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Facilities
and Services
Breakfast and dinner are served in the Matira Terrace
Restaurant, which overlooks the lagoon. Lunch and refreshments
can be taken at the Pofai Beach Bar. A light menu and
tropical refreshments are available in the Matira Terrace
Bar, with its open-air, sunset views of the lagoon. The
Matira Bar's tables are built from monkey-pod trees felled
during the occasional South Pacific storm; the roof is of
pandanus thatching. Afternoon tea is available from Hotel
Bora Bora's Pofai Beach Bar.
Local musicians entertain nightly in the Matira Terrace Bar.
Polynesian cultural entertainment highlights Hotel
Bora Bora's weekly beach barbecue. Another weekly resort feature
is the soiree flambée, which begins with sunset cocktails
and canapés at the Pofai Beach Bar and traditional
Polynesian singing. A flambé dinner follows in the
Matira Restaurant.
The Raititi Lounge is an activities center as well
as a games room and book exchange. It includes a pool table,
two card tables and a selection of games. Island and sea excursions
can also be arranged at the Raititi Lounge. Hotel Bora Bora's
Boutique offers a selection of local art and craft.
There's also a range of books and island clothing, including
hand-dyed Tahitian pareus. Two tennis courts, lit for
night play, are located on the resort. Tennis rackets and
balls are complimentary.
Guests may also enjoy a massage or body scrub in the privacy of their own bungalow, faré or in the Faré Tarumi (massage room). Beaty treatments, facials, pedicures, manicures and hair styling can also be arranged. |
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Bora
Bora is a French Polynesian island about 160 miles northwest of
Tahiti. Hotel Bora Bora opened in 1961 with 18 thatched-roof huts
on a Bora Bora peninsula uncommonly favored by nature. In the beginning,
you floated in by seaplane. And when you splashed down on what more
than a few writers -- James Michener included -- have called "the
most beautiful lagoon in the world," a canoe was there to ferry
you to the newly opened hotel. A few things have changed since then,
including a recent refurbishment to the resort's classic overwater
accommodations. But Hotel Bora Bora, an Amanresort since 1989, remains
the quintessential symbol of French Polynesia.
The
region's 115 islands and atolls are grouped among five archipelagoes:
the Marquesas, the Tuamotu, the Gambier, the Australes and the Society
Islands. The Society archipelago is further divided into the Windward
Islands, dominated by Tahiti, and the Leeward group, with Bora Bora
as the main island. Bora Bora is less than 6 miles long and 2-1/2
miles wide. Nineteen miles of road rim the island. The hotel is
situated on Point Raititi. From this southern peninsula on the very
edge of the island's shimmering blue lagoon, the views run 270 degrees
-- from the lagoon and the 25-mile barrier reef that rims it, to
the green-wreathed volcanic peaks that lend drama to the island.
Mount Otemanu (mountain of the bird), at 2,385 feet, dominates Bora
Bora.
The
resort's 54 Polynesian-style bungalows and farés (the Tahitian
term for home) are linked to the resort's public areas by black,
lava-stone walkways. These individual accommodations enjoy a variety
of settings, from garden-view and beachfront to overwater locations.
Whether bungalows or farés, the oversized rooms at Hotel
Bora Bora take on the eclectic taste of an old trader's house. Each
is furnished in rattan and bamboo, with Tasmanian oak floors, red-cedar
walls, ceilings of pandanus lashed to beams of Douglas fir, ball-and-claw,
cast-iron tubs, overhead fans, CD players and personal safes.
Deluxe
bungalows are set on the beach, bedrooms facing the sea. With an
elevated sundeck built on columns, and steps leading to the lagoon,
they have the mood of an overwater accommodation. Deluxe bungalows
also include a separate lounge overlooking the sundeck.
Superior bungalows are located on the palm-thick beachfront. Aside
from a spacious bedroom and bathroom, they come with a sitting area
that leads to a small patio facing the lagoon. The bungalows are
set within tropical gardens, and are of the same design as superior
bungalows.
Hotel
Bora Bora's 15 overwater bungalows are thatched-roof, tropical-island
retreats set directly over the blue lagoon. While some are located
in shallow water, the premium overwaters are further out, close
by a coral reef flush with marine life. Each overwater bungalow
features a large bedroom with a king-size, four-poster bed, a spacious
bathroom and a two-tiered sundeck shaded by a roof of hand-tied
pandanus. There's also a shower at water level alongside steps leading
to the lagoon.
The deeply thatched farés (villas) are set in white-beach
sand or surrounded by tropical gardens. The resort's eight pool
farés, each enclosed by a lava-stone wall, come with a private
swimming pool and an outdoor sun pavilion for two. Three farés
feature a Jacuzzi set into a teak sundeck within a garden setting.
Premium faršs are located in prime beach areas. All come with a
living room, a bedroom with a king-size, four-poster bed, an en
suite sitting room, a bathroom and a large sundeck.
Facing
three white-sand beaches, Hotel Bora Bora is made for sea-and-sun
lovers. Indeed, the sun sets directly in front of the hotel, just
off the main beach. Some of the island's best snorkeling can be
found just a few steps into the lagoon surrounding the resort. Scuba
diving, with full equipment and lessons, is available for both beginners
and certified divers. A number of dive sites are easily accessible
within the lagoon and beyond the barrier reef. Enjoy full-day or
half-day sailing excursions to neighboring islands in the Leeward
group aboard a 15-meter sportfishing catamaran. Sea-going charters
of up to three days are available, as are nightly sunset cruises
of the lagoon. Guests can also take a paddle canoe or outrigger
sailing canoe into the lagoon, jet ski around the island or enjoy
a combination beach picnic and cruise of the lagoon waters. Watching
local experts feed the black-tipped lagoon sharks under water is
an island highlight.
Fishing is big sport in the waters surrounding Bora Bora, with typical
catches ranging from tuna and wahoo to marlin and mahimahi. In the
lagoon itself, troll for the blue and silver trevally using light
tackle or try your hand at saltwater fly fishing.
Sightseers will want to take Hotel Bora Bora's four-wheel-drive
safari into the island mountains. The expedition includes a visit
to the cannons left behind after World War ll, as well as a ride
through the valley to an ancestral plantation. Visitors can also
see Bora Bora by helicopter, on bicycle or on horseback. Parasailing
1000 feet above the blue lagoon provides yet another fresh island
perspective.
For shoppers, Bora Bora boasts a variety of clothing and craft shops,
and the black pearl of Polynesia are world famous. A number of painters,
sculptors and photographers call Bora Bora home. |