ANGWIN (Napa County) Calif.------ Pitcairn Island, the tiny, remote South Pacific isle to which
mutineers on H.M.S. Bounty fled more than 200 years ago to escape from
civilization, is today trying to get the world to come to it.
As one of an ongoing series of moves that will make the island
more accessible to the outside world, bids are currently being sought
through newspapers in Fiji, Tahiti and New Zealand for the construction
of an all-weather surfacing of the island's washout-prone main road, and
development of a permanent water supply.
The road construction will make access to Adamstown, Pitcairn's
village, easier for visitors from cruise and other ships. And it will
make less difficult the almost daily trek up and down the steep road by
the Pitcairners to reach their boats and fishing canoes at the island
boat landing.
The new roadway will take a huge work load off the few
able-bodied among the approximately 50 persons on Pitcairn. Countless hours of work must now be
given to repairing wash outs that all but cut passage on the road
following the frequent storms that sweep over the little one by two mile
island.
Other recent moves toward contact with the outside world have
included the export of dehydrated fruits, and honey, and the worldwide
sale of Pitcairn's ".pn" Internet suffix.
There is talk of constructing a small airstrip on Pitcairn that
could bring tourists from Tahiti via nearby Mangareva in the Gambier
Islands.
The strip could also be used for air evacuation of those on the
island who fall seriously ill. Currently if a Pitcairner needs
emergency medical evacuation it is done by ship, some 1,200 miles to
hospital at Papeete, Tahiti, or more than 4,000 miles to New Zealand.
The road construction, which is expected to begin in April 2001,
will be a difficult task. It calls for the laying of concrete from the
island landing at Bounty Bay, up what the Pitcairners call their "Hill
of Difficulty," with grades ranging between 30 and 35 percent, to the
village.
The firm that wins the road bid must be prepared to crush rock
on the island, even down to a size that will take the place of sand,
since the small supply of sand available on Pitcairn is so
salt-saturated it would be more trouble to gather and wash the salt from
it than to crush rock to useable size.
It was in April 1789, that sailors on H.M.S. Bounty, mutinied
against Captain William Bligh, and set him and sailors loyal to him
adrift in a small boat among the Tongan islands. The mutineers, after
returning to Tahiti where they had been gathering breadfruit plants to
take to the West Indies, began searching for a safe island on which to
hide from British naval authorities.
After searching among many islands, the mutineers, led by
Fletcher Christian, master's mate of the Bounty, came upon Pitcairn
island and made it their home. It was 18 years from the time of their
arrival on Pitcairn until the outside world learned they were there.
Through many books and movies, the "Mutiny on the Bounty," has
become one of the world's most best known and most famous sea stories.
Pitcairn Islands Study Center, 1 Angwin Ave., Angwin, CA, USA. Herbert Ford, 707-965-6625, 707-965-2047, Fax: 707-965-6504, Email: hford@puc.edu, Website: http://library.puc.edu/pitcairn
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