Nautilus, Rarotonga, review: a new boutique resort

Sheriden Rhodes Nov 1 2014 at 1:15 PM

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I can't find my child. I know that sounds terribly irresponsible, but I'm not worried. The last time I saw her she was running barefoot, possibly not wearing sunscreen, hair blowing wildly in the breeze. She was chasing identical twin girls with blonde hair and sun-kissed skin, and a dog called Ice Cream. Earlier she was seen climbing a tall tree, her skinny legs clinging on for dear life. And before that she was huddled under a makeshift cubby; standing guard over a collection of hermit crabs being kept hostage in a coconut shell. I've never seen her so happy.

We're staying at the new Nautilus Resort, a boutique eco property that opened in Rarotonga in the Cook Islands on October 1. Surprisingly, up until now, there hasn't been a luxury resort in the Cooks that catered to well-heeled families. Fiji has had that cornered in the South Pacific, with kids' clubs, nannies and family friendly accommodation on tap. Australian owners Paul and Jane Pearson, who between them have four children (including those blonde twin girls), perceived a gap in the market. They saw the demand for quality surroundings in which to spend precious time with your family.

Eventually the 4.5-star, low-key property, set on the gorgeous Muri Beach, will have 38 spacious pool villas (the first six to open as part of stage one are mere steps from the water), a spa, and kids' club in addition to its excellent onsite restaurant. There will be a kids' concierge to organise fun cultural and environmentally aware activities, based on the demographics of guests staying inhouse. A tailor-made kids' program could include a beach treasure hunt, basket and ei (necklace) making and guided snorkelling of a motu. Nannies will also be available at $NZ15 an hour.

On arrival, the first thing that commands your attention is Nautilus' prime beachfront location. It sits on the safe, pristine Muri Lagoon opposite the picturesque Ta'akoka Motu, which you can swim, kayak or wade to (at low tide) for terrific snorkeling. The resort's centerpiece is a tiered infinity pool. When you're lying beside it, all you can see are layers of blue the cobalt blue of the pool and the aquamarine blue of the lagoon beyond, fringed by swaying palms. Adjacent to the pool is the resort's beachfront restaurant and bar. The Cook Islands has a competitive restaurant scene as visitors are not confined to eating at the place they're staying in and already Nautilus is making a name for itself for its food.

Head chef Michael Fosbender, a New Zealander who worked for The Landing in Wanaka before moving to Brazil to run Gotisso, delivers a menu with a strong Polynesian influence. There's a limited kids' menu too but, if you speak to the staff, the kitchen will whip up pretty much whatever your child fancies. Our six-year-old Ella became addicted to the frozen fruit slushies they served from the bar.

the first thing that commands your attention is Nautilus' prime beachfront location

The spacious villas feature contemporary island-inspired interiors with high ceilings, polished boards, canopy beds,deep baths, and salt-water plunge pools on the deck. There will be a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom villas, with the premium beachfront villas the pick of the bunch. Mist-shrouded peaks loom behind the resort, so the view from rooms set behind the beach isn't too shabby either.

It felt like we hardly saw Ella during our five days at the resort. She became fast friends with Jane and Paul's twins, Tia and Chloe, who have grown up in the Cook Islands. When she wasn't climbing trees or building cubbies, she was fashioning a crab race track in the sand, crafting boats out of coconuts, swimming in the pool or chasing the many friendly island dogs that roam free

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Nautilus, Rarotonga, review: a new boutique resort

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How China Is Making Tiny Islands Inhabitable With Huge Floating Docks

The Spratly Islands are basically mounds of sand in the middle of the South China Sea, some of them barely tall enough to reach above the water. But China is hell-bent on making them inhabitable, even drawing up plans for floating energy and water plants. It has nothing to do with the islands themselves and everything to do with the water around it.

The South China Sea is one of the most disputed areas of the world, with China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Malaysia all claiming various chunks of it. The sea encompasses valuable shipping routes into Asia and holds vast amounts of untapped oil and gas reserves. You bet China wants a share of that.

But there's a problem for China, which is that the islands it controls are not real islands long inhabited by people. They're more like sandy atolls. That hasn't stopped China though, which come up with creative ways to bolster their islands. They're dumping sand onto reefs to create new islands and building a military base right in the middle of it all.

But to sustain a military base there, you need people, and you need to somehow make these barren islands inhabitable. That's where the floating docks come in. Reporting from the Shiptec China 2014 exhibition, IHS Jane 360 has the details on the floating docks.

Two variants are under development. A base unit consists of a towed multifunctional platform and a bridge. [China Ship Scientific Research Center] said the platform can support the following capabilities: docking for 1,000-tonne ships, maintenance and repair stations for fishing vessels, an electric-power plant, fresh-water storage and supply, desalination of seawater, rainwater collection, and general storage of equipment and supplies.

A second platform variant is based on a semisubmersible vessel that can move under its own power, but not over long distances. The platform can be used for light construction and maintenance of an island, such as heightening sandbanks or removing reefs. CSSRC lists its additional capabilities as temporary living quarters for construction crews, and waste water treatment. The bridge is strong enough to carry a 10-tonne truck.

With floating docks in place, China could potentially settle the small islands much more quickly, giving them a stronger claim to the disputed waters. As China sees it, if life doesn't hand you islands, then you just have to build your own. [IHN Jane's 360 via Popular Science]

Top image: Spratly Islands. NASA/Wikimedia Commons

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How China Is Making Tiny Islands Inhabitable With Huge Floating Docks

Ship runs aground near Stockholm, spilling oil among pristine islands

A ship carrying 52 tons of oil in the Baltic Sea ran aground off Stockholms sprawling archipelago Wednesday morning and began leaking its cargo into the intricate network of islands and inlets, an online news agency reported.

The ships crew was working to transfer the oil from the container damaged by the grounding into an intact reservoir on the vessel, the Local English-language agency reported.

Neither the ships name nor country of registry were immediately reported.

Although 52 tons of oil is a relatively small cargo, equal to about 370 barrels, even a minor spill in the archipelago, which is a popular playground for boaters and campers in the area east of the Swedish capital, could inflict significant damage to the pristine environment.

The 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker spill in Alaskas Prince William Sound gushed more than 250,000 barrels into the sensitive aquatic environment, and the Deepwater Horizon explosion in the Gulf of Mexico four years ago spilled 560,000 barrels.

"It is too early to know how much damage has been done in the area," Jonny Aaberg from the Swedish Coast Guard told the Local.

Aaberg said high winds and waves were hampering the efforts to contain the spill.

Two environmental protection vessels were dispatched to the spill area after the coast guard received a distress signal around 5 a.m., the Local reported. Aerial surveillance of the accident site was also being conducted, the agency said.

Stockholms archipelago of 30,000 islands and peninsulas was in the news earlier this month when a mysterious vessel thought to be a Russian submarine was spotted in the area, triggering a massive sea and air hunt on a scale unseen since the Cold War ended. The search for an intruder was called off on Friday after authorities concluded the vessel had left Swedish waters.

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Ship runs aground near Stockholm, spilling oil among pristine islands

Zoologger: My lizard persona depends on my neighbours

Zoologger is our weekly column highlighting extraordinary animals and occasionally other organisms from around the world

Species: Podarcis erhardii, a wall lizard Habitat: The rocky scrubland, open sand dunes and high mountaintops of Albania, Macedonia, southern Bulgaria and Greece

Imagine being on holiday in Greece's Cyclades Islands, when you spot a greenish, speckled lizard. How close can you get before it runs away or tries detaching its tail in an effort to distract you? The answer depends which island you're on.

Erhard's wall lizard is found across the Cyclades, a set of islands in the Aegean Sea that became isolated from each other and mainland Europe at the end of the last ice age, more than 11,000 years ago. That stranded the islands' lizards, marooning them alongside different enemies. As a result, the lizards have been walking different evolutionary paths ever since.

Larger islands host a mix of feral cats, stone martens, hawks, snakes and rats, all hungry for a lizard-shaped snack. Smaller islands are less dangerous, inhabited by rats and a snake species or two, if anything. And it seems that those cohabitants have had an evolutionary effect on how edgy the lizard is - lizards on some islands are much more laid-back than elsewhere.

Islands are useful for studying evolution because they are isolated from each other, says Kinsey Brock of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. "One can ask interesting questions about evolution in a natural living laboratory that has been running an experiment for you on the order of thousands, maybe even millions of years."

And Brock's question is this: how close can you get to an Aegean wall lizard? To find out, she walked straight towards 913 different individuals, living on 37 islands plus the Greek mainland, at a speed of 1.3 metres per second. The average lizard ran from her when she got within 1.8 metres, but some lizards let her come as close as 10 centimetres. Others fled when she was 8.5 metres away.

She found a link between the distance at which a lizard flees and the island it hailed from. Lizards from smaller islands with fewer types of predator, or that had been disconnected from mainland predators for longer, let her come far closer by about 68 centimetres compared with their more fearful relatives.

Brock says that lizards on smaller, safer islands probably evolved this tameness because time is money. "If you're living in a predator-free environment, it would be evolutionarily disadvantageous to spend your time on the lookout for predators or running away while other lizards are foraging and mating."

Brock and her colleagues also investigated the lizard's tendency to resort to the extreme tactic of detaching its own tail. Called autotomy, this is usually a last-ditch attempt to escape a predator's grasp, or at least distract them with the writhing, wriggling remnant.

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