easter island workshop
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easter Island photographic workshop
March 22nd to March 26th 2009


In conjunction with
Andean Trails the UK's leading South American Adventure Travel Company, I will be conducting a photographic safari to Easter Island, Chile during March 2009.

This trip is geared up to give the keen photographer dedicated time and tuition at many of the spectacular locations to be found on Easter Island. You do not need to be an experienced photographer - enthusiasm is what counts. Each day will consist of shooting from sunrise to sunset whilst guided around the island by myself.

Easter Island is one of the world's most isolated inhabited islands. It is 3,600 km (2,237 mi) west of continental Chile and 2,075 km (1,290 mi) east of Pitcairn. World famous due to its mysterious stone statues, it is a spectacular location to photograph as it is home, in addition to the Moai statues, to many ceremonial sites, rock carvings, stone walls and buildings and caves. The geography of Easter Island is largely made up of three distinct volcanoes (Terevaka forms the bulk of the island whilst there are two older volcanic peaks; Poike which forms the eastern headland and Rano Kau the southern) and from all over the island you have superb views of the Pacific ocean.

Transport around the island will be in our own hired vehicle. Being a small island, there is easy access to the many dramatic sites we will visit and photograph, so we spend a minimum amount of time in the vehicle, and maximise time out and about.

itinerary

Day 1 - march 22

Fly to Easter Island, trf in, hotel.

Day 2 - march 23

Today we spend the morning exploring the north western side of the island around Hanga Roa village. There are several Rapa Nui sites of interest here to photograph including Ahu Vai Uri, and Ahu Akivi. Akivi in particular is of interest because it is the only site on the island where the Moai statues face out towards the sea, as well as being situated inland. They are a dramatic feature of the landscape.

In the afternoon we visit Kao Kao volcano and the ceremonial village of Orongo. This site contains superb views over the three islets Motu Iti, Motu Kao Kao and Motu Nui. There is an abundance of petroglyphs to be found at this ceremonial site. Volcano Kao Kao is a spectacular cauldron that demands the use of ultra wide-angle lenses. Hotel.

Motu Iti, Motu Kao Kao and Motu Nui

Motu means island in Rapa Nui Language.

All three islets have sea birds but Motu Nui was also an essential location for the Tangata manu (Bird Man) cult which was the island religion between the Moai era and Christina times. Motu Nui is the summit of a large volcanic mountain which rises over 2,000 meters from the sea bed.

The ritual was a competition to collect the first egg of the manutara (the Sooty tern). This took place starting from Motu Nui where the Hopu (representatives from each clan) waited for the Sooty terns to lay their first eggs of the season. The Hopu who seized the first egg raced to swim back to the main land, climbed the cliffs to Orongo and presented the egg to their sponsor in front of the judges at Orongo. This gave their sponsor the title of Tangata manu, and great power on the Island for a year. Many Hopu were killed by sharks or by falling. The winning clan gained certain rights including the collecting of eggs and young birds from the islets.

Day 3 - march 24

We explore the eastern side of the island today. Rano Raraku volcano is of particular note as the birth place for the majority of the Moai statues. For almost 500 years this was a quarry supplying the stone for the statues. Rano Raraku is a visual record of Moai design and technological innovation. The edges of the volcano are littered with nearly 400 statues, some still in-situ with others erect on the slopes. The incomplete statues in the quarry are remarkable for their number, for the inaccessibility of some that were high on the outside crater wall and for the size of the largest; At 21 metres in height almost twice that of any Moai ever completed, and weighing an estimated 270 tonnes, many times the weight of any transported. Some of the incomplete Moai seem to have been abandoned after the carvers encountered inclusions of very hard rock in the material. Others may be sculptures that were never intended to be separated from the rock in which they are carved.

In the afternoon we will visit Ahu Nau Nau situated near the only sand beach on the island at Anakena. The Moai statues here are in a beautiful location with palm trees. Ahu Nau Nau was restored in 1978 by the islander archaeologist Sergio Rapu. All of the Moai here had elaborate topknots (pukao). An important finding here was that of an almost complete eye made of coral, with a red volcanic scoria disc to represent the iris, inlaid in a circular cavity in the coral. The eye sockets of the Moai quarried at Rano Raraku were not carved until they were upright on the ahus (in order to bring them to life). It is therefore possible to tell which Moai had been erected, and which were still in transit when the society collapsed.

Further on we will also visit the ‘Navel of the World’, a ceremonial site which contains an egg shaped stone. Hotel.

Day 4 - march 25

Today we explore the south eastern and western sides of the island.

In the morning we visit Ahu Tongariki (substantially restored in the 1990s), one of the most impressive locations on the island.  Tongariki contains fifteen of the largest Moai statues including an 86 tonne Moai that is the heaviest ever erected on the island.  The Moais are lined up facing inland from the Pacific towards Rano Raraku. The statues have quite distinctive faces that require the use of telephoto lenses, but the entire landscape surrounding this location is great for further exploration.

In the afternoon we visit Poike, one of the three main volcanoes of Easter Island. Poike forms the eastern headland and there is an abrupt cliff "the Poike ditch" across the island marking the boundary between flows from Terevaka and Poike. Poike last erupted between 230,000 to 705,000 years ago, and as the oldest of the island’s three volcanoes is the most weathered with relatively stoneless soil. At 370 metres it is the island's second highest peak after Terevaka.

For those who are keen we will also visit the top of Terevaka, the central volcano on the island. Terevaka is less than 400,000 years old. Its lava field at Roiho has been dated at between 110,000 and 150,000 years old. Hotel.

Day 5 - march 26

Return to Santiago.


Extensions

This trip coincides with a photographic safari to
Torres del Paine, Patagonia. It is possible for you to do both if you so wish.


costs & booking

£645 | $1272.46 | €815.73

Price Includes: Accommodation with breakfast, transfers to and from airport/hotel on Easter Island.
Price Excludes: Flights, airport taxes, local gratuities ($60 recommended).
Single supplement applies, £65.

Andean Trails are an ATOL approved partner and can assist in booking your flights.

If you would like to discuss this trip,
please feel free to contact me.

Bookings should be made directly with Andean Trails through the following contacts:

Tel:
+44 (0)131 467 7086
e-mail:
info@andeantrails.co.uk
web:
www.andeantrails.co.uk

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