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Thursday, 19 August 2010

Upcoming 2nd Annual Canoe Festival!

The Yap Visitor's Bureau and the Yap Traditional Navigation Society are pleased to announce the upcoming 2nd Annual Canoe Festival this year on the island of Yap. This year's festival themed "Preserving Traditional Technology" will guarantee to showcase more traditional canoe and navigation skills and techniques. If you joined us last year or if you were not able to attend, you will not want to miss all of the new events planned for this year. Many more amazing arts, talents, and demonstrations will be displayed. Join us in this exciting three day festival as we sustain our traditional skills, preserve our cultural heritage, and demonstrate Yap's unique talents that can be seen nowhere else in the world!


This Second Annual Canoe Festival will be conveniently located in Colonia Town for easy access from all downtown hotels and resorts. The countdown is almost over.

On November 12, 2010 the Festival will begin so make your plans to join us today!



Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Continental Micronesia connects Yap with another air link...

Continental Micronesia announced yesterday it will enhance its current schedule of flights between the A.B. Won Pat Guam International Airport and Yap International Airport.

          
A weekly Guam-Yap-Palau and Palau-Yap-Guam flight, as well as a new dedicated flight between Guam and Yap, re-establishes one weekly connection between Yap and Manila via Guam, according to the airline.

Service between Yap and Palau will be maintained once each week in conjunction with Palau's boat schedules, to support two-destination tourism itineraries. The new schedule creates additional capacity for passengers and cargo between Guam and Yap.

"Continental Micronesia is committed to offering superior service and value as Guam and Micronesia's hometown airline, which continues to provide new flight options to residents in the region as well as better access for visitors," David Kendell, Continental's director of sales and marketing for Micronesia and Asia, said in a news release.

Text by Guam PDN

Monday, 28 June 2010

PRESS RELEASE: WWII Memorial to be Dedicated onPacific Island of Yap

The Yap Visitors Bureau (YVB) and the Missing Air Crew Project (MACP) announce the dedication of one of the most unique World War II memorials in the Pacific. The newly constructed site displays the wreckage of a plane flown by Ens. Joseph Cox (from Idaho) and will be dedicated July 27th, symbolizing the tremendous sacrifice and loss of human life near this Pacific Island during WWII. The YVB and MACP have been working together for several years to preserve and remember this very special group of soldiers.

In the historical context of WWII and the Pacific theatre, American losses near Yap (now part of the Federated States of Micronesia) were substantial yet continue to be overlooked even today. Strategically located between the Philippines and Guam, Japanese occupied Yap was targeted almost daily from June of 1944 to August of 1945 at the cost of hundreds of American men, 110 of which remain classified as missing in action (MIA). Pat Ranfranz (from Cameron, Wl), founder of the MACP has spent over 20 years researching Yap during WWII and the stories behind each soldier and his mission, hoping to preserve their memories for generations to come. Pat's uncle is among the soldiers that remain MIA.

The memorial to be dedicated on July 27th displays the actual wreckage of an F6F-5 Hellcat flown by Ens. Joseph Cox, one of 36 planes American planes that fell near the island. Joseph's plane was shot down with three other Hellcats from the USS Enterprise on September 6,1944 and was only recently recovered moderately intact. "It is truly one of the most unique wrecks and now memorials in the Pacific," explains Pat. "After the war, most of the wreckage throughout the world was picked over and removed. Fortunately in this case, the Yapese have respected the wreckages as grave sites and taken care to preserve them and remember the American men who lost their lives during the war." Joseph's plane was spared from the expanding Yap landfill in 2008 and relocated to government held land. Displayed on a concrete pad next to an all-weather sign and memorial marker describing the man, the plane, and the mission, the YVB together with the MACP were able to construct one of the finest memorials to American men lost in WWII's Pacific theatre.

Pat Ranfranz is extremely grateful for the work that has been done to make the memorial come together. "This would not have been possible without the work done by the people of Yap and the Yap Visitors Bureau to save and preserve the American crash sites and wreckages that remained after the war. Too many people have forgotten the men who gave their lives for our freedom during WWII. This memorial and others on Yap Island will help to immortalize the forgotten and bring meaning to their sacrifices." Attending the dedication will be Yap Governor Sebastian Anefal, US Ambassador Peter A. Prahar and other dignitaries along with the 90 year old brother of the pilot, Ellis Cox of Idaho.

Wednesday, 23 June 2010

Yap - Truly a Paradise for divers...

...reef fish, tuna, dolphins, turtles and the famous mantas - nothing is missing when you come to this unique diving spot. Observing the greatly varied marine life has become a must for divers around the planet. They say that Yap's diving stands above the rest! To see Mantas is guaranteed and they come so close that you can almost touch them - unafraid of their human guests, used to be watched during their daily cleaning when hundreds of Cleaner Wrasses preen them of any parasites. Go back in history and explore the numerous wracks from WWII.

Watch the video, lean back, and enjoy the underwater world of Yap...