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Honolulu

March 28, 2007

2007.03.28, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

WHAT KIND OF BERRY CLUSTER IS THIS?

Some of my friends have seen this image before, since I used it as a greeting card during the holiday season and posted it online a couple of times. These grow in our back yard in Pahoa, Hawaii:



...but I still don't know for sure what to call them. I have seen something like this berry elsewhere online, called "Christmas berry," although that seems to be a generic name given to lots of things. Also Ardisia crispa / Coral Berry / Hilo Holly. But the latter seem to occur in spoked clusters like these, rather than as above.

Any gardening buffs out there care to take a guess? I think they're just Ti plant berries, like these ones.

In any case, they sure are pretty. And I'd love to know more about them.


 

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, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

March 27, 2007

2007.03.27, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

WE'RE GOIN' BANANAS TODAY!

These are small apple bananas that grew in our front yard last summer. I took pictures as they grew from blossoms to ripe fruit.



Above and below: Apple bananas, July 13.


Click here for technical information on Hawaii's commercial banana crop. We are in the Puna District. On the chart, note that Puna is at the top of the rainfall per year list, with an average of 140 inches. In other words, it is very good banana weather here — it is raining even as I type this! Banana plants have high drainage and nutrition needs, but they still grow wild all over the place.

Above: August 1. Just under three weeks later, and you can see how quickly the fruit has grown from the blossoms. I love these rubbery red "elephant ears" that drop off the blossom as the cluster matures. Some sort of nectar or sap drips from the red tip, too — it's all quite suggestively phallic.


Above is a close-up of banana blossoms, pod, and emerging fruit.


Above: The mature tree. Below: Baby trees grow around the base of the mature tree. We cut down the mature tree once it bears its fruit. It will not bear again, and eventually it withers and dies anyhow. Meantime, removing the finished tree ensures better nutrition for the rest of the group.


This is just a close-up of a banana leaf that I liked. I think they look the most interesting when they are starting to fade, spot, and turn colors like this one.


 

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 26, 2007

2007.03.26, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK, JANUARY 2002

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


I'd love to see the National Park Service's list of strange objects retrieved.


I suppose that wearing the "Himalaya" T-shirt to see the Kilauea caldera was a bit gauche.

 


These two shots depict sprigs of newly sprouted Ohia (pron. o-HEE-ah) growing in recent lava flow. Ohia, fully grown, ranges in size from tiny shrubs like these, to tall trees sixty feet and higher. It has evolved to take advantage of the lava ecology and is often the first plant to take root after a flow. It is highly fire retardant. You can see the links in my previous post on Ohia trees for more information on the fascinating Ohia.


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 23, 2007

2007.03.23, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

THE LIGHT UPON THE LEAVES

Nothing too deep here, just a lovely picture of the front driveway. I took this photo when we started looking at houses and first saw this place — right at the very beginning, just about a year ago today.

Sometimes in life, you just know when something is right, and all the rest is simply convincing yourself that you can trust that first impression. This was such a moment. We looked at maybe a dozen other places, but nothing quite compared with the "fit" of this initial stop.

Life is a series of trade-offs. The sky brings the rain, but then it leaves us with this. It's all a gift, if only we can look at it that way.


Sometimes it's hard. When we moved in, we also inherited a deadbeat's phone number. For close to a year, we have been patiently awaiting the drop-off of bill collector queries. We still get several a week. Then tonight we decided to give up, after I got a harassing call from some guy who claimed that the deadbeat had stiffed him in a motorbike deal.

The cowardly caller had reached us via area code 716 directory assistance (Rochester, NY), so that we couldn't trace his call, which means he had to pay maybe an extra dollar to have the operator patch him through to our number. Since he refused to listen to me explain the mix-up, choosing instead to play out his sordid little mini-drama, I am guessing he was also a cheapskate. No stand-in for Mr. Deadbeat was going to rob him of his moment of glory, nosirree! I mean, he'd paid an entire dollar for the privilege! Get real, man!

So I will, Mr. Cheapskate. Tomorrow we will call the executive officer at Hawaiian Telecom and change this phone number. Maybe if I had trusted my first impression, we could have changed the number immediately and thus avoided a year's worth of deadbeat-related calls.

Yet it's never too late to have a beautiful day. A new beginning, a fresh chance at life, the light upon the leaves.




But, please, everyone, clean up your campsite before you move on. It really does make life easier on the next guy. And wouldn't you want the same for yourself? You can think of it as practice for the Big Time. It's our tiny acts of kindness that add up to the greater glory.




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 12, 2007

2007.03.12, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

PUNALU'U BLACK SAND BEACH, BIG ISLAND OF HAWAII



ABOVE AND BELOW: Sunday, February 18, 2007. Here are four shots from around Punalu'u State Beach, where the sand is crushed-up lava! Rather than the usual scenic postcard shots of the beach itself (just Google on "Punaluu"; there are lots), here are some less photographed sights. Notice the effect of persistent wind on the two tiny trees in the second photo! I took this shot when the air was momentarily still:



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In fact, Punalu'u is in the Ka'u District of the Big Island, and "ka'u" is the Hawaiian word for wind. In other words, it's VERY GUSTY here! In fact, there is a wind farm near South Point, the southernmost point in the fifty United States.

In addition to prolific amounts of wind, Ka'u grows a wide variety of produce and wonderful coffee that rivals the more famous Kona District beans. It's somewhat akin to the difference between Napa Valley and Sonoma Valley wines, since about 1970 — both are great producers, yet one is relatively unknown outside the region. (See, for example, here.)

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Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent



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 06, 2007

2007.03.06, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

February 16 found us at the 'Imiloa Astronomy Center in Hilo for the first time. It's a big, beautiful new facility that opened its door just about a year ago.

I love the space-age architecture (Metal teepees? Kewl!) and the big, roomy planetarium with six projectors for the dome. The narrator for the introductory show that afternoon invited me to sit next to her, as she ran the control panels, which was a real treat because I got to see a bit about how the show works "from the cockpit." After the show, she led a group of us "backstage" to see the rest.

Now we've become 'Imiloa patrons, complete with photo I.D. cards. So the next time that clerk at Longs Drugs in Hilo wants to refuse my Bank of Hawaii debit card for not having two pieces of photo I.D. to make a seven-dollar purchase, I can flaunt my new 'Imiloa Astronomy Center membership in her face! Damn it, I'll pass for a solid citizen yet.

Maybe she didn't trust me because of my still-valid California driver's license, although when she summoned the manager, he chose not to override her decision. Who knows what's been going on "backstage" at Longs, anyhow. They've probably had a lot of recent rip-offs. Still, a seven-dollar purchase is not too likely to generate a theft. But there I go again, expecting logic where none exists. To them, we are still just haoles at best, and petty crooks at worst.

The more I see of my side of the Big Island, the more I notice the newness of so much of it. There seem to be natural and human elements about equally at play in that regard:

(1) The land itself is so often new — even barren, in the case of recent lava flow. Without romanticizing it too much, I would call that quality emergent. The frequent starkness here evokes a moonscape ambience, so the futuristic architecture of our new Astronomy Center is well aligned with the naturally imposed aesthetic of an island still undergoing development.

(2) Everyone wants to be the last one off the boat, and that is a charming fantasy but not the way things work out. Despite a momentary lull in the price of property here on the East Side, there is a steady influx of newcomers. Lots are being built upon, and commercial areas are undergoing expansion. In fact, the Big Island is home to two of the world's largest private subdivisions: Ocean View Estates (near South Point, the southernmost point in the fifty United States) and Hawaiian Paradise Park (just down the highway from us).

(3) Of course, certain aspects of local culture on this part of the Island are emergent as well, such as this Astronomy Center. You may have noticed that the foreground in some of these photos still show fresh dirt, waiting for the newly planted gardens to grow into it.

Here's a bit of detail from the foyer floor:

 

 

Nothing will overcome the suspicion of the folks at the drug store except time. We prove ourselves by showing up in each other's lives and demonstrating character. ("True self you have shown," as the lyrics to one of my favorite R&B songs puts it.)

Living in a place as powerfully alive as the Big Island is a tremendous opportunity for study and growth, and I hope that somehow I can encourage mindful cultivation of its resources, rather than sitting passive in the face of runaway development. Some of the newer homes are particularly ugly, especially the "spec homes" built by real estate speculators who only intend to turn a quick profit, never to live in them. I'm glad we found a beautiful older home to inhabit.

 

Speaking of which, here we are, just outside the front door. Our February guest does a Vanna White turn, modeling with the big bunch of apple bananas we harvested recently from the front yard. We picked this crop at the beginning of February; they took about two weeks to ripen; and I just finished the last of the bunch this morning. (There were about 70 altogether — smallish, but mighty good eatin'. Glad we had a guest to help us out!) There are plenty more trees, but nothing is blooming yet, so it looks like it'll be a while before we get a new crop of 'nanas.




 

In other news today:

1. This blog just received its first-ever contribution to the Tip Jar — thank you very much for your support! 

2. Both on and off the blog, I've been getting some wonderful and unexpected responses  to Friday's impromptu post regarding the Forever Family website and Johnny P. Flashback's Friday-evening oldies show. See the new Google calendar in my sidebar (scroll down on the left) for details. 

3. I'm getting more clicks now for older material (which in my case means anything older than last week, since LitBoy is still a wee puppy of a blog). Today it's all about the drugs, and it's all because of my post from the middle of January:  

- a. one hit from a Dogpile.com search for "Easi3st Recip3 for Crank M3th" (Don't bother looking cuz it ain't here, and right here I just changed the wording from e's to Leet-style 3's to avoid confusion and dashed hopes, LOL — though now I'm curious to see if this eccentric Leet-code phrasing generates its own Leet-spelled hits.)

- b. one hit from a Blogger.com search for "Anti Narcotics Anonymous"
(Here's the top hit, just in case you're curious:) 

John Travolta: Scientology Could Have Saved Anna Nicole!

… so right now, I'm the third hit for that phrase, right under Scientology and something at alt.recovery.na .

4. I am working on lots of new material for this blog. Thanks for tuning in, and please visit again soon!




Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent

March 05, 2007

2007.03.05, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

Here are several more shots from my Feb. 15 trip to Hilo's Rainbow Falls — the waterfall-free version, anyhow: ABOVE is my shot of one of the many lovely banyan trees at the Falls. According to Wikipedia, there is a Banyan Drive elsewhere in Hilo, and I think I know where this is. (Their page could use a bit more information since, according to Wikipedia, "The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter." And they need some pictures of Banyan Drive, too. Hmm, I wonder who could take those?)

BELOW are two enlargeable pictures of a beautiful berry-filled bush I found at the Falls. I have no idea what kind of berries these are, but I hope some lucky birds are enjoying them — they remind a bit of the orange pyracantha berries I grew up with in California — the birds used to get drunk on the pyracantha berries, if I remember correctly.

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Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent

March 03, 2007

2007.03.03, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

ABOVE: Ocean crashes the lava party! Late afternoon, looking out from the Ahalanui Hot Pond, Puna District, Hawaii Island, February 20, 2007.

BELOW: Tree's a Model, and It's Looking Good. (Apologies to Kraftwerk.) Graceful tree at Ahalanui Hot Pond near the picnic areas. I think this would be a lovely choice on which to base a logo or some kind of Hawaii-related graphic. If you know which tree species this is, please let me know!



Okay, enough with the clever captions for now. We'll visit another Big Island hot spot tomorrow. Please bookmark my blog and check back often!



Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent

February 28, 2007

2007.03.01, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

Here is a picture from the Ahalanui Hot Pond, just off the Kapoho-Kalapana road (Hawaii State Highway 137) and a few miles from my front door. There are two ponds, really. The soaking pond is protected from the ocean surf by a man-made wall, and changes temperature according to the tide. The picture you see is of the pond adjacent to the soaking pond. The ponds are fed by the ocean and change temperature according to the tide. This is part of a public-access park with a parking lot, shower, and picnic facilities available.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent

February 27, 2007

2007.02.27, Picture of the Day, Big Island of Hawaii

VISUAL POETRY

I have been taking hundreds of digital pictures from various parts of the Big Island of Hawaii all month long. These are too good to keep all to myself, so for the entire month of March, this blog features a different scenic image each day. To kick things off, here is a preview of coming attractions. Please bookmark and enjoy!


Welcome to Hawaii Island, where the ground really can open up and swallow you. I took this shot at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, near the active volcano Kilauea. Heads up for those orange cones!


...and I didn't have to drive very far to find this one. It's from my backyard, and yes, I am very lucky to live here.

In other news ... I spent an hour or two today brainstorming promotional strategies, after an email exchange in which a writer colleague and I were scratching our heads as to how we might better leverage this blog phenomenon for mutual fun and profit. I like her blog -- it is both heartfelt and thought-provoking -- and so, since actions speak louder than, you know, go check it out!

Dirty Laundry

...or, if you just want to sink your teeth into something especially chewy, try this:

Erma Bombeck in the Blogosphere

As always, if you find something here that you especially like, please leave a tip in the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Minimum donation, just two dollars!




Wishing you a beautiful day,

—Bill Brent