In December of 2016, I traveled to Fiji, a country comprised of many islands in the South Pacific. The biggest island, called Viti Levu, is where I spent most of my time in Fiji, followed by a week or so on Drawaqa, a small island in the Yasawa group of Islands.

Lessons Learned: Disclaimer

This was my first big international trip, so lots of life lessons learned. The person traveling with me was less prepared than I had anticipated. I quickly learned that I was expected to be the provider, the planner, the forecaster, the caregiver, the tour guide, etc. Despite the workload, I had a blast.

The story starts in the Los Angeles LAX airport:

Know the airport.

Always know where your upcoming departure gate is and give yourself extra time to get there.

I am usually a stop and smell the flowers type of guy. I’ll gladly change my plans if it means an authentic experience is to be had. Sometimes, I can be a little too lackadaisical, and this was on full display when I deplaned in LAX. Prior to figuring out where the next departure gate was, I chose to glance through the shops in the airport with absolutely no intention of buying a single thing.

It turns out that the Tom Bradley international terminal at LAX, at least as of 2017, is not accessible from the other terminals at LAX. Instead of moseying down to the gate as planned, the process was more involved, requiring:

  1. Exit through security;
  2. Collect our bags from baggage claim;
  3. Go outside, walk down the street past the cars dropping people off, then enter the Tom Bradley international terminal;
  4. Start the process as if we had just arrived to the airport by car.
The nostalgic departure board hanging over the Tom Bradley international terminal at LAX.

The added steps were unexpected and I was in a bit of a time crunch from my dilly-dallying, but there was still time to stop and smell the flowers, right?.

As I walked into the Tom Bradley international terminal, the whole ambiance of checking in was magical. A gigantic departure board hung overhead, clicking away as the flights and times adjusted. Loads of international travel seems to depart from LAX at night, so the check-in area was packed with people from nearly every country on the planet.

The roaring white noise from everyone talking was seemingly silent as hundreds of different languages filled the air. You can’t help but to stop and take it all in. It’s fun to people-watch and imagine all of the things they may be traveling for. For instance, we were waiting to be on holiday, but others could easily be on their journey to get home, or they could be going on a business trip, moving, maybe even going to see a loved one who could be ill. It’s truly remarkable that air travel enables so many goals to be accomplished for humans all over the world.

The takeaway: Make a plan, but don’t be too worried about sticking to it. Among others, Eisenhower once said, “No plan survives first contact with the enemy.” Though travel isn’t the enemy, the point is that it’s important to be flexible so you can enjoy the journey. Flexibility, in every aspect of the word, is likely one of the most desirable traits a human could attain.

Check the weather.

Flight path on seat-back.

I board the plane, get situated in my seat, and the excitement sets in. The seat-back screen on the chair ahead of us is displays a map with a disproportionately sized plane shown hovering over California and a green line tracing the whopping 12 hour flight path all the way to Fiji. The moment is finally here; The next stop is Fiji.

All the passengers are now on the plane and, as usual, the flight attendants are feverishly playing tetris with the overhead bin space. The pilot clicks the intercom and announces “… due to the tropical depression, we have to take on more fuel, so we are needing a couple of volunteers to stay in LA for the night and catch the flight into Fiji tomorrow.”

I should have been asking what a tropical depression is, because I had no clue what that meant. After ten minutes go by, the pilot again made the same announcement. I said to my travel partner, “We really ought to consider taking the money and trimming one day off of the itinerary.” After all, the plans for the trip were far from rigid and a single day wouldn’t have inconvenienced us at all. Another twenty minutes or so go by and the pilot comes on the intercom again, this time to say, “…Okay, since no one wants to volunteer, we will be taking bags off the plane instead… click.”

Yeah, you’re on the right track… , I wouldn’t be telling you all of this if my bag made the flight, right? Right.

I arrived in Fiji both learning what a tropical depression is and that I’d be without my clothes for a few days. The first few days in Fiji were full of rain, land slides, muddy ocean water, … you get the picture. I should have learned what a Tropical depression meant, maybe I would have stayed in LA for an extra day or two and cut the trip costs in half! Lesson learned.

Don’t be cheap; Be frugal.

I decided to hire a car for the trip. I looked into things before the trip and learned that in Fiji, rental cars and Taxi’s are identifiable by yellow license plates and the rental cars have a large red R or P displayed in the windshield. Also, rental cars can be expensive. I decided to be cheap and pay someone to use their personal car while I was in Fiji. It didn’t go well. It didn’t go real bad, but it certainly didn’t go well. 0/10, wouldn’t recommend.

It’s okay to splurge.

This is more of a general lesson learned.

Since this was my first big vacation and the flights seemed expensive, I went on the trip thinking that I needed to conserve money. About halfway through the trip, I realized that I had spent a lot to get there and it was going in vain since I wasn’t experiencing things on the island. So, I decided to splurge, and it was well worth it.

Ever since, I focus on pinching pennies when I am home then splurge when on holiday. I think most adventurous people won’t regret doing the same, money-back guarantee… just kidding, but really, give it a try!

The fun stuff!

Beqa Lagoon

There is a famous shark dive on the southern coast of the main island, Viti Levu. I hadn’t planned the dive in advance, so the night before I ringed a few companies without answer. In their defense, I waited until late in the day to call and it was the day before Christmas eve. Plus, Fiji Time is a real thing.

I showed up in the town on the morning of Christmas eve and booked the trip with the first company with an open slot which happened to be Beqa Adventure Divers.

Beqa Lagoon shark dive, taken from my GoPro Hero 6.

The dives were exhilarating with plenty of Bull sharks, a gigantic grouper fish. A Tiger shark even swam by at the end of the second dive. The experience was surreal, a literal once in a lifetime opportunity. It’s not just a tourist trap of a dive either; the bay is actually protected and all the dive companies contribute to the protection of the sharks and the marine life. They feed the sharks at intervals, regardless of tourists or weather, so the sharks aren’t agitated or on alert when divers are in the water. If you’re ever in the area, I certainly recommend the dive.

The Yasawa’s

It was practically my last week in Fiji and the experience was great so far, but it was different than I had envisioned. Fiji, at least the main island and especially the capital city of Suva, is quite industrial.

I found myself craving that bougie Fiji. You know, the bungalow over the crystal clear water, Fiji. The, money is no object, Fiji (except money was an object, so I got creative).

The Yasawa Islands are accessed by a high speed catamaran called the Yasawa Flyer. It leaves the tourist city of Nadi on the big island and does a round trip that stops at each of the major Yasawa islands, dropping people and goods off on the way out then picking the same up on the way back.

Bungalow at Barefoot Manta on Drawaqa Island.

I found an authentic experience on the island Drawaqa at BareFoot Manta; No electricity, no mainstream amenities, just the beautiful island and the guests staying in one of 21 individual huts. It was quaint, giving the exact experience I was hoping for.

The island hosts two researchers doing marine conservation. As a perk, they ran a small scuba shop and doubled as dive guides on the island. I dove six times with them during my week long stay, each of which was intimate with only one or two other divers. The water was pristine, coral rich and full of sea life like I had never seen before.

The island had recently purpose-sunk a fiberglass boat that was sort of abandoned by a Chinese company after is arrived in Fiji and refused to pay fines. Not many fiberglass boats had been purpose-sunk for marine life, so the researchers were running an experiment. I dove this shipwreck, but it was only recently sunk, and it was on purpose, which somewhat takes the glamour out of a shipwreck dive.

Nevertheless, the diving was absolutely life-changing! 10/10 would recommend.