What Country Owns Easter Island
Which country owns Easter Island?Almost half of the mai ever made on the island are still in their Rano Raraku quarries. Nevertheless, several hundred mai from the volcano quarries were moved to their present sites and placed on rock formations, the so-called ahu, around the island. Nearly all of them have extraordinarily large minds, three eighth of the whole volumetric area.
For the old Rape Nui, who used to carve, transport and erect them, they were true storehouses of Manas, the holy intellectual strength of their Polish forefathers. By Honu Nui you will find mai, rogorongo pills, ao, rimiro, mask, tanga manu, engraved ceramic depictions of fruits and many other handmade wooden and stoneware objects that are characteristic of Easter Island.
Miguel Nahoe's work, the artisans who own and run Honu Nui, was shown at the Viña del Mar Film Festival. Please fill in the following forms and indicate the date and number of persons.
Paragliding Eco Village & Spa
When you are looking for a place off the well-trodden paths and off the crowd, a place where you can step into another realm, another cultural place where you will surely encounter new and interesting and a place where you will be immersed in a peace you can only imagine, then we welcome you to Hangaroa Eco Village & Spa!
The Hangaroa Eco Village & Spa, opened in 2012, is the most luxurious building on Easter Island and the only five-star hotel on the island. Hangaroa Eco Village & Spa is a place where you will find what it means to be man, where you will find sobriety, the origin of man and above all the natural world.
It' an inviting experience to make your mind younger and at the same time to gain a sense of appreciation for the environment and people. It' an inviting to be an activist and audience member of an ancient civilization that is still intact. Hangaroa Eco Village & Spa's architectural style is a homage to the village of Orongo.
On the west peak of Rano Kau there are still remains of this town. There the Tangata Manu was elected, the most important ceremonial in the second phase of the island. It was conceived to encourage a harmonious interaction between rooms intertwined by landscaping of indigenous types in which natural and architectural elements merge into a whole.