Monday, July 18, 2005


"Stitching" in leather was nice to do.

Friday, July 15, 2005

Rapture of the deep.

Ok, not that deep. A few feet.

Dad kindly sent over a disc of our underwater pictures taken while snorkelling at Kealakekua Bay. In Hawai'i, I bought a slim book of fish identification. I thought when I got home I'd just play match the fish and be able to identify all these guys for ya. It turns out most of the fish we took pics of are not in the book, or not identified by name if they happen to be in the background in a picture. Drat. I was hoping to dazzle you with my erudition.

Hopefully some marinelife boffins will stumble across this and help me out. I looked online, but no go, even on the fish charts.

Dad also points out that below I spelled "Moloka'i" incorrectly. There is no "c" in Hawai'ian. So it's "Moloka'i".
MPK


The colors are amazing.

Lobe coral and yellow tang.

Finger coral. Can you spot the starfish, kids?

Puffer hiding out in coral, center bottom.

Sailfin tang.

Yellow tang.

Unknown fish.

Coolest. Fish. Ever.

Close-up of fish shown below.

Fish that is pictured in my book, but not identified.

Fish.

Snazzy little number with white stripe.

Ffaelan fish.

Alex fish.

The rare and much feared ultraviolet pufferfish.

Friday, July 08, 2005

Kilauea and environs

Here are pictures taken on the Chain of Craters, as the road is called in Volcano National Park. This is a great trip to take. I'm sorry for all the inane captions. The image software that posts my photos demands a caption to every picture before it will zip it over here. It's rather a strain to my creativity at times :). The sights are pretty awesome and should speak for themselves. I'll always remember zipping down the road through the woods and then **BIG CRATER**, boom. The craters all have dates on signs nearby. Some of them are fairly recent.

I guess you can get a sense of my tastes that I have dozens of pictures of blackened charred earth and only one or two of the beaches.

MPK

Steam produced by the still-erupting Kiluaea volcano. The lava is flowing into the Pacific.

Lua Manu.

Another view.

Crater.

One of the many wonderful patterns created by swirls of lava.

Cooled off slag that looks like quartz.

Field of lava mounds.

Lava crust bursting upwards.

Geomarker in the middle of nowhere.

Lone dead tree in lava. There is a very faint rainbow in the background on the right.

At nearly 4000 feet.

Lava fields.

I love the way the light plays over the surface.

Lava as far as the eye can see.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Pu'uloa Petroglyphs

Here's a few examples of petroglyphs from Pu-uloa ("long hill"). The little I have read about them tends to reinforce the fact that their purpose is a mystery. I thought (as I do) that they looked astronomical in nature, with the pockmarks being stars, the figures representing constellations, etc. I've been poking around on the internet looking for research on this. I got one page that brings up the possiblity, but it doesn't look like a credible study. For one thing, they date the Ki'i petroglyphs at 3000 B.C. As far as my understanding goes, Hawai'i wasn't settled until 1500 years ago.

And how the heck do you map the entire planet in an outrigger canoe?

Anyway.

I'm posting a few of my favorites that look "astronomical". I like the concentric circle drawings and "charts". We were lucky to get to the site at an ideal time for photographing the carvings. I took a lot more, but these are the most clear and interesting to study. I will save the pictures of craters and cooled lava for another post, as this one is quite long enough as it is.

MPK

figure 1

figure 2

figure 3

figure 4

figure 5

figure 6

figure 7

figure 8

figure 9

figure 10

figure 11

figure 12

figure 13

figure 14

figure 15

Monday, July 04, 2005

Happy July 4th.

I'm back from our country's 50th state. Did you know that Hawaii wasn't made a state until 1959? What a weird and beautiful place. I'm not sure they all know they are a state now. We found ourselves referring to the tourists (us) as "Americans". We were in a touristy area so the disconnect seemed particularly vast between the visitors and the population. I am digging into the history of the "annexation" of the Kingdom of Hawaii. Interesting parallels to the Iraq situation.

Anyway. We went all over the big island of Hawaii. I was with my Dad, my brother Ffaelan, his fiance' Debra and my fiance' Alex. We stayed in my Dad's timeshare in Kailua-Kona. That was really cool. It had a full kitchen, so we had a lot of our meals in-house, and fixed picnics for our day trips. We did something different everyday, alternating strenuous trips with lazy outings.

On Sunday we went North to a little town called Hawi. It was cool and funky, with art galleries and a "dive-y" atmosphere. My brother and I revelled in the decay and took lots of pictures. I was consciously looking for things to document that weren't the typical "postcard" views of Hawaii. This is hard to avoid in some cases since it really is that darn pretty.

On Monday we drove 96 miles south to view the site of the Kilauea eruptions in Volcano National Park. It's been erupting continuously since the mid-80's. We walked and drove all over the site. The devastation is breathtaking. They say it's like walking on the moon, and it's true. Pictures can't really convey what it's like to survey the black and charred desolation that stretches to the Ocean.

We walked .7 miles over cooled lava to view petroglyphs that were carved into the rock sometime in the 1800's. I took dozens of pictures of these and they really merit their own post, so I will save these along with most of the crater pics for another day.

The next day we drove north again to Spencer Beach. It was mostly empty on a Tuesday. The water was glorious and my brother, Al and I swam for a long time. We had a picnic lunch and relaxed under the shade of the huge banyan tree that the beach is known for. Then we headed up to Kapaau to visit a bookstore I'd read about. It is called Kohala Books and has new and used books. My brother and I both plunked down a chunk of change. He found an Anne Sexton rarity, and I found a biography on Charles Lamb and his sister that I hadn't known existed. (I am wild about the Essays of Elia.)

Wedsnday we took a short cruise on the Fair Winds 2 to Kealakekua Bay for a morning of snorkeling. The lovely site has quite a morbid history. The cliff base that shelters the bay is the old burying grounds of the Ali'i (royalty) of Hawaii. The captain told us that in order to maintain the secrecy of the burial, a villager would be "volunteered" to secrete the body on the cliff face. He would lower himself and the body on a rope down the sheer face. After the body was buried and concealed, the villager's final task was to cut his rope and fall to his death. The cliff is till considered sacred today and no one is allowed on it.

This bay also marks the fall of Captain Cook. Below is a site marker that commemorates his death. Evidently some dispute broke out between Cook's crew and the natives of Hawaii. In the fray, Cook was killed at this very spot. This little plot of land was deeded to the British and is considered British soil.

Despite the grim associations, the bay was perfect for underwater site seeing. The crew of the Fair Winds are very strict (huzzah!) about not spoiling the reef. We weren't allowed to put our feet on the ocean floor or touch the fish, rocks or coral. The boat was our "beach". Alex, Ffaelan and Deb got the hang of snorkeling pretty well. Me, not so much. I did what I called "smorkelling" and just held my breath for short bursts of looking underwater with my mask on. The water is so salty you can't get very deep anyway.

There was a ton of stuff to see. We took underwater pictures. My dad has these to develop so I hope to post some of these in the near future. It was like swimming in a tank in the Steinhart Aquarium!

Thursday we drove south again to do some sightseeing. First we went to a tour at a coffee farm called Greenwell.
We tasted yummy coffee and got to follow our guide on the process from plant to drinkable. I bought a half pound of private reserve Kona coffee. I am now ruined for any other kind of coffee, though Alex tells me that the Guatemala coffee will blow me away.

After that we drove down a bit to visit St. Benedict's aka the Painted Church. We arrived at the same time as two big busloads of tourists off the cruise ship that had anchored in Kona. Ugh. Between waves of humanity, I took pics of the wonderful murals in the church. They depict biblical scenes and other "great moments in Christianity". Mass is still celebrated in the church.

Our last stop was the Place of Refuge. This is an awesome place, very quiet. Nowadays it is refuge ot sea turtles who come and lunch on the algae that grows on the rocks in the cove. It's amazing to walk around a site with so much history. There is a huge wall still there that was erected in the 1500's. A lot of it has been reconstructed, but you still get the sense of the place, I think. It's a great place to reflect on the royal Hawaiian culture that is so unique. The takedown of the monarchy is really melancholy reading.

On Friday, we poked around Kailua-Kona some more. We took pictures of the first church of Hawaii, and the royal vacation house that is now a museum. We took the museum tour, but you aren't allowed to photograph the interior, so no shots of that. Here is their web site that shows some good highlights of the tour. After that we went home and got ready for a luau at the Royal Kona Resort down a ways from where we were staying. It was kooky and fun and the food was really good. We were sitting next to a cool family also from California. Their young son thought that Alex was Captain Hook from Peter Pan, and watched him more than the action on stage. Alex obligingly made pirate noises for him. All in all the perfect ending to the holiday.

I am glad to be back to home and computer. Funnily enough I was reading this entry from Wikipedia today that states that Rand Mcnally reports that Oakland has the best climate in the United States! Hey, why leave? Actually we spent much of our trip trying to convince my father to retire to Hawaii.

Lots of pics below. Aloha!
MPK



My first glimpse of the Big Island.

Our first prance in the Pacific in Kailua-Kona.

Gallery room in Hawi.

Hallway in gallery.

Great sign.