April 2026 at Fare Om: Brisbane Learners, Big Breakthroughs (and a Little Humidity)
- Ozan Isabelle
- 22 hours ago
- 4 min read

In April 2026, we welcomed a small group from Brisbane (and beyond) to Fare Om, Moorea for French immersion with a very clear goal: speak more, understand more, and live the language—not just “study” it.
They arrived with different levels, different personalities, and different expectations… and left with something surprisingly similar: more confidence, stronger listening skills, and that special feeling that happens when French stops being an exercise and becomes a real part of your day.
Here are a few moments from their own words—shared in their testimonials at the end of the program.

“Not French on the side”—Real immersion, all day
Janelle (Brisbane) summed up something we hear often from serious adult learners: many language trips feel like tourism first, French second.
She told us she didn’t come to Moorea for “a tourist visit with a little bit of French on the side.” What made this program exceptional for her was the way the learning and the culture were fully blended—and always in French.
Museum visits, cultural presentations, dance, poetry—not translated, not softened, not switched back to English when it got difficult.
And yes, she admitted (honestly) that she could be “lazy from time to time”… but she also noticed how the team—Isa, Sophie, Jean, Philippe, and the teachers—were kind but insistent: French stayed the shared language, because that’s how listening improves and confidence grows.
Confidence: the biggest change (even for bookworms)
When we asked about the biggest improvement, Janelle didn’t mention grammar or vocabulary first—she said confidence, especially the courage to speak out loud.
She described herself as an introvert, someone comfortable with reading, writing, and studying alone. But speaking in a group—getting what’s “in the head” into clear spoken French—was “humbling”… and exactly the challenge she came to face.
What mattered most wasn’t a single perfect lesson. It was the full experience: showing up, participating, and committing even when it felt uncomfortable.
Her advice (and it’s a good one): come with an open mind and do everything—poetry, dance, conversations, activities—because that’s where the breakthroughs hide.

Shane: “The best program” because it’s immersion every day
Shane (Sydney) highlighted what makes an immersion program work: the repetition and the real-life contact.
For her, the success came from interacting daily in French—with teachers, with different people, and through the rhythm of busy days where French isn’t only something you “learn,” it’s something you use.
SHe also mentioned how much she appreciated the teaching approach: teachers taking pronunciation seriously, working at a pace that supported the group, and giving enough language to keep up with the daily activities.
And one detail we love: she especially enjoyed lessons outside, in nature—because Moorea is hot, yes, but learning in the open air changes everything.

Cathryn: outside the comfort zone—supported, welcomed
Cathryn (South Australia) arrived excited about Polynesia, but expecting immersion to feel daunting. Her testimonial was honest about being taken out of her comfort zone—yet surprised by the supportive atmosphere at Fare Om.
She also spoke openly about expectations: Fare Om is not five-star luxury, and Moorea isn’t a resort bubble when you live closer to the real island rhythm.
But what stood out most in her experience was the openness: different people, different conversations, generous time from French speakers, and many opportunities to communicate—exactly what adult learners need.
Her conclusion was simple and strong: she would genuinely return.
And when asked about improvement, she came back to the same word as others: confidence—less hesitation, more willingness to use the language even when it’s not perfect.

Tom (Brisbane): when French comes back… you start thinking in it
Tom came to Moorea with a very specific hope: he spoke a lot of French when he was younger, and he wanted to see if he could get it back.
He told us that in Brisbane, classes felt slow and sometimes frustrating—especially when people switched to English the moment things got difficult. Here, he wanted the opposite: an environment where French is the default.
After about a week, he noticed something that made us smile: his inner monologue started returning in French. That quiet moment when you catch yourself thinking in the language again—proof that your brain is switching gears.
And then came his personal “I can’t believe I did that” breakthrough: the creative workshops.
He described making art with local spices, dyes, and sand, shaping breadfruit leaves into a heart—something he hadn’t done in decades.
Then the poetry session: slam poetry led by Paul from New Caledonia, followed by writing and performing their own pieces in French.
Ten days earlier, he said, he would have called it impossible. But once everyone is doing it together, inhibitions soften—and French becomes something you perform, feel, and own.

The Fare Om recipe: structure + culture + real human connection
Listening back to these interviews, one theme comes through clearly: progress didn’t happen only because of classroom time.
It happened because French was everywhere:
- in the garden lessons
- in shared meals and daily conversations
- in cultural activities (dance, art, poetry)
- and in evenings with French-speaking guests, locals, and visitors—where everyone mixed, talked, and practiced naturally
Tom described those dinners as a moment when he realized: “I can actually do this. I can stay with French-speaking families when I travel and not worry so much.”
That’s the real goal.
A practical note from Janelle (worth reading before you come)
One of the most helpful pieces of feedback was also the most practical: be prepared for the environment.
April in Moorea can be hot and humid (even for Australians), and Fare Om is in a more local, natural setting—so come with:
- the right shoes
- light, breathable clothing
- bug spray and sunscreen
- and the personal items you rely on (because you can’t always “just pop to the shop” easily)
It’s simple advice—but it can completely change your first two days.
Mauruuru to our April 2026 Brisbane crew
To Janelle, Shane, Cathryn, Tom, Belissa, Michele, Justin, Joan, Clare, Sally, Eleanor and Jean-Phillipe —and everyone who shared this week with us—thank you for your energy, your effort, and your honesty.
You came for French, and you gave yourselves fully to the process: speaking, listening, creating, laughing, and stepping outside comfort zones together.
That’s how immersion works. And that’s how French becomes real.
If you’re reading this and wondering whether you can do it too: you can.




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