concerned when he was late to return. By the time they started to search, it was too
late and no trace of him was ever found.
At last, another operation is up and running on Nananu-i-ra, although it gets few
visitors. Ten minutes by motorboat from Viti Levu, the isle is so tiny you can walk
around it at low tide in an hour. Papoo Divers is the main shop there. Divers can stay
at Papoo’s or at Betham’s Beach Cottages. You can get some terrific diving for under
$1,000 a week, a bargain for the South Pacific.
Diving here is equivalent to Beqa, a popular -- and more populated -- island south
of Viti Levu, but it’s far less rainy. And it’s also far more interesting than any
Caribbean diving -- more animals, bigger sharks, better viz and fewer Americans. My
dives averaged 60 to 90 feet, and sites are 5 to 20 minutes from shore. The two most
notable are Pinnacles and Canyons, both with hard-coral pinnacles and canyons rising
from 100-foot depths and draped with seafans. Maze and Dream Maker are some of the
coral gardens and bommies swarming with anthias, triggerfish, Dascyllus, several species
of butterflyfish, trevally, long-fin bannerfish and coral grouper. On some dives,
I was surrounded by a few white-tip reef sharks or schools of yellow-stripe grunts and
rainbow runners. It was fun to peek into the healthy multi-colored hard (brain, staghorn,
Millepora, Acropora) and soft corals to find porcelain crabs, prawns, lionfish
and stonefish. The ferry Ovalau (at 85 feet) and cargo ship Papuan Explorer (75 feet)
can be explored inside with wreck reel and lights. Otherwise, I checked out heavy-duty
transport trucks, tires, cables and coral-encrusted hulls from the outside. The strongest
drift dive was at Cannibal Cove, where currents were less than two knots. Water
temps go from 72 degrees in October to an 80-degree peak in February.
Papoo Divers is owned and operated by PADI instructor Papu Pangalau, who was formerly
with the now defunct Kai Viti Divers and caters to small groups. His custom boat Rose of the Reef (O2, cell phone, marine radio, dry
area and life vests but no head) holds up to 12 divers
for two-tank dives, and he’ll contract another
boat for additional divers. Papoo Divers is a family
business; Papu’s son and divemaster cousin drive
the boat while snacks are pancakes made by his daughters
and mangoes plucked from his trees. Papu gives
thorough briefs in excellent English, and experienced
divers can dive their own profiles if they stay
within air and non-deco limits. I dived with Papoo
last year and liked the crew’s personable feel and
the boutique experience of just diving with a few
other divers rather than a couple of dozen. I stayed
at Betham’s last time but Papoo now has on-premises
lodging, so for my March stay, I rented its airy twobedroom
apartment with shower and toilet, a shared
but fully-stocked kitchen, hot water, AC and electricity 24/7. Before I boarded the
launch to the island, I bought groceries in Raki Raki, the nearest town on the mainland.
Then I cooked my meals in the shared kitchen and ate them with Papu’s family and
the other guests. One night, Papu’s family gave me a special nightlight treat, a Fiji
lovo (pit cookery) courtesy of Mrs. Papu and her sisters, while their teenagers did
traditional songs and dances.
A standard two-tank dive is US$80, or $45 if you’ve got three-plus divers in your
group, and a five-dive package is US$175. Nanoo’s apartment is around US$65 a night. No
Nitrox and no credit cards accepted but Papoo will shuttle you without charge to Raki
Raki’s banks/ATMs to change money. Papoo Divers doesn’t have a Web site; e-mail them at
papoodivers@mobileemail.vodafone.com.fj.
An alternative is Betham’s Beach Cottages, a self-catering mom-and-pop operation
owned by an Aussie-Fijian retired couple. It’s not as spacious or new as Papoo’s but
the fully-furnished cottage I stayed at last October was clean and freshly painted. No
hot water or A/C, and electricity is available only from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Betham’s
restaurant meals must be ordered before 3 p.m. I bought groceries at their kiosk and in Raki Raki, cooked on the two-burner stove and enjoyed sunset suppers on the beachfront
porch. For two adults, it’s US$65 per night, and Betham’s takes Mastercard and Visa,
travelers’ checks, and foreign currency (www.bethams.com.fj).
With advance notice, both Betham’s and Papu will arrange for the two-hour taxi
ride (approximately US$60) from the Nadi airport to connect with their boats at
Ellington Wharf. Betham’s charges around $17 for the round-trip boat transfer and Papoo
does not charge (you may find yourself riding the boat with Papu’s kids coming home
from school). For more information about the island, go to www.nananu-i-ra-fiji.com.
-- N.M.