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The Cook Islands

5

Reasons To
Visit The Cook Islands

  • Cook Islands Christian Church

    The CICC is vitally important to most islanders for whom it has a profound influence on everything they do every day. Visitors are most welcome to attend a church service which take place on Sunday mornings and evenings and several mornings during the week. The service is in Maori but foreign visitors are made to feel very welcome as long as they dress smartly in long dresses and trousers.

    Cook Islands Christian Church
  • Culture

    Cook Islanders consider themselves true Polynesians and are very proud of their Maori and Maohi heritage. However, equal importance needs to be given to the influence of Christian missionaries on this society. Today, an unusual yet harmonious blend of Christianity and ancient pagan traditions exists in the Cooks and is a wonderful example of how two vastly different beliefs can coexist peacefully.

    Culture
  • December Parades

    The stunning flora of the Cooks is celebrated in all its glory in December. Parades of beautifully decorated floats cram the streeets, and there are prizes for the most impressively decorated government buildings.

    December Parades
  • Diving

    The best dive sites in this tropical paradise are found off the islands of Rarotonga and Aitutaki with plenty of scuba diving and snorkelling opportunities available both inside and outside the reef. Surrounded by beautiful lagoons, both Rarotonga and Aitutaki have a wealth of marine life to explore.

    Diving
  • Lagoon cruises

    Cruises around Aitutaki and Rarotonga are the perfect way to spend a day as you explore and discover the many wonders that are found in the lagoons here. Most cruise operators usually include a swim, a barbecue lunch, a beach stroll and a snorkelling trip as part of your lagoon cruise, so that you take in the best that these islands have to offer.

    Lagoon cruises

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Visit Rarotonga, The Cook Islands

The largest and most populated island of the Cooks - though not, by any standards, crowded - is Rarotonga. Volcanic, it rises 4,500 metres from the ocean floor, and although you can drive around it in just half an hour it takes a great deal longer to cross the mountainous interior.

Rarotonga

The Cook Islands

The largest and most populated island of the Cooks - though not, by any standards, crowded - is Rarotonga. Volcanic, it rises 4,500 metres from the ocean floor, and although you can drive around it in just half an hour it takes a great deal longer to cross the mountainous interior.

Dense rainforests and sheer peaks drop to palm-fringed beaches and clear blue water, sheltered by an offshore coral reef.

Exploring the island

There are plenty of ways to explore the island: four-wheel-drive is the easiest. Cross-island treks, with trails passing the island’s most dramatic peak, Te Rua Manga, or ‘the Needle’ are also a firm favourite.

With no snakes, dangerous wild animals or poisonous insects, exploring on land is relaxing and rewarding.

Surrounding waters

To sea, dive boats and catamarans explore the Pacific in all its glory: an exciting world of giant pelagics and multicoloured shoals of reef fish on every side.

Local restaurants live from the wealth of the sea, with tuna, mahi mahi (dolphin fish) and parrot fish staple foods, and curried octopus a speciality.

Often these are followed by the island’s tantalising tropical fruits - pineapples, pawpaw (papaya) and bananas, which are also the prime elements of the refreshing island breakfast.

More in Rarotonga, The Cook Islands

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