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The view from our little front porch on our first stop in Samoa

The view from our little front porch on our first stop in Samoa

From Pago Pago in American Samoa it’s a quick 35-minute flight to Apia, the capital of independent Samoa. You don’t even change a single time zone. You do, however, cross the international date line and switch days. Without having to adjust our watches, we went from being 7 hours behind the Eastern time zone on Wednesday to 17 ahead on Thursday. And the 14th of September mostly just vanished. I’m not sure there are many places in the world where you can do that.

Many homes feature the relatives buried prominently out front

Many homes feature the relatives buried prominently out front

Apia is on the island of ‘Upolu, where most Samoans live. As our taxi drove us to a resort on the south shore of ‘Upolu, our first impression was just how lush and beautiful it is. Thick green vegetation is loaded up with flowers in red, orange, yellow, and white. The weather was quite moody, really playing up the color drama.

On Friday nights restaurants put on "fiafiia," a fun dance performance that features lots of shouting and chest pounding

On Friday nights restaurants put on “fiafiia,” a fun dance performance that features lots of shouting and chest pounding

Next impression: The people here are just super friendly. We’ve joked that it reminds of of Minnesota. When you walk down the street everybody says hello. And they frequently want to ask where you are from, where you are staying, what you think of Samoa. All this without the slightest hint that you are being hustled for anything.

During our first few days we got a good dose of that moody weather I mentioned. One minute it’s sunny and beautiful. The next minute dark clouds roll in out of nowhere and it pours. The sun might return just as quickly, and it might even start pouring rain while the sun is still sparkling overhead. It’s weird to find yourself getting rained on and sunburned at the same time. But whatever the weather is doing it’s always lush and beautiful. We really liked sitting on our little porch and watching it all unfold.

On our second day we took the public bus into Apia to do some errands. The bus is crowded, the benches are hard, and the people are friendly.

On our second day we took the public bus into Apia to do some errands. The bus is crowded, the benches are hard, and the people are friendly.

In town we discovered this church, completed just a couple years ago. We loved the very bright, Samoan interior. Wait, who is that praying, just to the right?

In town we discovered this church, completed just a couple years ago. We loved the very bright, Samoan interior. Wait, who is that praying, just to the right?

The roadway leading to our resort under a moody sky

The roadway leading to our resort under a moody sky

Sitting by the pool area was gorgeous under a sunny sky

Sitting by the pool area was gorgeous under a sunny sky

Still lovely even in the pouring rain that would come out of nowhere

Still lovely even in the pouring rain that would come out of nowhere

Here we are at the western end of American Samoa. We had assumed it was the most westerly point in the U.S., but that title belongs up in Alaska. However, while technically that northern extremity is 172 degrees west and American Samoa is only 170 degrees west, the degrees are a lot longer here near the equator than up there near the poles. Thus while this isn't the furthest west you can get in the U.S., it is the furthest you can get from the Prime Meridian that runs through Greenwich, England. So there.

Here we are at the western end of American Samoa. We had assumed it was the most westerly point in the U.S., but that title belongs up in Alaska. However, while technically that northern extremity is 172 degrees west and American Samoa is only 170 degrees west, the degrees are a lot longer here near the equator than up there near the poles. Thus while this isn’t the furthest west you can get in the U.S., it is the furthest you can get from the Prime Meridian that runs through Greenwich, England. So there.

We expect to spend the next six weeks or so in the South Pacific, a part of the world we’ve never been to before, and we’re starting in American Samoa. It’s a short stop – just a day-and-a-half – but then it’s a small place. Consisting of five main islands, American Samoa covers less than 77 square miles. To put that in some context, Washington, D.C., is slightly over 68 square miles. So it’s small, with a population of about 55,000.

How did this tiny group of islands become an American territory? I know that we acquired a bunch of territories as a result of the Spanish-American War in 1898 (e.g., Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Philippines), so I wondered if that’s where American Samoa came from, too. Nope. The Samoan islands, including American Samoa and today’s independent country of Samoa, were important Pacific refueling stations in the 19th century; the harbor at Pago Pago (pronounced something like pongo pongo and crucial for solving many crossword puzzles) was particularly attractive and used by Germans, French, British, and American ships. The Germans and Americans got into a fight over the islands in 1889 but, before either side could score a victory, a typhoon wiped out both sides’ warships. Ultimately the issues were settled by the 1899 Tripartite Convention, whereby the U.S. acquired the eastern Samoan islands (smaller than the western islands but home to Pago Pago), the Germans took the western islands, and the British got Tonga, parts of the Solomon Islands, and some territory in West Africa. It does not appear the locals had much say in any of that.

If you're wondering just where we were, that blue dot is American Samoa. The dashed line is the International Date Line, so you get a sense of just how close we were to tomorrow.

If you’re wondering just where we were, that blue dot is American Samoa. The dashed line is the International Date Line, so you get a sense of just how close we were to tomorrow.

Today the American footprint here seems relatively limited. They use the U.S. dollar as currency and people are pretty much fluent in both English and Samoan. At the same time it is a self-governing territory with little actual role for U.S. officials. American Samoans can live and work in the U.S., but citizenship is an interesting issue. American Samoans are U.S. nationals, but not necessarily citizens. Confused? It turns out that all U.S. citizens are U.S. nationals, but nationals are not necessarily citizens; people born in American Samoa are not U.S. citizens unless one of their parents was also an American citizen. In other U.S. territories – Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands – newborns are automatically U.S. citizens; American Samoa is the outlier in this case.

Even so, the system seems to work. One piece of evidence of the relative support Samoans give to their relationship to the U.S. is that American Samoa has the highest rate of military enlistment of any state or territory. Of course, part of that is a function of the relative poverty here compared to the rest of the U.S., but the economy is comparatively strong; per capita GDP is about $13,000 here compared to a bit under $5,500 in neighboring Samoa. Tuna processing is the main industry, with roughly half of private sector workers helping to ensure that American kids never have to go without their tunafish sandwiches.

One thing American Samoa is not, though, is a tourist destination. We’ve probably never been anywhere with less of a tourist infrastructure. We stayed at a reasonably nice hotel on the coast, but it’s the kind of place with no web site or anything like that. Everyone we met there over breakfast was there for work, whether with the VA, the Coast Guard, or whatever. As we went through immigration (it’s part of the U.S., but we needed to show passports to get in) and so on, people seemed genuinely surprised when we said we were just there to visit. So no resort hotels, no fancy restaurants, no great swimming beaches, just a couple days in a tropical island.

Our hotel was modest, but it was right on the coast (actually, pretty much everything in America Samoa is right on the coast). It's a rocky coast with lots of steep cliffs, so there was some great crashing wave action. Made for a pretty glorious place to sit and read and watch the ocean move.

Our hotel was modest, but it was right on the coast (actually, pretty much everything in America Samoa is right on the coast). It’s a rocky coast with lots of steep cliffs, so there was some great crashing wave action. Made for a pretty glorious place to sit and read and watch the ocean move.

Our stay was short in part because of a truly weird phenomenon. A month or two ago, when we decided to come this way, we made reservations both in American Samoa and in Samoa. We would stay in American Samoa for three nights, September 12-14, and then on the 15th go to Samoa. When we went to reserve our flight between the islands, though, we discovered that to get to Samoa on the 15th, we had to leave American Samoa on the 14th. You see, although it’s only a 35-minute flight, and you don’t even cross a time zone, you do cross the International Date Line. So you leave Pago Pago at 10:45 AM on Wednesday, September 14, and arrive in Apia, Samoa, at 11:20 on Thursday, September 15. And since our reservation in Samoa was non-cancelable while the reservation in American Samoa was cancelable, we had to knock one night off our already brief stop there.

That’s too bad, because I would have like a little more time. As I said, it’s a really small place, and over the course of our one full day there we drove from one end of the main island to the other and it seemed kind of interesting. There was, for instance, a church in every tiny little village we drove through. Sad, to me, that the poorer people are the more they seem to spend on churches. And there were some distinctly unique things to observe. Like kids all outside playing volleyball and even cricket, but no soccer that we saw. I thought kids everywhere in the world (except mainland USA) played soccer. And the tombs in front yards. As we drove through these tiny villages, many houses (most?) had big burial plots in front, presumably for dead ancestors. It seems nice to keep them so close, but it occurred to me that such a quirky tradition might have some significant impact on a house’s resale value. (“Um, are they going with you?”) Just driving in American Samoa was interesting; the entire island seems to be posted at 25 miles per hour, except where it’s posted at 20 miles per hour. And people really, really drive that slowly. Weird.

So that was it, one of the more remote and isolated places we’ll ever go to. If you ever go, there was one decent restaurant and our hotel had it’s charms, but don’t expect a lot. A great place to start a South Pacific adventure, though.

Loved the pinks and blues of our little spot on Waikiki beach

Loved the pinks and blues of our little spot on Waikiki beach

Honolulu is the obvious place for a quick stop to break up the long journey from mainland USA to the South Pacific. We had to stop here anyhow, so why not stay a few days, adjust a few time zones, and just hang out on Waikiki beach?

This is our second visit to Honolulu, and I would not say we are huge fans of the city itself. To us it feels like a ‘sanitized’ version of the tropics. The area all around Waikiki is pretty but antiseptic, sort of like a huge outdoor upscale mall. Restaurants are crazy expensive, yet packed to the gills. Fortunately, the hordes of Japanese tourists here eat on the early side, so the restaurants thin out a tad at our preferred dining times.

Since we ran around seeing the obligatory sights last time we were here (Pearl Harbor really is amazing), we now felt obliged to do nothing more than sit on the beach and practice readjusting to tropical life. We have spent very little time as beach bums since we left Greece and Turkey almost a year ago.

And I’ll admit, Waikiki beach is a stunning spot to do that. I love the bright turquoise water, the smooth sand, and the lush green of Diamond Head rising in the background. We stayed at a classic old hotel, the Royal Hawaiian, whose pink walls, pink rugs, and pink striped bathrobes add a bit of magic to this heavenly spot. I’m now pink, too, but we’ll call that a base. Give me another week, and I hope to have a teeny bit of a tan.

Wearing his swimsuit to match the hotel decor, Jim ponders a lunch that takes an unexpected turn

Wearing his swimsuit to match the hotel decor, Jim ponders a lunch that takes an unexpected turn

Our last day featured an unexpected little bit of drama. We like to dine sitting at the bar, especially in the US, where it’s more common. You often learn a few things from the bartender or from your neighbors. The bar at the Royal Hawaiian had lovely views and reasonable food, so we had lunch there every day. On that last day I sat next to a friendly young couple who started up a bit of conversation with us. We were soon surprised by just how much the young woman was slurring her words so early in the afternoon. Not 15 minutes later she was slumped lifelessly on top of the bar and had vomited a bit. It was all her colleague could do to get her to stand up and stumble away. We felt quite bad for them both.

That evening we had dinner at a nice steak place, where we snagged a couple more seats at a small bar. Once again the woman next to me tried to strike up a conversation and was obviously pretty smashed. I mostly sat with my back to her, as she tried to engage the bartenders and got mildly obnoxious, at one point informing us all that she was “richer than God,” which apparently meant she was due better treatment. It was a huge relief when she left after 15 minutes or so, as the bartender grumbled, “Three hours I’ve been babysitting her.”

What’s in the water in Honolulu?

The pool early in the morning before the crowds

The pool early in the morning before the crowds

More pretty pinks and blues

More pretty pinks and blues