Aloha HAWAII Mahalo!
Hawaii over the years.
This is me on…
April 24
This is me on the day back from the Big Island enjoying this massive bed and this massive view in my glorious climate controlled room catching up on pictures.
Looks like such old-fashioned…
Looks like such old-fashioned aloha.
OFF TO THE BIG ISLAND! (that’s a link you can click on to see the story if you’re in the mood).
We had a nice…
April 23
We had a nice drive back to the Kona airport with a few stop-offs along the way including here…
Welcome Back! This…
Welcome Back! This orchid has been opening bloom by bloom since we got here and arriving back from the Big Island it is all aloha welcome glow.
Volcanoes National Park where…
April 22
Volcanoes National Park where we drove up to the Visitor’s Center and then rolled on out to…
…the Kilauea viewing station….
…the Kilauea viewing station. It’s still bubbling away which is quite a sight. There is a flow at the sea too which I’ll talk about later.
A sweet couple from…
A sweet couple from the Netherlands about to make their way into the lava tube trail.
We’re driving along the…
We’re driving along the Chain of Craters road and there was a turn-off, the Hilina Pali Road built by the Civilian Conservation Corps from 1933 through 1942 that leads to the Hilina Pali Overlook.
Here we are at the end of nine twisty miles on one lane.
Check out all those…
Check out all those dotted lines. Those are trails made for Real walkers as each one is quite long.
Here’s a particularly good…
Here’s a particularly good crater, and the National Park Service website is excellent with noting the stops. I just didn’t note the stop as I took the pictures!
A good one here…
A good one here too. Our rental car is featured in many of these pictures and it is serving us well – an Infiniti QX70.
From the NPS: “This…
From the NPS: “This impressive sea arch was cut into the cliff of an ancient lava flow, about 550 years ago. The term used in the creation of this sea arch is “differential erosion”, which is the difference in the hardness of various layers of lava flow.”
All over the internet…
All over the internet you can find pictures of this lava flow, active now and making quite a show as the rivulets ooze into the sea.
From the end of the road just a few steps from the above bridge you can walk 4 miles on a gravel road to get to the flow. And then you get to walk the 4 miles back. I think they are allowing bikes too if you are of a mind.
We stopped for a…
We stopped for a late lunch at the Volcano House sitting here enjoying the food and the VIEW!
We went up to…
We went up to Christa’s friend’s place to get the Merrie Monarch tickets (YAY Christa!).
L-R: Ka’ahukane, Christa, Daniella, Kara, and Zachary
What it looks like…
What it looks like inside. From now, no more pictures because, new rule, no pictures at all allowed during the competition, but I can say wholeheartedly and without reservation, it was AWESOME.
I’m going to try to get the video but really, there’s nothing like being there. Go if you can!
Christa got the tickets…
Christa got the tickets from a doctor she’s working with who got them from someone else we don’t know who, but the doctor told Christa all he wanted in return was a picture of us having fun. I ran out to the concessions when I heard the announcement that, new rule, we couldn’t take any pictures in the arena. I asked these beautiful ladies if I could have a picture with them to which they laughingly agreed and here it is, me having FUN!
There was a row…
There was a row of many shops selling leis and other flower adornments. I got that little guy in my hair at this one.
Wow, parking was inconvenient…
Wow, parking was inconvenient and I was too lazy to even get out of the car!
“According to legend, Kamehameha lifted the 5,000 pound Naha Stone at age 14 (it’s the big flat one), and was the only person to ever lift it. The legend that goes with this particular stone is that the man who lifted it was the legendary warrior who would unite all of the islands.”
We left Kona this…
April 21
We left Kona this morning heading to our two nights at Volcano National Park. We travelled by way of highway 200, the Saddle Road where inside of a couple of hours we drove from sea level to 6,632 feet and back to sea level. Oh it was a party in my ears alright.
Arriving in Hilo on…
Arriving in Hilo on a fully sunny day, not so often the case in Hilo, we took a drive-about and stopped off here for another commemoration to Kamehamemha the Great.
And this tree. …
And this tree. There were so many of them in Hilo and I am going to keep asking until I can confirm their name.
Moving on, from lighthousefriends:…
Moving on, from lighthousefriends: “Located on the Big Island, twenty-five miles southeast of Hilo, is Cape Kumukahi, the easternmost point of the Hawaiian Islands. According to Hawaiian mythology, the cape is named after Chief Kumukahi who refused to allow the fire goddess Pele to participate in the playing of royal games. Offended, Pele sent forth a fountain of fire and lava that chased Kumukahi to the beach and continued eastward creating the cape.”
The lava fields on…
The lava fields on the Big Island are amazing, huge and dramatic and beyond my ability to fully express in a picture.
…and more….
…and more.
There seem to be two main kinds of fields, the lava spewing kind with giant jagged rocks ‘as far as the eye can see’ and the lava oozing kind with huge rolls of folding blackness.
…and Christa came to…
…and Christa came to join us for the first night!
Christa is here on a two month assignment from her school in Honolulu and HURRAY CHRISTA! she got us our tickets for Merrie Monarch!! You did it Christa – you’re THE BEST!!!
We had dinner in…
We had dinner in the village at this place, Ohelo, and it was very good.
(internet pic)
We met three people…
We met three people in Waimea – two lovely ladies at the Keck and the fellow at the Heritage Center. All three said we simply must go have breakfast at the Hawaiian Style Café.
It was delicious and a ton of fun. Also it was ‘Hawaiian style’ which means the portions are HUGE.
From their website of…
From their website of the Keck Observatory on to of Mauna Kea. You can visit up here and it’s supposed to be totally splendid but going there didn’t fit with our schedule.
(internet)
Heading into the little…
April 20
Heading into the little town of Waimea central to the cowboy country of the Big Island.
No cowboys here though – this is the W. M. Keck Observatory Headquarters where you can see a few things in their lobby and when a docent is around you can learn a lot, which we didn’t because there wasn’t a docent around.
It’s a great story…
It’s a great story featuring English explorers, kapu cattle, Hawaiian kings, and Mexican vaqueros.
From their website: “Since…
From their website: “Since its formation in 1998 the goal of the Paniolo Preservation Society has been to establish a Heritage Center for its collection of paniolo documents, images and artifacts. On April 1, 2011 PPS took over management of one of the oldest and most beloved gems of the Big Island ranching community – historic Pukalani Stables. Since the early 1900s ‘The Stables’ were the center of the Parker Ranch horse breeding operation for over half a century.
“There could be no better site to honor the generations of Hawaii’s paniolo than this venerable location, now renamed the Paniolo Heritage Center at Pukalani Stables.”
Here we are for…
Here we are for our private tour at the Paniolo Heritage Center at Pukalani Stables. This guy was totally into it and answered every question at great length.
At the end of…
At the end of a long and winding road, the Pololu Valley lookout looking up the valley…
…and Pololu Valley lookout…
…and Pololu Valley lookout looking down the cliffs.
You could hike down there to that black sand beach if you wanted however they discourage swimming because of the currents. And then you’d get to hike back up!
Commemorating the birthplace of…
Commemorating the birthplace of Kamehameha the Great: “The statue, which was restored in early 2001, stands on the grounds of the Kohala Information Center on the main road (Highway 270) in Kapaʻau. Cast in Italy in 1879 and erected in the early 1880s, it is the original Kamehameha statue. There are five other bronzes, one on Oahu, one on Maui, one in Hilo, one in Washington, D.C. and one in Las Vegas.”
The Park Service is…
The Park Service is doing a wonderful job with these historic sites including this place, the Pu’ukohola Heiau National Historic Site.
Back in Kona, the…
Back in Kona, the historic Mokuaikaua Church is right next door to our condo.
From Wiki: “The congregation was first founded in 1820 by Asa and Lucy Goodale Thurston, from the first ship of American Christian Missionaries, the brig Thaddeus. They were given permission to teach Christianity by King Kamehameha II, and the Queen Regent Kaʻahumanu.
“After the royal court…
“After the royal court relocated to Honolulu, they briefly moved there. In October 1823, they learned that the people of Kailua-Kona had developed an interest in the new ways and had erected a small wooden church. The first structure on the site was made from Ohiʻa wood and a thatched roof, on land obtained from Royal Governor Kuakini across the street from his Huliheʻe Palace. The name moku ʻaikaua literally means “district acquired by war” in the Hawaiian language, probably after the upland forest area where the wood was obtained.”
“After several fires, the present stone structure was constructed, partially from stones recycled from a nearby Heiau (ancient temple of the Hawaiian religion), from about 1835 to 1837. The interior is decorated with Koa wood.”
Sent out by the…
Sent out by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, this is a model of the ship Thaddeus that carried the first group of missionaries traveling from Boston to Hawaii.
Across the bay looking…
Across the bay looking back to the church and the waterfront portion of Kona town.
A few minutes before…
A few minutes before this spot was full of long boats.
King Kamehameha the Great restored this ‘Ahu’ena Heiau in 1812 and it was being restored again when we were here in 2011.
Here we are…The Usual!…
Here we are…The Usual!
We both got the clam chowder bread bowl and it was the best version of that particular dish that either of us ever had. They took the top off that thick fresh flavorful crusty sourdough bread loaf and made drippy delicious garlic toast out of it. YUM!
This place somewhat follows…
This place somewhat follows the Colonial Williamsburg model with rebuilt structures, practicing craftsmen, and history lessons, one major difference being that it’s also an active religious site and treated as such.
…and this is the…
…and this is the very large and important heiau that faces the bay.
From Wiki: “Settlement on Kealakekua Bay has a long history. Hikiau Heiau was a luakini temple of Ancient Hawaii at the south end of the bay… associated with funeral rites. The large platform of volcanic rock was originally over 16 feet high, 250 feet long, and 100 feet wide. The sheer cliff face called Pali Kapu O Keôua overlooking the bay was the burial place of Hawaiian royalty.
“The name means “forbidden cliffs of Keôua ” in honor of Keôua Nui. He was sometimes known as the “father of kings” since many rulers were his descendants. The difficulty in accessing the cliff kept the exact burial places secret.”
Good morning from the…
April 19
Good morning from the balcony of our little condo in the heart of Kona town, Big Island, Hawaii.
“The rule of kings…
“The rule of kings might change, but the burial rights of families survived on their lands. With this right is connected an inherent love of the land of one’s birth, so that men do not willingly wander from place to place but remain on the land of their ancestors.” S.M. Kamakau, Hawaiian historian, 1869.
Kealakekua Bay State Historical…
Kealakekua Bay State Historical Park. It’s also called Captain Cook Bay…
There it is, the…
There it is, the monument to Captain Cook. It’s a big story. You’ll want to read all about it in Sarah Vowell’s book Unfamiliar Fishes. You won’t be sorry, I promise!
Scanty attire, sports, eating,…
Scanty attire, sports, eating, vending, etc., are not allowed in the main site for religious reasons but just outside the wall great crowds are sunning, swimming, fishing, and paddling their dogs around.
Next stop, Pu’uhonua o…
Next stop, Pu’uhonua o Honaunau, a National Historic Park where, since 1961, the National Park Service has maintained this place which was once both Royal Grounds and place of refuge.
Refuge was an important part of cultural life back then and too long for me to tell…I want everyone to read Sarah Vowell’s book Unfamiliar Fishes. You won’t be sorry, I promise! (Maybe I’ll mention this book only a few more times? Maybe.)
We’re on to St…
We’re on to St Benedict Roman Catholic Church, Honaunau, Hawaii – Hawaii’s First Painted Church, The Painted Church on the National Register of Historic Places, built and decorated from 1899-1904.
A roadside view point….
A roadside view point. I didn’t walk to the sign (why?) but I remember we pulled over to admire the moonscape.
Arriving at Ka Lae,…
Arriving at Ka Lae, the southern most location in the US, not, they like to say, the Florida Keys as Floridians like to say.
This particular spot is well known for the folk who throw themselves off these cliffs to see if they’ll survive.
You can head straight south from here and not find anything but ocean until you hit Antarctica.
I wanted to find…
I wanted to find a plaque and have a picture of me standing behind that plaque but it was not to be. I thought this might be a plaque, but no.
I continued on to…
I continued on to the edge of the sea, and still no plaque. But here’s a picture of me anyway. That’s not a new hairstyle, it’s just windy out there.
We could also have a plaque saying that this was the place where, believed by many, the original Polynesians first landed in the Hawaiian Islands.
We were out on…
We were out on the road from 8:30 until 4:30. It was cocktail hour for sure and since we’re staying in town no one had to drive.
The view from our…
The view from our cocktail hour table. Check out how the big ship is leaving and the long boats are heading home.
And then with a slight turn to the right…
We’re off to the…
April 18
We’re off to the Big Island early today. It’s all in the Big Island, click!
Fun to compare 2012…
Fun to compare 2012 to 2017. They have some talented decorators there at Saint Raphael’s.
And then we got…
And then we got to eat lunch that was so delicious I had to sigh many times.
Then off to catch a couple of churches…
From their website:…
From their website:
“Saint Raphael Catholic Church in Koloa…is the oldest Catholic Church in Kauai. St. Raphael’s was founded in 1841; two years after Catholics were granted religious freedom in Hawaii after the French threatened Honolulu. Father Arsenius Walsh established the parish.
“The first stone chapel was built by Father Walsh in 1842. In preparation for the Centennial anniversary in 1941, the Chapel sanctuary was rebuilt by parishioners.
“The present sanctuary of St. Raphael’s Church in Koloa, Kauai was completed in December 1854, however the blessing did not take place until October 24,1856 to coincide with the feast day of St. Raphael the Archangel. In 1933 the bell tower was removed and a permanent adobe tower was added to the left of the sanctuary. In 1936 Father Philibert enlarged and renovated the church to double its seating capacity.”
From their website:…
From their website:
“History of the Koloa Church…The first missionaries arrived in Kauai around the year 1820. They were brought to the island by George Kaumuali’i, son of King Kaumuali’i, the last ruling monarch of Kauai before King Kamehameha I took control and united all of Hawai’i.
“George had been sent by his father to the United States to be educated in New England. During these early times, people met in their homes and were visited occasionally by the missionaries who were in Waimea.
“The Reverand Peter J. Guilick began the mission in Koloa in 1834. With no official house of worship, they lived closely with each other in thatched houses and worked on the idea of building a church of their own. In 1837, they built a chapel on the premises where the current church now stands. Its original dimensions where 95 feet in length by 40 feet in width with an 8 foot lanai that went completely around the chapel.
“The chapel served the congregation until 1859 when it was torn down to make way for a new frame building. This undertaking was carried to completion through the energy and devotion of Reverand James W. Smith, M.D. He served as a missionary, pastor and doctor from 1842 to 1887. This new and improved church served the congregation for 70 years. It stood as a silent witness to all of the changes which have occured in the islands over the years.
“It was recorded in the Missionary Herald of 1860 that this church stood on the high ground and could be seen from far out to sea, forming a landmark which ships used for navigating as they approached port.
“In 1929, the church underwent repairs and was given a New England style finish. The Ohia (Hawaiian wood) timbers hewn by the Hawaiians in those early years are still supporting this church in their former positions, with the exception of a few timbers. (This text was taken from the writings of Judge Henry Blake. Some content has been edited for grammar.)”
The door was locked…
The door was locked but I knocked and a sweet lady let me in. She said to be sure to come back on Sunday for the special Easter service because they were going to have a band, singers, and a hula performace!
…Tunnel of Trees!…
…Tunnel of Trees!
Then it started raining and we just drove around in the rain looking at Kauai from the windows of the car.
When we got to…
When we got to the Kauai Coffee Plantation the rain had stopped falling and we could enjoy their always entertaining walking tour.
And PIZZA! Our favorite Brick Oven Pizza. Owww, there’s still some leftovers in the fridge!
This guy was flapping…
April 14
This guy was flapping around the foyer and at first I thought it was a bat. He’s about five inches long, but not a bat.
Based on some googling about we believe her to be the Black Witch Moth. I made er rather lighter than she was to stand out against the wood of the ceiling The moth and the wood were the same color.
…but fabulous nonetheless, full…
…but fabulous nonetheless, full with birds and the rich smell of the fields.
There are at least…
There are at least several dozen fields in the valley that look like this one and it’s a treat to be able to walk beside them.
From the Christ Memorial…
From the Christ Memorial Episcopal Church, Kilauea website:
“The Episcopal Church in Hawai’i began in 1862 when King Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma invited the Church of England to Hawai‘i. The King and Queen supported the Church’s establishment throughout the islands with gifts of land, and by founding the Cathedral of St. Andrew in Honolulu. Queen Emma also founded Queen’s Hospital (now Queen’s Medical Center) and St. Andrew’s Priory School for Girls in Honolulu.
“As early as 1888 worship services were held in Kilauea under the direction of lay leadership and Bishop Willis. Bishop Willis had been sent to Hawai`i by the Church of England and on occasion, confirmed people in Kilauea. By 1924 the time had come for a permanent church in Kilauea, and under the leadership of Bishop LaMothe and the Rev. Henry Willey, Episcopalians in the area started worshipping in a frame building owned by the Hawaiian Congregational Church.
“In 1939 the Kilauea…
“In 1939 the Kilauea Sugar Company deeded the churchyard to the Episcopal Diocese of Hawaii and gave the native stone used in the erection of our present building. The chief benefactor, however, was Mrs. Robert Shapard, of Griffin, Georgia, in memory of her husband, and on the Second Sunday after Epiphany on January 19, 1941, the Right Rev. Harrington Littell consecrated the church.
“The graveyard surrounding the church dates back to the earliest days of the original Hawaiian Congregational Church, with many graves dating back over 100 years. Unfortunately, many graves are unmarked and the number of people buried here will probably remain a secret known only to God.”



































































































