Page 31 - Fiji Traveller 7
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Welcome to Paradise





























                        Guests to Paradise Taveuni Resort are welcomed to the property with a complimentary foot
                       rub, their first encounter with the Taveuni locals working at the  resort .
                        Owner-operator Terri Gortan believes it is these connections, from the women providing that
                       first massage to the wait staff in the restaurant and the resort’s dive guides, that keep their
                       guests coming back.
                        The resort is perched on an oceanfront cliff edge at the southern part of Taveuni, a one-hour
                       drive from Matei airport or a slightly shorter trip by speedboat. There’s no sandy beaches there,
                       but you can slip into the sea and be immediately surrounded by fish and coral any time of the
                       day.
                        “Most of our guests are scuba divers from the North American part of the world,” says Gortan.
                       “People are saying it’s some of the best diving they have ever done.”
                        She says when they first bought the resort 18 years ago,  it was “a rundown little backpackers
                       …so we pretty much knocked everything down and started again.”
                        Traditionally a four-star resort, Gortan says they have now added three luxury rooms with
                       extended decks, and separate bedroom and lounges. The ‘honeymoon’ bure also has its own
                       plunge pool.
                        Paradise Taveuni Resort also features a pig and poultry farm that makes use of food scraps
                       generated from the property’s kitchen. Plots on the property supply the hotel with fruit and
                       vegetables, and a kava and dalo farm was also established during Covid.
                        Gortan says they discourage plastic at the resort, issuing guests with reusable bottles they
                       can take on dive trips and eventually take home.
                        On the reef we have a no-touch policy, she says.
                        “We don't handle any of the marine creatures. We don't touch any, and our dive team are
                       very passionate about that as well.
                        “There's no picking up starfish or holding sea snakes or that kind of thing. So we basically
                       hold our guests accountable.”


                                                                            - Interview by Prerna Priyanka
                          paradiseinfiji.com










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