The Tahiti lagoon conceals a life that almost no one sees. You're going to change that.
Meet at 5:30 p.m., the exact moment when the sun touches the horizon and sets the lagoon ablaze. While the other tourists head back to the hotel, you board the boat. The show begins even before you're in the water.
The boat cuts through the lagoon towards an unspoiled coral reef, one that the usual day trips don't visit. The briefing takes place en route, between two reflections of the sunset — nocturnal fauna, technique, safety. Nothing complicated, just the essentials.
Then the moment arrives. Lamps in hand, mask on your face, you glide into the black water. And there it is—the reef lights up. The turtles are dozing within reach. The moray eels hunt in the corals. The nocturnal fish take over the ocean floor. A parallel world, a few metres below the surface, that 99% of Tahiti's visitors will never see.
Back on board, a hot or cold meal, snacks, and the return trip to the marina under a starry sky that only Tahiti can offer. The kind of night you'll still be talking about years later.
Every Thursday evening. Only four explorers. Will you be one of them?