 Sculpted
 by sky-piercing, moss-green peaks and lined with vivid turquoise 
lagoons, sultry French Polynesia is a place to take it slow and 
experience warm, laid-back island chic.
Sculpted
 by sky-piercing, moss-green peaks and lined with vivid turquoise 
lagoons, sultry French Polynesia is a place to take it slow and 
experience warm, laid-back island chic.  
Lagoon Spectacular
While there are plenty
 of slim stretches of white-, pink- and black-sand beaches in French 
Polynesia, they are just pretty springboards into the real draw: the 
lagoons. Most high islands are surrounded by fringing reef that creates a
 protected swimming pool of the most intense hue of aqua imaginable. 
Coral atolls have this same calibre of lagoon minus the big clunky 
island in the middle. Fish, dolphins, rays, sharks, turtles and more 
inhabit these clear-water coral gardens that are as excellent for 
snorkelling as they are for diving and swimming. Surfers ride glassy 
wave faces at reef passes while kitesurfers and windsurfers fly across 
the water terrain with the trade winds.
The Dream

Tahiti: just the word conjures 
up centuries’ worth of images: hibiscus flowers; svelte, bronzed dancers
 in grass skirts; a humid breeze over turquoise sea. The islands of 
French Polynesia became legends the minute the first European explorers 
reached their home shores with tales of a heaven on earth where the soil
 was fertile, life was simple, and sex was plentiful and guilt-free. 
While the lingering hype is outdated, French Polynesia is still about as
 dreamy as reality gets. The trees are still heavy with fruit, the 
mountains rise as majestically as ever and the lagoons are just as blue.
 Today, however, there are freeways, Christianity has instilled more 
conservative values and people work nine-to-five jobs. French Polynesia 
has not escaped the modern world but embraced it. True, it’s not the 
perfect, untainted paradise of explorer lore, but at least there’s a 
pretty fast internet connection.
 
To Luxe or Not to Luxe

Over-the-top
 indulgence has become French Polynesia’s – or more specifically Bora 
Bora’s – signature, and often overshadows what the rest of the country 
has to offer. Resorts on the ‘Pearl of the Pacific’ are a honeymooner’s 
dream, with private overwater bungalows, every luxury trapping and 
spectacular views of the island’s iconic, square-topped peak. But if 
this isn’t your cup of coconut water, or simply not in your budget, 
don’t let that dissuade you from visiting French Polynesia. Small, 
family-run hotels and bed and breakfasts offer a closer-to-the-culture 
experience at prices that require a financial output similar to what 
you’d need for a midrange trip to Europe.
 
 
 
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