AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz

Popular Links on this Blog

My Photo

BooksFromHawaii

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 01/2007

July 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

Honolulu

July 30, 2008

DEATH HAIKU

 080705-AnthuriaShrine-PunaCoastNearKalaniMWV


the vision of timelessness

all in a rush now

the blink of infinity





Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2008.07.30, 5:30 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a culture-oriented site, focusing mainly on literary art and current events. If you enjoy this blog, and you wish to support its continued existence, please email a reply to this post. Indicate your desired contribution amount. The moderator will then reply with an invoice you can use to contribute via PayPal. Your name and contribution amount are confidential and NOT posted to the blog. Your three-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
20.00 / $200.00
(10.0%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars and the annual goal of $200. Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually LitBoy posts your contribution on the very next blog post.

Unless otherwise indicated, all original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 25, 2007

2007.03.25, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

LUSHNESS ALONG THE ROADS OF
HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK

These pictures continue the series from one of my early visits to Hawaii Island, in January 2002.


What now strikes me most about this photo is, here I am, in a fern forest, yet all the fronds in this shot are dead. The other plants don't seem to mind, though.


Here, fuchsias and ferns coexist peacefully.

 

This was my partner's first visit to the Island. He was very patient with me as I pulled the car over to take these roadside shots. I have no idea what kind of wild blossom this is — sure is pretty, though!

Today's pictures are from Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park.


 

Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $179 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
31 / 179
(17.2%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution within 24 hours.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 21, 2007

2007.03.21, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

ALOHA AND A HANOHANO SPRING TO ALL!


And isn't it about time? Perhaps, as Oscar Wilde said rather famously, conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative. On the other hand, he's dead, so who cares what he thinks!

Seriously, it's been one hell of a winter for most of the folks I know on the mainland, and I don't mind bringing it up. Even here in lovely Hawaii, it seems we've had more than the usual number of gloomy days. But so far, this week has been beautiful, other than the usual night and early morning storms here in our patch of Pahoa.
 


So, in hopes of bringing a bit of bright spring into your day, here's a bit of sunshine in the form of this insanely lovely orchid that was blooming in our yard last summer. In Hawaiian, I would call this flower hanohano — that's one of my favorite Hawaiian words, and it is both a noun and adjective, roughly meaning magnificent, dignified, distinguished (adjective) and dignity, glory (noun).

And if one yellow flower can bring you a bit of spring, then perhaps one more can keep it around for a while. Et voilà, a buttery yellow plumeria:


I mean, really, don't you want to spread this on toast or something? We get two colors of plumeria blossom in our yard, an apricot color and this sunny yellow.

Here's one more picture of the orchid, this time with a bit more color on the side. I love the mossy greens and scaly browns on these tree trunks. Such intense colors we are blessed with!

[UPDATE, 30 March 2007: I am pretty certain now that this is not an orchid but a giant GINGER PLANT. And it appears that a flower called a HANOHANO ORCHID actually exists. You can see a picture of it here.]




Wishing you a hanohano day and season,

—Bill Brent


If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

All original photos on this website (LitBoy.com) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 19, 2007

2007.03.19, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

OK, SO I WASN'T DONE WITH FLOWERS YET.


In honor of this week's return of spring — and, heh-heh, the fact that I have taken so many colorful flower pictures, and have twelve days of March's Picture of the Day project still to go — here are some lovely begonias:



So now we're back at home in the yard in Pahoa, which is in a sub-tropical rainforest about a two-hour drive from our friends' protea flower farm in arid, volcanic-slope Ocean View Estates. And that's not even halfway around the Island. So now you know why they call it the Big Island — Hawaii Island has over half the state's total square mileage, at approximately 4,030 square miles — and counting, since we have an active volcano (Kilauea) that is growing approximately 32 acres of new land per year. Here's a table in .PDF format if you're curious about the comparative sizes of Hawaii's Islands.


Here now, for a bit of contrast, is a picture of a white bloom from the flowering bush in our yard. Cheryl's Hawaiian Gifts informs me that this is a gardenia bush. Note the intrepid bee who zoomed in to check it out for himself, just as I lined up this shot:


Speaking of contrast, apparently Hawaii Island is host to every major global climatological zone, according to one source. So we are nothing here if not diverse.





Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent


If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

All original photos on this website (LitBoy.com) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 18, 2007

2007.03.18, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

A FAREWELL TO FLOWERS


Here is the final set of pictures in my series featuring Ka'u Protea, a Big Island flower farm specializing in proteas.


Here are two images of Banksia, originally from Australia:




Close-up:




And here is a grouping of leucospermum. I believe the more yellow blooms are the Kula Sunrise variety depicted here. "Kula" is Hawaiian for "open meadow," and "Kula Sunrise" references the Kula district on the east side of Maui Island.



As you can see, there are many varieties, and some of them look very similar.


In trying to figure things out, I stumbled upon this lovely page of contemporary quilts that reference various aspects of Hawaiian life, including some designs that are plant-inspired.


Tomorrow we visit a very different part of Hawaii Island!




Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent


If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

All original photos on this website (LitBoy.com) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.