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Introduction

by Frommers Travel Guides

    Because of its fame and extraordinary beauty, little Bora Bora is a playground for the well-to-do, occasionally the famous, and honeymooners blowing a wad. French Polynesia's tourist magnet, it has seen an explosion of hotel construction in recent years, with piers reaching out like tentacles to multitudinous bungalows standing over its gorgeous lagoon. Some of the piers are so long that The Moorings has added them to its sailing charts as hazards to navigation!

    Those of us who remember the island in its more natural state often bemoan that development has ruined it. But when I meet someone who is here for the first time, they invariably are as blown away by Bora Bora as I was when I spent a week camping here a few eons ago. If you look beyond the tourists hanging under parasails over the lagoon, you will appreciate why James A. Michener wrote that this is the world's most beautiful island.

    Of course, there are more tourists here than on any other French Polynesian island. Thus, some lovers now like to finish their honeymoons on the more peaceful Tahaa or Huahine after the mile-a-minute pace here.

    Lying 230km (143 miles) northwest of Tahiti, Bora Bora is a middle-aged island consisting of a high center completely surrounded by a lagoon that's enclosed by coral reef. It has a gorgeous combination of sand-fringed motus (small islets) sitting on the outer reef enclosing the multihued lagoon, which cuts deep bays into the high central island. Towering over it all is Bora Bora's trademark, the basaltic tombstone known as Mount Otemanu (725m/2,379 ft.). Standing next to it is the more normally rounded Mount Pahia (660m/2,165 ft.).

    One of the best beaches in French Polynesia stretches for more than 3km (2 miles) around the flat, coconut-studded peninsula known as Point Matira, which juts out from the island's southern end.

    Bora Bora is so small that the road around it covers only 32km (19 miles) from start to finish. All the 7,000 or so Bora Borans live on a flat coastal strip that quickly gives way to the mountainous interior.

Bora Bora Travel Experiences

Traveler Photos of Bora Bora

Bora Bora Boat owners in the South Pacific often rigged up their boats in this manner when storing them overnight Cheryl on her bike just down the tiring hill we had climbed earlier in the heat, on our easy coasting return from the beach (after climbing the other side of the ridge), with some of the Maupitit backbone cliffs above. Bora Bora
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Popular Bora Bora Things to Do

  1. Beaches
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