Rimatara — The Quiet Island That Wins You Over Fast (Ep. 9) Podcast By  cover art

Rimatara — The Quiet Island That Wins You Over Fast (Ep. 9)

Rimatara — The Quiet Island That Wins You Over Fast (Ep. 9)

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In this episode, we talk about Rimatara in the Austral Islands of French Polynesia—a tiny place that stays off most travelers’ radar, yet leaves a big impression through its simplicity and warmth. If you want to plan travel that feels personal and unhurried, start with Far and Away Adventures.com and explore itinerary support at https://farandawayadventures.com. This episode is a conversation you can feel: slower roads, fewer distractions, and a community that welcomes you in a genuine way.

Normand Schafer meets with Nila on Rimatara, setting the scene of a small island protected by a close reef and home to roughly 900 residents. Instead of “selling” the island, Nila explains why she lives here: she moved from Bora Bora after marriage, and she believes the quality of life on Rimatara is better—especially for raising children. She describes a place with more nature, fewer cars, and fruit available easily, where people can grow what they need and live close to the land. It’s not complicated, and that’s the point.

The parenting perspective becomes a window into community. Nila says it’s easier to raise kids here because everyone feels like family, and people look out for each other. For travelers, that kind of social fabric changes the experience of visiting. It creates a sense of safety and welcome that you can’t replicate with infrastructure. Normand’s questions bring out something important: places that feel special often feel that way because of how people live, not just what the landscape looks like.

The episode also gives practical reality around visiting. Rimatara isn’t easy to reach, and that limits tourism naturally. Nila explains the options include limited flights per week and rare ship visits, meaning you won’t find crowds. There are two small guest houses, and she emphasizes that hosts care deeply for visitors because arrivals are rare and personal. If you’re tired of traveling where you’re one face in a sea of faces, this is the opposite.

So what do you do on a quiet island? You discover the land. Nila says an island tour is essential, but a deeper connection comes from participating in the community—religious parties, dance, and singing. She also shares details about the annual “Hava” festival in July, where villages prepare dances and performances over multiple days, with separate focuses on dance, singing, and sports like stone lifting. It’s the kind of cultural moment that doesn’t need a stage—it already belongs to the island.

Rimatara also offers nature experiences that feel intimate rather than commercial: birdwatching for the colorful “ʻura,” lagoon and underwater time, fishing, and local seafood gathering. Nila describes sea cucumber and shellfish and explains that women often collect seafood to share with others—another example of community-first living.

If Rimatara is calling you, Far and Away Adventures can help you connect transport, timing, and pacing so you can enjoy the quiet without stress. Start with Far and Away Adventures.com and plan at https://farandawayadventures.com.

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