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2019-11-07 01:01
in Ntrips, Trips
This was not our first time in Micronesia, we had been to [Truk Lagoon|perso/diving/post_2018-12-01_Diving-Truk-Lagoon-with-Truk-Odyssey.html] before, but first time in Palau, which is another world top diving destination. In the process we got to learn about the country too, which used to belong to Germany, then Japan (peacefully), and less peacefully during WWII.
The US liberated the country in a bloody battle at Peleliu, and eventually Palau opted for independence from the US and became a young republic 25 years ago. There are lots of signs left that this used to be a US territory, including the use of the dollar, gallons, NOAA weather station, and more.
On our first day, we did a kayak/snorkel tour to Nikko Bay with Sam's Tour
the tour did include visiting a japanese outpost
On our 2nd day, we boarded the Palau Siren for an 11 day diving tour of Palau. During that time on the Palau Siren, we had a half day Peleliu tour, which recounted the history of the US landing to liberate the Island from the japanese.
Unfortunately, the Japanese were well equipped and fought to the last one, infliciting significant losses to the US. Taking the place over too 74 days instead of the planned 4 days. The island has left over Japanese buildings, tanks, and amphibious vehicles for the beach landing:
found a nice hermit crab on the beach
also, plenty of small ones
runway that the americans wanted to capture
lots of crickets in the caves
thousand man cave was last on our tour
they drunk lots of beer
lots of bats live in there, now
one of the caves' exits
After our time on the Siren was over, we had one more day in Palau before flying out, so we took Sam's Palau Cultural day tour of Palau. We learned more about how Palau became a county with many states within it, and a bit about how it's ruled.
We saw the nice Nikko hotel before leaving for the day:
We then arrived to a cultural house where state leaders gather to conduct business
Next, was a hike to a waterfall:
the japanese built a train to shuttle out the boxite they were mining
and eventually we arrived
jennifer found a small snake on the way back
On the north side of the island, they have some monoliths that are around 2000 years old:
they also had yummy young coconuts
Last stop wsa the new congress that had just been built, partially financed by Taiwan and the EC. It looked like a mini Washington DC and was very pretty:
Even though Palau is not that big, each state within it, has its own license plate and while they drive on the right as per US influence, most of the cars also have a steering wheel on the right (wrong side) because they are second hand from Japan:
And that was it for Palau, it was then time to go to the airport and fly home |