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Daily Archives: April 10, 2017
Mystery surrounds tragedy of newlywed on Bahamas honeymoon … – The Sun
Posted: April 10, 2017 at 3:05 am
The 32-year-old is understood to have fallen from the ship's ninth deck
POLICE officers are probing the mystery disappearance of anewlywed husband enjoying his honeymoon after he was seen apparently jumping overboard from a cruise ship.
Reco Scott, 32, from Decatur, Georgia, was on theCarnival Liberty cruise ship with his bride Angelijica Scott on their dream getaway when tragedy struck.
Facebook/ Rico Scott Snr
The incident, which took place at 5am on Friday, saw him fall overboard when the ship was10 miles north west of the Berry Islands in the Bahamas.
At that point the cruise ship turned around, making way for rescue boats to move into the area.
A helicopter was also dispatched by the US Coast Guard.
However he has not been found, and the cruise ship resumed its journey later that afternoon.
A Carnival spokesman said: The missing guests family has been notified and our CareTeam is providing support.
We extend our thoughts and prayers to his family and loved ones during this difficult time.
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Gardiner breaks Bahamas national 400m record in Grenada meet … – Bahamas Tribune
Posted: at 3:05 am
STEVEN Gardiner broke his own Bahamian national 400 metres record to highlight the inaugural Grenada Invitational in St George's on Saturday night.
Dominating the B race, Gardiner, who was part of the Bahamas team to win 4x400m relay bronze at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro last summer, clocked 44.26 seconds to shave 0.01 from the national record he set in Nassau last June.
The 21-year-old Abaconians impressive performance was one of the fastest ever produced in the month of April, and sets the early season world leading time. Najee Glass, of the US, was a distant second in 45.70.
Gardiner's run upstaged that of local hero Kirani James, the 2012 Olympic 400m champion, who headlined the evening-capping A final. James won handily in 45.44 seconds, finishing nearly a second clear of Briton Martyn Rooney who clocked 46.35.
Full story, see Monday's Tribune
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Bahamas Drops Into Zone Iii After Davis Cup Loss – Bahamas Tribune
Posted: at 3:05 am
Support for the Bahamas at the Davis Cup. Photo: Perry Newton
By BRENT STUBBS
Senior Sports Reporter
THE mens team of player/captain Marvin Rolle and Phillip Major Jr gave it a gallant effort in the pivotal doubles, but it wasnt enough to get the Bahamas past Bolivia in the Davis Cup Zone II tie.
On Saturday at the Club de Tenis Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, Bolivia, Rolle and Major Jr fell 6-7 (5), 6-1, 6-0, 6-1 to Bolivias duo of Hugo Dellien and Federicio Zeballos.
With the victory, Bolivia clinched the tie after winning the first two singles of the first day of competition on Friday to remain in Zone II for 2018. With the loss, the Bahamas dropped back down to Zone III.
The tie will be completed on Sunday, but the reverse singles will be relegated to the best-of-three matches instead of the best-of-five in the opening singles on Friday.
In those matches, Bahamas top seed Spencer Newman suffered a 6-2, 6-0, 6-2 loss to Dellien, Bolivias No.2 seed, while Major Jr, playing No.2, fell 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 to Zeballos, Bolivias top seed.
None of Team Bahamas players were available for comments.
But Bahamas Lawn Tennis Associations public relations officer Perry Newton said they had a rain delay after the third set and they were hoping that Team Bahamas would have regrouped.
The team tried to pull it off, but Bolivia just got the best of us in the doubles, he said. So we look forward to next year with the hopes of getting back into Zone II.
Newton said the BLTA is confident that with the calibre of players that they have to work with, the Bahamas has sufficient players to do it again.
Last year, Rolle captained the team that comprised of brothers Baker and Spencer Newman, along with Kevin Major Jr as they advanced out of Zone III.
However, the BLTA didnt have the services of Baker Newman and Kevin Major Jr this year, with both committed to playing for their respective colleges.
Without them, Rolle carried the same team of Spencer Newman, Phillip Major Jr and Justin Lunn to Doral, Florida in February where they lost 5-0 to Venezuela in the first round of the American Zone II tie.
Rolle and the trio of Spencer Newman, Phillip Major Jr and Justin Lunn made the trip to Bolivia in their bid to stay in Zone II. But Newton said Team Bahamas faced a high level of tennis.
Both Zeballos and Dellien are ranked in the top 1,000 on the ATP computer list, but none of Team Bahamas players are ranked.
Despite losing the tie, Newton said he and the other seven spectators who traveled to Bolivia to support Team Bahamas were treated with a lot of love and respect by the home crowd.
It was a lot of fun. Newton stated.
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Bahamas Drops Into Zone Iii After Davis Cup Loss - Bahamas Tribune
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‘Ghost In The Shell’ Rises To $93M Offshore; ‘Beauty And The Beast’ Tops $977M Global International Box Office – Deadline
Posted: at 3:05 am
UPDATE, WRITETHRU: This frame saw the first shift at the top of the international box office since Disneys Beauty And The Beast initially twirled through offshore turnstiles last month. With a $36.1M weekend, Belle and her beau dipped from their No. 1 perch to No. 3 in the session, trailing Ghost In The Shell ($41.3M) and The Boss Baby ($37.5M).
But theres no cause to weep for the star-crossed lovers and their enchanted pals. In its 4th weekend at the worldwide ball, BATB waltzed to a global cume of $977.4M, poised to cross $1B in the coming days. The Bill Condon-directed film also rose to $545.1M overseas, helping The Walt Disney Studios clock $1B+ in 2017 overseas receipts with $1.007B to date.
Meanwhile, coming off of a weekend largely led by China, Paramount/DreamWorks/Reliances Ghost In The Shell emerged as the No. 1 film overseas this frame. In the Middle Kingdom, the Scarlett Johansson-starrer earned $21.4M higher than the actress 2014 actioner Lucy which bowed to $20M there.
In the Japanese launch, Ghost came at No. 1 in with $3.2M. While the film has been decently received there, and the market is slow burn, neither it nor China are expected to fully bail Ghost out.
The international cume is now $92.8M and some industry estimates see it landing between $150M and $170M at the end of the day. Particularly with The Fate Of The Furious revving up in China on Friday and then in Japan on April 28. Beauty And The Beast hits the latter on April 21.
DreamWorks Animation/Fox
In other weekend activity, Sony Pictures Animations Smurfs: The Lost Village added $22M for a $42.1M offshore total thus far; and Warner Bros Kong: Skull Island pounded out another $16M for an overseas cume of $377.8M and a global warchest of $534.4M.
Also from Warner Bros, new entry Going In Style is coming in fashionably versus some comps and opened to $4.3M in 32 markets.
Setting a new milestone, Lionsgates six-time Oscar winner La La Land has reached $287.8M internationally to surpass the lifetime of The Hunger Games.
Beginning on Wednesday this week, Universals Fate Of The Furious gets off the starting block, muscling into eight offshore markets including Australia, France, Korea and Belgium. By the weekend it will be in 62 and on 688 IMAX screens internationally; 392 of those in China.
Breakdowns on the above films have been updated below.
NEW GOING IN STYLE
Warner Bros
Russia opened to $800K at No. 4 to more than double the results of The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, followed by the UK with $688K on 454. The UAE knocked off $520K on 45 for No. 2 and surpassing all comps. Holland topped Last Vegas by 11% with $320K including sneaks and more than doubled Luc Bessons The Family which WB is using as a comp. Brazil lifted $243K on 121 to top the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel sequel by 77%.
Releases this week include Spain and Germany. Australia and Mexico go the following frame.
HOLDOVERS/EXPANSIONS GHOST IN THE SHELL
Paramount
In the Middle Kingdom, where sci-fi does not over-index, the Rupert Sanders-helmed movie made $21.4M at 7,600 locations. Thats bigger than Johansson vehicle Lucy which bowed to $20M in 2014 and went on to $44.8M there. The film has a 6.6 rating on Douban and mid-weeks will count as The Fate Of The Furious will obliterate anything in its path when it opens on Friday.
In Japan, from whence the source material hails, the film opened to $3.2M at 327 cinemas. As Deadline reported last week, the whitewashing controversy seems to have sidestepped Japan because audiences are used to watching western actors, and word of mouth appears decent. While Japan is a leggy market of big multiples, Ghost also faces F8 there beginning April 28, just after Beauty And The Beast on April 21.
Sources are pegging the overseas final on Ghost in the $160M neighborhood.
In IMAX, Ghost In The Shell took $5.5M global for a $13.5M cume; the international weekend was $4.4M including $2.5M from 389 Chinese screens.
The Top 5 overall markets on Ghost are China ($21.4M), Russia ($8M), Korea ($5.5M), France ($5.3M) and the UK ($5.2M).
THE BOSS BABY
Fox
Despite warm, sunny weather in the UK, families went out for Alec Baldwins tough guy kid with $9.9M at No. 1 (including previews) and 49% bigger than The Croods, 47% bigger than Trolls.
Mexico held No. 1 in the 2nd session with $3.4M and a 40% drop ($12M cume). France likewise was No. 1 for the 2nd frame in a row, topping local newcomer A Bras Ouverts with $3.2M and a 37% drop from open ($9.8M cume). The next best results were in Brazil ($2.1M/$6.2M cume); Germany ($1.9M/$5M cume); and Australia ($1.8M/$8.8M cume up 21% versus last weekend).
The lead market remains Russia at $24M. In comparable markets and at todays exchanges, The Boss Baby is cooing louder than Trolls (+63%), Rio (+40%), The Croods (+20%) and Sing (+14%).
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
Disney
In 55 material markets, BATB dipped 46% in its 4th session with strong holds in several plays including Belgium (-7%), Poland (-16%), Germany (-27%), the Netherlands (-34%), Brazil (-38%), Australia (-39%) and China (-39%). The Emma Watson/Dan Stevens romantic tuner has clocked No. 1 for four weeks in a row in Germany, Korea, Austria, Finland, Poland, Portugal, Brazil, Venezuela, Bolivia, Switzerland and the UK (the latter holds No. 1 based on this weekends FSS but Boss Baby is No. 1 with previews included). Other No. 1 holds include Australia, Chile, Argentina, Malaysia and New Zealand.
In Europe, the cume to date of $217M has surpassed the total regional runs of Deadpool, Zootopia, Batman Vs Superman: Dawn of Justice, Captain America: Civil War and Suicide Squad.
Here are the Top 5 markets to date: China ($85.3M), UK ($73.2M), Brazil ($36M), Korea ($33.9M) and Mexico ($28.3M).
SMURFS: THE LOST VILLAGE
Sony
Major hubs on the earlier films included a mix of Germany, China, France, the UK and Brazil. Of those, only the UK had opened through last weekend on The Lost Village. This frame added Brazil ($2.2M), France ($1.9M with previews), Mexico ($1.6M), Germany ($1.5M with previews) and Italy ($1M).
The diminutive Peyo characters have a sizable international brand, but saw a drop-off between films one and two which legged out to $421M and $277M, respectively, at offshore turnstiles. There have of course been big currency swings between 2013 and today, and while some watchers are underwhelmed by the perf so far, Sony is where it expected to be given the strong competition.
With Easter and spring holidays coming up, the studio is anticipating runway on the pic which has a reported negative cost of $60M and a global P&A less than the $100M spent on the profitable Angry Birds Movie. China is due on April 21, the last film made $22M there.
KONG: SKULL ISLAND
Warner Bros
In the 3rd session, China added $11.3M for No. 2 behind newcomer Ghost In The Shell. This week, the movie from Jordan Vogt-Roberts crossed the 1B RMB mark and now has a local Middle Kingdom cume of $161M (1.11B RMB). Rounding out the Top 5 markets are the UK ($18.6M), Mexico ($13.9M), Japan ($13.8M) and Korea ($12.1M).
SABANS POWER RANGERS The Lionsgate title grossed an additional $6.1M from 75 markets this frame, bringing the international cume to $42.1M. The biggest new play was France with $1.3M. The film is playing younger than expected in Europe with only the UK in the Top 5 out of the majors. Currently, the No. 1 play is Mexico with $5.3M, followed by the UK at $4.9M, Brazil ($4.8M), Malaysia ($2.7M) and Australia ($2.4M). The kids morph into their next major with Korea on April 20, followed by hopeful key markets China (May 5) and Japan (July 15).
LIFE
Sony Pictures
SING
Universal
MOANA Coming out of its 19th weekend in offshore release, Disneys Moana has reached $386.1M at the international box office and $634.8M worldwide. This frame was worth $2.3M overseas in Japan which has now risen to $39.4M. That makes Japan the No. 1 offshore market, overtaking Frances $35.4M.
GET OUT
Universal
MISC UPDATED CUMES/NOTABLE
20th Century Fox
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Proposal would prevent offshore wind project in Maine | WGME – WGME
Posted: at 3:05 am
A proposal before the Maine Legislature would prevent the state from permitting an offshore wind energy project in the vicinity of Monhegan Island. (MGN)
PORTLAND (AP) -- A proposal before the Maine Legislature would prevent the state from permitting an offshore wind energy project in the vicinity of Monhegan Island.
Monhegan Island is a tiny island about 12 nautical miles off of Maine's mainland that is well known as a home to artists, seasonal residents and lobster fishermen. Maine Aqua Ventus intends to install a two-turbine, 12-megawatt project off its coast.
Republican state Sen. Dana Dow, who represents the island in the Statehouse, wants to prevent the project from happening. His proposal would create a prohibited zone where an offshore wind energy test area would not be able to be located.
Dow's proposal would also prohibit the state from issuing a permit for an offshore wind project within 10 nautical miles of the Monhegan Lobster Conservation Area.
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Here’s Why These Offshore Drilling Stocks Fell Sharply in March – Motley Fool
Posted: at 3:05 am
What happened
In March, shares of offshore drillersEnsco(NYSE:ESV),Transocean (NYSE:RIG),Rowan Companies(NYSE:RDC), andAtwood Oceanics(NYSE:ATW) finished between 10.7% and 16% lower than they started. Since the beginning of the year, that puts all four drilling rig operators down between 12% and 30% at month's end.
There hasn't really been much in the way of material news in the offshore oil market over the past month or so following the quarterly earnings season in February. However, there wasa lot of chatter about oil prices.
Image source: Getty Images.
The biggest news affecting oil markets -- and therefore oil stocks -- was the growth of oil inventories, especially U.S. onshore supply. According to industry data, U.S. crude stocks increased 11.6 million barrels in early March, far higher than industry analysts were expecting.
Here's how that affected oil prices for the rest of the month.
ESV data by YCharts.
It should be pretty easy to see that these four offshore drilling stocks correlated with the movement of oil prices. This is typical -- and will remain so -- for as long as the downturn continues to keep oil producers from spending money on offshore drilling.
On an asset basis, these stocks are at fire-sale prices:
ESV Price to Book Value data by YCharts.
In other words, the market is pricing these companies at one-third or less of the liquidation value of their assets. But until producers start spending offshore, you can expect offshore drilling stocks to pretty much chase oil prices. When oil goes up, share prices will likely outpace them. When crude falls, however -- as it did in March -- offshore drilling stocks will probably fall farther.
At some point, offshore spending will pick up, simply because some of the world's biggest oil fields are offshore. And while they are very expensive to develop, offshore oil can be profitable at current crude prices.The problem is that it takes a lot of up-front money and a long time before the oil starts flowing. And there's some indication spending is set to pick up, with a number of new projects expected to go to bid before year-end.
The best approach if you're considering investing in this space, or if you already own shares, is to take the time to understand each company, particularly the strength of its balance sheet, how much (and when it's due) debt it has, and the size and stability of its contracted backlog of work.
But until there's more work to be had, there's going to be a lot more of the kind of volatility we saw in March -- and largely based on non-news and speculation.
Jason Hall owns shares of Atwood Oceanics, Ensco, and Transocean. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Atwood Oceanics. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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Young family moves from high desert to life on the high seas – Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
Posted: at 3:04 am
Tyler and Kristy Hawkins, former Mesa County residents, pose on their new home, a 37-foot boat in North Carolina. The couple will set sail for the U.S. Virgin Islands in the fall with their children, Sofie, 3, and C.J., who is almost 1 year old, along with their dog, Riot. They will chronicle their adventure in a blog.
By Erin McIntyre Sunday, April 9, 2017
Tyler and Kristy Hawkins know that life is too short, and thats one of the reasons theyve sold everything, left their home in western Colorado and embarked on an adventure with their kids. But this isnt just a trip, its a new lifestyle theyre happy to share with anyone who wants to live vicariously.
The 27-year-old Plateau Valley High School graduate and his wife, a 25-year-old Fruita Monument High School graduate, call themselves the Windswept Gypsies, and are documenting their adventures on their blog, windsweptgypsies.com.
The Hawkinses started downsizing their possessions last year with the goal of living on a 37-foot sailboat with their two children. And for the past month, theyve been getting their sea legs on board the Night Music, currently docked in the Northwest Creek Marina just outside New Bern, North Carolina.
It has been quite the adjustment, moving from a 1,500-square-foot house with two small children in a landlocked state to living on a boat with their dog, Riot.
For the couple, the decision came after tragedies and the realization that they wanted to have a different lifestyle, and they didnt want to be the kind of people who spend their best years in the rat race to take a few weeks off here and there to spend time with their kids.
Their new lifestyle allows for a lower cost of living than the house and vehicles they were maintaining in western Colorado, and theyre embarking on this incredible adventure together, with their daughter Sofie, 3, and son C.J., who is nearly 1 year old. They hope to experience a more sustainable lifestyle that focuses on quality, not quantity.
Living on a boat has been a longtime dream for Tyler, and hes wanted to do it since he was in high school. The decision to make it happen was prompted by recent losses of family members. Tylers dad, Wes, was killed in a sudden, massive landslide less than three years ago near Collbran, with two others, and Kristys dad and brother have died in the past two years.
Lifes too short to not go and do something like this, Tyler said. We figured we could either continue down the path we were going and wonder if we were truly happy or make it happen.
Last year, the couple was in the process of trying to buy some property near Molina, which didnt pan out. Tyler was working long hours as an electrician and missed being with his kids.
They sat down to dinner one night and were discussing the problem, and Kristy said, Why dont we just move onto a boat?
And Tyler thought, Thats why I married you.
So far, they dont regret their transition one bit, although living with less in a smaller space has been an adjustment. Theres no hot water heater, no washing machine for clothes, no dishwasher. Theyre setting up a wringer for laundry, and C.J. is wearing cloth diapers, so thats on the list of things to learn how to do. Theres no TV and Kristy has to keep a hawk eye on the kids for fear they will fall overboard, as C.J. is learning to walk on the boat.
Their plan is to stay at the marina until fall, after hurricane season passes, when theyve worked out the details of living on the boat full-time. Then theyll head to the U.S. Virgin Islands, the destination of their first trip together only two weeks after they met years ago, and the place they fell in love.
So far, the couple has detailed their experiences getting to the marina and starting life on board on their blog, and plan on sharing their adventure with anyone who wants to know more about their lifestyle, including the nitty-gritty details, and is fascinated about life aboard with kids.
Were going to be pretty open-book, he said.
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Master of the high seas: Pomp, patriotism and politics as Navy’s newest ship gets a name – Wicked Local Wellesley
Posted: at 3:04 am
Rick Holmes Opinions/Mass. Political Editor @HolmesAndCo
BATH, Maine - The orders of the day called for dress blues, so the crew of the USS Thomas Hudner marched in their sharpest uniforms into the biting wind and slushy snow of an April storm. It was a special occasion, the christening of the nations newest destroyer, and the men and women of the U.S. Navy dont mind getting wet.
Ship christenings have traditions that are well-practiced here in Bath, where they have been launching ships into the Kennebec River for 400 years. A Navy Band played. Dignitaries spoke, including all four members of Maines Congressional delegation. The wife of the ships namesake smashed a bottle of champagne on the bow of the 509-foot craft.
The honoree, Capt. Thomas Hudner, was on hand, a rarity when it comes to ship christenings. In 1951, when his friend and wingman, Jesse Brown, was shot down in Korea during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, he crash-landed his own plane in a vain effort to rescue him. President Harry Truman awarded Hudner the Congressional Medal of Honor for "displaying conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life."
There was no talk of jobs, money or politics as Hudner and his ship were honored that blustery morning. But the presence of Maines two senators and two Congress members was a reminder. Each was introduced with reference to the committee assignments most relevant to keeping the Navys ships being built by Bath Iron Works.
The 5,900 jobs at BIW skilled manufacturing jobs with good union pay and benefits are critical to the economy of Mid-Coast Maine. Every Maine politician, whether its the liberal Democrat from the states southern House district, the Republican from the northern district who based his remarks on America First, or the states moderate senators, Republican Susan Collins and Independent Angus King, makes preserving those jobs a top priority.
Defense contracting is big business, and General Dynamics, owner of BIW, is one of the biggest in the world. Theres an intense competition between BIW and the Huntington-Ingalls Shipyard in Pascagoula, Mississippi, to build Arleigh-Burke class destroyers like the Hudner. Its the job of the Maine Congressional delegation, along with an army of General Dynamics lobbyists, to keep those contracts coming here.
None of the speakers mentioned the cost of the USS Hudner, but its your money, so you should know: $663 million.
The Hudner, which will be officially commissioned next year after more testing, is the 66th out of a planned 75 Arleigh-Burke destroyers. And thats just one part of the American fleet, which is far and away the largest Navy in the world. The U.S. has more destroyers than the next five countries combined. The advantage in aircraft carriers, the most powerful sea-going vessels, is even greater. No other country has more than one. The U.S. has 10.
Our large fleet is getting ever larger. We have about 272 vessels today, which was due to grow to 305 ships under Obama administration plans. President Donald Trump campaigned on a pledge to build a 350-ship Navy.
Thats just part of Trumps proposed $603 billion defense budget. Hes calling for a $54 billion increase in military spending, paid for by huge cuts in non-military domestic programs.
And theres the rub. To budget is to choose. The USS Hudner costs more to build than the budget for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting ($445 million) and the National Endowment for the Arts ($145 million) combined two of 19 programs zeroed out in Trumps budget with their own political constituencies. Theres a large debate to come about the choices we make.
But the story of Capt. Hudners heroism in Korea is a reminder that national security isnt just about dollars and cents. Hudner disobeyed an order to stay in the air. He destroyed an expensive piece of military equipment in a futile effort to save a buddy. For that he received not a reprimand, but the nations highest military honor.
Even that decision may have involved some politics. Jesse Brown, the pilot Hudner tried to save, was black, the nations first African-American naval aviator, and Truman had taken intense criticism for his decision to integrate the armed forces.
Their friendship was spotlighted at the time, and again at the ship christening ceremony, sending a message about inclusion.
My father was a Navy man. Like the members of the future crew of the USS Hudner who marched proudly through the snow in Bath, he helped supervise the construction of the aircraft carrier that would carry him to war in the Pacific. We should all be proud of the ships Americans build, and of the men and women who sail into danger on them.
But we cannot forget that theres politics and money behind every line of the federal budget.
Rick Holmes can be reached at rick@rickholmes.net. You can follow his journey at http://www.rickholmes.net. Like him on Facebook at Holmes & Co, on follow him on Twitter @HolmesAndCo.
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Fiji’s luxury Vatuvara Private Islands – Gourmet Traveller Magazine Australia
Posted: at 3:04 am
On a deserted island in Fijis pristine northern Lau archipelago, Sophie McComas settles into an over-the-top villa owned by Oakley founder, Jim Jannard.
I'm being defeated in a staring contest by a double-decker coconut cake, thickly iced and sprinkled with golden toasted coconut flakes and frangipani flowers. It sits beside a bottle of Taittinger on ice, my only companions inside a villa that's big enough for 10, but intended for two.
Only three of these enormous villas hug the shrouded shoreline of Kaibu, a remote island in the pristine Lau archipelago in Fiji's far east. Kaibu is one of two islands that comprise Vatuvara Private Islands resort, a hideaway accessible only by its gloriously retro Twin Otter plane, which banks above the sapphire lagoon before touching down on an airstrip at the island's peak.
The owner, like his islands, is very private. In 2007, more than 30 years after launching his sportswear and eyewear company Oakley Inc, Jim Jannard sold it to the eyewear giant Luxottica for $US2.1 billion. His next project, named Red, was more niche but no less successful, producing high-resolution digital cameras for the film industry. One of the brand's earliest champions was New Zealand director Peter Jackson, who shot The Hobbit trilogy on Jannard's cameras, catapulting their value.
Drinks served on the beach at the resort.
So, with no issues regarding cash flow and with a mission to find somewhere to spend a few weeks a year with his toes in the sand and his head in a coconut cocktail, the Californian entrepreneur scoured Fiji. In 2010, he bought a pair of reef-fringed islands in the east: Kaibu, a 324-hectare piece of land on which US fibreglass tycoon Jay Johnson had previously developed a simple, quiet resort, and neighbouring Vatuvara, which is roughly the same size, dotted with coconut groves and dominated by a soaring mountain peak resembling a stone hat.
Jannard's next step was to lure husband-and-wife management team Rob and Lynda Miller, an Australian and American respectively, to build a secluded resort and run it in the months he wasn't enjoying his splendid island isolation. The Millers were managing Wakaya Club and Spa at the time, considered by many (including Gourmet Traveller, which featured it back in January 2006) as the South Pacific's most exclusive island resort. Its reputation was due in no small part to the Millers' careful management since the early '80s. In its heyday, Wakaya was favoured by the likes of Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise (even after their split), Russell Crowe, Demi Moore and Spain's Prince Felipe. Apparently Keith Richards toppled out of one of the resort's coconut trees in 2006. That's the extent of the Millers' account - discretion is high among their talents. "We've had to hide the guest book a few times," says Rob when we meet over a salad lunch, plucked mostly from the island's organic kitchen garden.
The resort's signature lunch dish of raw fish marinated in coconut milk.
The Millers are a relaxed couple - he's a hotelier and chef by trade, she has a horticultural degree - and when they arrived, they shared a clear picture of the kind of paradise they wanted to create in this corner of the world. Jannard had his own ideas, of course, but for the most part the Millers were left to realise their vision. "We thought if we can imagine it, we can make it happen," says Lynda.
After 28 years at the larger (though still boutique) Wakaya resort, with its 10 bures and expansive villa, they were keen for a new, smaller project. "We decided it would be fun and new and something we can take charge of ourselves," says Rob. The aim was to attract a similar crowd to a more tranquil and remote island idyll. The Lau archipelago is sparsely populated; the closest resort island is Laucala, owned by Red Bull's Dietrich Mateschitz, 60 kilometres to the north. "Between them and us and a few little ones, that's all there is this side of the mainland," says Rob. "Everything else is off Nadi. When you come here, you're out, way out. Almost in Tonga. It's all untouched."
The view from Delana, one of the resort's three villas.
The couple moved to the uninhabited Kaibu in 2010 with a tent, a generator and a handful of helpers, and began work. "We looked at the island like a big backyard," says Lynda, recalling the early days of the resort's transformation. They trained villagers from a neighbouring island in carpentry, gardening and construction to help them, and employed Fijian architects to polish and modernise the existing resort's classic Fijian style. The beachfront pavilion that houses Jim's Bar & Grill is built with darkly stained pylons of Fijian mahogany. The main bar is a highlight; Rob worked with a local tattoo artist to etch the thick slabs of Vesi hardwood with Fijian-style carvings noticeable only when you run your palm over them. For a contemporary feel based on South Pacific style, Lynda sourced furniture from Italy and soft furnishings from Coco Republic and Tommy Bahama.
Sitting on the crest of the island is Delana which, at 450 square metres, is the largest and most impressive of the three villas. A pair of heavy wooden doors as wide as my outstretched arms swing open and I'm looking down the barrel of an infinity-edge lap pool and beyond to the lagoon. I count 11 lounging positions on sofas and daybeds by the pool's edge, each one upholstered in dove-grey linen, scattered with bright cushions and accessorised with potted succulents, candles and coasters.
Fruit punch and juices.
From the pool terrace, I spot Delana's private cove, where a rack of stand-up paddleboards is flanked by a life-sized chessboard and a cabana with neighbouring twin hammocks.
Inside Delana, the blaze of the sun is muted by the coolness of stone and dark lacquered hardwood. Two desks sit side by side in a study so handsome it's almost presidential. That space flows into a lounging area dominated by slouchy, contemporary Italian furniture, screened by double doors from a supersized custom-made bed looking out to the pool and lagoon through floor-to-ceiling glass. Just a few steps from the bed is a square stone spa bath and massage area, with twin massage tables and a therapist on call. The Vintec is stocked with your favourite wine and spirits requested before arrival.
The island's other villas, Vatu and Saku, sit on either side of Delana but are completely hidden from it. Marginally smaller than the master villa, they have similarly over-the-top features. There are private pools, ocean-facing terraces for yoga or Pilates classes, deep stone tubs, outdoor showers, and unlimited cocktails and snacks. For guests who can't (or won't) switch off, there's high-speed WiFi available everywhere on the island - from every hammock and on every beach.
Lounges with a view at Delana.
Tablets in each villa are loaded with deserted island playlists, and there's a direct line to staff should guests need a pillow fluffed or bottle chilled. If one were to request a bath filled to the brim with single-malt whisky, it's not hard to imagine the only question might be one's preference of barrel age.
It would be a shame, though, to remain indoors when there's scuba diving, surfing and fishing trips, cooking classes and a four-hole golf course. A perfect morning might involve a lagoon ride in Houdini, the island's speedy 11-metre Naiad boat, with a couple of stand-up paddleboards in tow. It wouldn't be an unreasonable or unusual request to be dropped off on one of the powdery banks that rise from the private lagoon for a few hours at low tide, with a bucket of iced Champagne, a walkie-talkie and your lover. Houdini will reappear when summoned.
The dining pavilion's exterior.
Back on land, Lynda guides us through the gardens that she and her team of six have cultivated. Paths arc through a riot of lush green splashed with the rude colours of bougainvillea, hibiscus, and frangipani. The gardens are beautiful, but that's only a fraction of the story. With a degree in horticulture and a goal of self-sufficiency, Lynda has developed an expansive farm and orchard with full organic certification, a standard still uncommon in Fiji. "When we arrived, this area was sort of a natural bog," she says, gesturing to small pools at the lower end of the sloping garden. "We created ponds and redirected the water into them, so we can utilise the land here." Chooks scratch and fuss between tomato vines and rows of lettuce, rocket, endive and zucchini; they lay eggs haphazardly, leaving a treasure hunt for the gardeners. There's a little market garden behind each kitchen, so chefs can dash out and snip mint for drinks or salad leaves for lunch. Ink-blue coconut crabs with muscular pincers scurry along paths in front of us and dart up palms to evade capture (as a protected species, they needn't worry).
The orchard is full of bush lemons, cumquats and Indian and Tahitian limes, which are squeezed and mixed with fresh sugarcane juice and ginger for breakfast drinks. There are dark glossy-leafed macadamia trees and laden breadfruit trees, pawpaws and bananas, delicate vanilla plants and jalapeo plants, bushy rows of shiso and soy beans. Almost everything on the table is grown on the island or sourced nearby. Lynda's herbs and local lobster fill curries at dinner; at lunch, there are sliders with organic beef and lamb from neighbouring Mago Island, which is owned by Mel Gibson. (Oysters from his island are also said to be excellent.)
Fijian wood carvings dominate the Valhalla's look.
There are two spots for dining on the island, not counting your villa. Jim's Bar & Grill is a breezy pavilion on the beachfront with a barbecue on the sand for the day's catch - prawns on lemongrass skewers, say, or lobsters caught in nearby reefs - and also a wood-fired pizza oven. This is the spot for knocking the top off a young coconut and sipping its water, and for leisurely breakfasts - smoked salmon with poached eggs and homemade chilli jam, perhaps, or piping hot doughnuts and local coffee. A traditional Fijian lovo earth oven is fired up for chickens, joints of pork or whole fish to cook underground until tender, smoky and crisp-skinned.
Set back from the beach, up on a crest en route to Delana, is a more formal dining pavilion with bar and lounge, aptly named Valhalla. Games and books are stacked up for rainy afternoons, before evening cocktails and candlelit dinners. The menus mix fresh Californian and Japanese flavours with Fijian staples - labelled by Rob as "Pacific Rim" - though as is the way on this isle of plenty, the kitchen will endeavour to make anything requested. Seafood is abundant; local fishermen routinely come ashore with lobsters, crabs and torpedo-sized yellowfin tuna. We start one evening with Gingeritas and roasted coconut chips dipped in aoli. Tuna sashimi, lobster curry and grilled opakapaka - a pink deepwater snapper - are followed by banana-caramel souffl and a nip of whisky from the island's 300-bottle stash.
Delana's master bedroom.
The cocoon of tranquillity and comfort at Vatuvara seem so shatterproof it's hard to imagine that conditions are not always so calm or predictable. The most recent cyclone in February last year was the wildest in Fiji's recorded history: a category-five event named Winston. It and its accompanying tidal surge devastated many islands, killing 44 people and affecting 350,000 more. An estimated 32,000 homes were destroyed, many of them in low-lying villages. The damage at Vatuvara resort was enormous, though less deadly. Rob recalls running to the resort's main pavilion after the roof on his house blew away. "Once the roof goes, the walls go," he says. "It was like a washing machine. [The storm] was about eight hours all up." The gardens were shredded; coconut palms torn clean from the sand.
A year later it's hard to detect damage. Aside from a few slightly balding palms, the scars have disappeared under new growth. "It's funny," says Rob as we sit at the outdoor table at Jim's Bar & Grill, looking out to the garden, "during cyclone season, you just have to go ahead and chop the tops off the banana trees so they don't rip away in the wind. Once the storm has passed, they sprout again as if nothing had happened. Everything goes back to normal."
The view from Vatu.
The team here has done much the same. Lynda has the garden back in shape, and guests enjoy its bounty at every meal. It's hard to spot a Fijian face without a smile here, whether they're wrangling coconut crabs or agreeing that, yes, of course, it would be a good idea to whip up a second coconut cake. It's impossible not to match their smiles with one just as wide.
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Fiji's luxury Vatuvara Private Islands - Gourmet Traveller Magazine Australia
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Gilman: For Mark Sundeen, the search began with a meat snack (column) – Summit Daily News
Posted: at 3:02 am
After two decades of bumming around the country, first as a dirtbag outdoorsman stringing together jobs in the rural West, and later as a city-bound freelancer "whose sole purpose was to inhale dollars, transform them into pleasure, then exhale a stream of carbon into the air, feces into the sewer and plastic containers into the landfill," Mark Sundeen settled in Missoula, Montana.
There, he got engaged to a woman who also valued a simpler life, bike-commuted 14 miles daily and lived on garden feasts that took hours to concoct.
In a world where human appetites obliterate entire ecosystems, Sundeen recognized that what we choose to consume has moral implications. But one night while grocery shopping, faced with the $6.50 price tag on organic butter, he headed instead for the cheaper stuff in the conventional food aisles. There, he succumbed to a greasy breast of fried chicken, no doubt factory-raised on monoculture grain and cruelly caged. Then, he wiped his sins away with a moist towelette and pedaled home.
It's a wry encapsulation of a conundrum that those who aspire to sustainability face: We carve out sacrifices here and there Drive less! Recycle! Install solar! until they interfere with other desires. In search of a clearer path, Sundeen, author of "The Man Who Quit Money," set out to find people who have gone far beyond what most of us consider "good enough."
The result is his book, "The Unsettlers: In Search of the Good Life in Today's America," which provides a contemporary twist on Wendell Berry's 1977 classic, "The Unsettling of America." Where Berry argues that industrial agribusiness and modern capitalism have distanced people from the land and each other, Sundeen explores a movement toward radical simplicity, digging deep into peculiarly American strains of utopianism and telling the stories of three couples trying to live out their ideals in wildly different places.
Olivia Hubert, a black horticulturalist, and Greg Willerer, a white former teacher with roots in the anarchist punk scene, create a tiny urban farm. They're hoping to localize and humanize Detroit's inner-city food system part of a bigger ambition to build a more just version of a city bludgeoned by industrial collapse, racism and poverty.
There is Ethan Hughes, who led a cross-country, bike-driven "superhero" expedition to do good, and his wife, Sarah Wilcox, a classically trained soprano. They create a car-free, electricity-free intentional community in Missouri that engages in nonviolent activism.
We also meet Luci Brieger and Steve Elliott, who founded a small organic farm not far from Missoula that catalyzed a vibrant local food scene across western Montana.
The book is part memoir, chronicling Sundeen's new marriage and quest for a better life, and part social history. But though Sundeen finds beauty in each of the couples' lives, he doesn't flatten them into human Instagrams "the soft-focus shots of sun-dappled mason jars and fresh-picked pears" that tug at the heart of anyone stuck in a cubicle.
Hubert and Willerer must chase armed intruders from the crackhouse across the street off their property instead of merely grappling with gophers attacking their fields. Hughes and Wilcox weary of the infighting common in intentional communities and grope to maintain momentum when few of their peers are willing to commit to the enterprise for more than a summer. And Brieger and Elliott watch their dream enter mainstream society as yet another piece of the corporate machine: Mega-organic agriculture that sends plastic-sealed produce thousands of miles, driving right over the environmental and community benefits of the small, diversified farms that the couple built their lives around.
The characters are weird, stubborn and strong, and Sundeen provides a nuanced picture of their beliefs, underpinned by both religious and social justice movements and influences ranging from Wendell Berry and Thomas Jefferson to the Quakers, Booker T. Washington, the Nation of Islam, Tolstoy and Gandhi. Sundeen also acknowledges that the "renunciation of privilege" can become "just another means of exercising it."
In the end, nobody finds revelatory answers, yet all persist. Sundeen himself recognizes that his own role is not to be a pioneer but what he already is: a writer. In this, the book seems to suggest that the true recipe for revolution is not utopianism but the emotional foundations of its practitioners. In other words, to live right, one must find true purpose, work hard in its service and do the best good she can.
Sarah Gilman is a contributor to Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News (hcn.org). She is a contributing editor of the magazine in Portland, Oregon.
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Gilman: For Mark Sundeen, the search began with a meat snack (column) - Summit Daily News
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