
Vanuatu Post extends seasonal greetings to all
its customers and
visitors to Vanuatu. Christmas is symbolised here through the local
“Christmas Tree” known as Flamboyant Delonix regia,
which is also known
as the Poinciana. This large tree provides a magnificent display of red
flowers at Christmas time giving the islands and especially Port Vila,
a blaze of colour. White birds are also synonymous with greetings and
throughout Vanuatu a number of beautiful coastal birds allow Vanuatu
Post to aptly illustrate their greetings message in this striking stamp
issue.
Identifiable by long white tail
streamers and yellow/orange bill, the
White-tailed Tropicbird Phaethon
lepturus is around 40cm tall
(excluding 35cm streamers) and carries black markings. Feeding on fish
and squid and caught by diving from a great height, they tend to nest
on rock ledges, tree hollows and atop coconut palms laying a
solitary egg. Tropicbirds are the most pelagic (sea going) of their
order and have been identified and linked with Monument Rock in the
Shepherd Group and in Malo (near Santo).
The Eastern Reef Heron Ardea
(Egretta) sacra (also known as
the Reef Heron, Reef Egret and in Bislama – Longfala neck) is
interestingly seen in two different colour phases in Vanuatu. They
inhabit rocky coasts, reefs, sea cliffs, mangroves and mud flats. Found
alone or in pairs, they are strongly territorial in defending their
foraging areas. They feed by stalking gracefully through the shallows,
at the intertidal zone, taking small crabs, crustaceans, small fish,
frogs, lizards and insects.
The Great Crested Tern Sterna
bergii. Growing to 48cm and identified by
long yellow bill, black cap and deeply forked tail, this tern is
usually found near the coast and fishes in shallow waters near the
surface. A graceful flier, it is found throughout the Indian and SW
Pacific Oceans and has been reported as a vagrant in Vanuatu although
reports from Efate have placed it often over Mele bay and Hideaway
Island.
The Fairy Tern Gygis alba, also
known
as the White Tern and White Noddy, is snowy white with a ring of black
feathers around the eye. Known for its fluttering flight, it feeds near
the surface taking small fish, squid, crustaceans and plankton. It can
also catch Flying Fish in flight. Its distribution is in the tropical
and sub tropical Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans and in Vanuatu, it
is scattered throughout the archipelago.Vanuatu Post acknowledges the valuable assistance it has received from the publication “Birds of Vanuatu” by Heinrich Bregulla (1991).


Greetings from Vanuatu
Please Note: All prices are in US Dollars
| Set of 4 stamps | $5.25 | ||
| Miniature Sheet with 1 stamp | $2.50 | ||
| First Day Cover with 4 stamps | $6.25 | ||
| First Day Cover with Miniature Sheet | $3.50 |
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Collectors Notes: | ![]() |
For more information please contact: |
|
| Designer: | Lucas Kukler, Nairobi, Kenya | The
Manager, Philatelic Bureau, Vanuatu Post, Port Vila, Vanuatu Tel. + 678 22000 Fax + 678 23900 E mail: philatelic@vanuatupost.vu |
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| Printer: | Southern Colour Print, Dunedin, New Zealand | |||
| Photography: | Brian Chudleigh, New Zealand and Top Shots, Vanuatu | |||
| Process: | Offset lithography | |||
| Stamp Size: | 50.0 mm x 25.9 mm vertical. | |||
| Mini sheet Size: | 100 mm x 70 mm horizontal. | |||
| Perforation Gauge: | 14.80 x 14.67 | |||
| Panes: | Two panes of 25 stamps with central gutter. | |||
| Paper: | 104g Tullis Russell, non phosphor gummed stamp paper. | |||
| Denominations: | 45, 100, 130 and 250 vatu | |||
| Period of Sale: | 26 November 2008 for a period of 2 years |

