Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Hawaiian Wedding and The Big Island

September 28th, 2016 (Savannah to Oahu)

First view of Oahu - the Windward Shore and Kailua Bay
First view of Oahu, our former home,  and the remotest spec of land on this planet.  It's the 28th of September, and Andrea, me and our good friend Beth Gasiorowski have been sky- hopping our way to Hawaii starting at 4:30AM in Savannah, Georgia, with a short layover in Chicago before the 10 hour flight to Honolulu. As flying cattle class goes these days, the flights went well, albeit their was no food service nor entertainment options on our flight from Chicago to Honolulu.  Really United, you can do better by your passengers.   I had previously paid extra for sufficient leg room to allow my knees to fit between my seat and the seat in front of me.  Odd how you except paying extra for this the privilege of not eating your knees, when just ten years ago, it would have been ridiculous to even think an airline wouldn't be able to accommodate someone 6'1" in their normal seating arrangements.

Getting into Honolulu is always a thrill as evidenced by our first view above, the curve of the windward shore of Oahu with the two Mokes (islands off Lanikai) clearly visible, the 2 mile crescent sand beach that fronts Kailua and the Kaneohe Marine Corp Air Station just beyond on the peninsula.  The ocean scented air was a pleasant reprieve from the stale air aboard our  old Boeing 777.  This coupled with the sight of palm trees and the pink colored Tripler Medical Center on the horizon was an encouraging sign that not all had changed in the ensuing 10 years since we called Oahu home.

After all of our group of family and friends (including sister Susan Brant, husband John, niece Ellie Heath, Andrea's two children Cassie and Ryan, Beth (our good friend from Hilton Head ) who flew with us and Barbara and Bob Pawlishyn (more old time Hilton Head head friends who were crazy enough to join our expedition to Hawaii) were on the ground and had gotten their respective bags, we finally left the baggage area some three hours after landing.  We secured our mid-size car that I swear was in a compact car in it's prior life, and threaded our way to the Likiliki Highway, which tunnels it's way to the windward side through the Koolau Mountains and drops one into Kaneohe town on the Windward side of the island.  Sister Susan, John and I were on this path north, while Andrea, Cassie, Ellie and Ryan stopped off at the Costco to stock up on food and drink, before arriving at our 4-bedroom, Hawaiian style home in Pupukea, near Sharks Cove on the North Shore.

The next day, with weather a bit iffy from rain, we took the group to the Puu o Mahuka Heiau, which sits above Waimea Bay and Valley, a favorite spot of mine from days past.  This revered Hawaiian religious site gives provides for a sense of Hawaiian history, while also presenting the sheer beauty of the island to the traveler.  Puu o Mahuka means " Hill of Escape" and was the largest Heiau for ceremonies on Oahu.  Our group gathered for the only complete group picture below with Waimea Bay as the backdrop.

In order left to right - John, Boyd, Ellie, Andrea, Cassie, Beth, Bob, Barbara and Ryan

Our intrepid hikers posing in Waimea Gardens
Andrea and Boyd in Waimea Gardens
 Next on our brief tour was Waimea Gardens, a touristy yet beautiful botanical garden that graces Waimea Valley and Falls.  Are eclectic group of intrepid hikers are pictured above.  Most of the comments from gardeners in the group typically revolved around some sort of statement like, "OMG look at the size of that plant.  Mine at home is nothing like this."  The plants do grow to prodigious sizes in this particularly lush, warm, relatively humid and stable tropical environment.  This is especially  true of the vines which seem to reach for the sky as they climb up the giant Acacias and other tropical trees gracing the landscape.
Barbara and Bob on the footbridge at Waimea Gardens
On the Friday the 30th we hosted an afternoon get-together for our family and close friends of the bride and groom at our rental home.   The infinity pool was a hit with all.  This affair was purposefully casual and different folks broke off to swim, skin dive and just plain ole party down throughout the afternoon.

Kikila from the front lawn
On Saturday, October 1st,  I headed to Kikila, the north shore plantation where the wedding was to be held the next day, to go through rehearsal and help with last minute preparations (like picking up three, thirty cases of beer). The actual rehearsal was brief, with the wedding planner walking those involved through their paces. For the most part it was a chance for the brideal party to play most every conceivable game from Mahjong to frisbee golf and paddle tennis. Some reading this blog might be thinking Kikila looks familiar.   This is because the family gathering for the movie, the Descendants, was filmed here over the last 10-15 minutes of the movie.  It is a unique setting not to be duplicated anywhere on Oahu, and is choke full of games and activities for all ages.  Throughout the morning and afternoon,  Granddaughter Sloane would make an appearance with the nanny and consistently steal the show for whatever else was going on.

Dane & Boyd Center with Bridegrooms
Table Setting

Andrea and Boyd walking down aisle to seats at wedding


Dane & Anna celebrating immediately post ceremony
My return to Kikila flooded me with memories, having spent overnights in the original home with the matriarch of the family Betsy Chapman, and former wife Kate.  Kikila has expanded with an entire newly built home patterned after the original cottage, multiple separate mini-cottages and pool since I was there in the 90's.  Kikila was also the location for where my daughter Jessica's celebrated her 5th birthday with her Tutu Betsy Chapman.  This occasion was made extra special, when Magnum PI's helicopter landed on the front lawn to take Jess on her first helicopter ride with open doors around Oahu.
Stunning Anna in her wedding gown
One of the bridesmaids with my granddaughter Sloane
Andrea, Dane, Anna and Boyd at the Wedding Oct. 2nd. 2016

Now Anna & Dane McCleary
The wedding itself was a story of beauty and Aloha, complemented by a grand wedding party of 26. Dane and Anna, looking like cake-top models,  presented a radiant picture of happiness.  This happiness pervaded the affair; a reminder of the quality relationship they have fostered together, couple with an obvious pleasure in sharing daughter Sloane with family and friends.  There was a short, heartfelt ceremony led by Dane's best friend, a buffet dinner of special Hawaiian foods, and a rousing party under a large white tent for 140, which had been set up in the courtyard between the cottages and pool/tennis area.  I need to give a shout out to my former wife, Kate Saavedra, who did an outstanding job organizing this complex affair in coordination with the wedding planner.
Dane removing the garter from Anna
  
Ryan Ley, Dane, Anna and Andrea post wedding
The champagne and Mai Tais stoked those assembled into a festive mood, two local Hawaiians sang during the dinner and then it was over to the DJ for a mix of millennial and old rock and roll music. Somewhere into the evening I was pulled into a small mob of young bridesmaids, for some frenetic dancing.  Endurance not being what it used to be, the dancing was measured out over the evening.   The best part of the evening was taking my beautiful bride Andrea onto the dance floor and "cutting the rug" as my parents were oft to say.   Apparently we made quite a hit with our old-school fast dancing, as Dane stated "you two are on fire and rocked the night".  We too sensed a certain electricity from the crowd that had circled around us on the dance floor.  My friend Bob summed up the wedding and setting by saying " I felt like I was on a movie set".  Beyond the stunning setting, food, and entertainment, the wedding was reflective of the love and Aloha Dane and Anna bring to their relationship and to those fortunate enough to have attended. 
Andrea, Boyd, Bob & Barbara Pawlishyn and Beth Gasiorowski on front lawn of Kikila

Dane, Sloane & Anna McCleary  - the reason for our trip to HI
The Monday after the wedding was given over to yet another afternoon party with food, beer, wine and swimming at our home away from home, with some of Andrea's closest friends, Beth, Jill and their families.  Dane and Anna stopped by with granddaughter Sloane,  and Dane and I got a chance to skin dive Shark's Cove and recover the sense of awe and splendor we had originally experienced together, when as a ten year old, he would hang off my scuba tank's Octopus or secondary as we explored the undersea coastline. 

Ryan Ley, Beth Gasiorowski, Andrea McCleary, Ellie Heath and Cassie Ley by Sharks Cove
The next day we headed south along the coast back to Kailua town, where Ryan, John and I parked our butts on a small patch of the  two and a quarter mile crescent beach.  Andrea, Susan, Ellie, Cassie and Andrea's friend walked around Lanikai,  our old running route, then joined us for some sun time. After having our fill of lying on the beach and soaking up the tropical rays, Ryan and I put on our swim googles and swam the 1/4 mile out to Flat Island. It was an invigorating swim, made a little more challenging with the currents sweeping in around the island, which were prone to moving you  off coarse.  Not hitting the small twenty foot sand beach would have been problematic as the balance of this small island is a rocky shore.  We returned to the shore with the wave's behind us this time, catching sight of some Puffer fish along the way, who were busy finding morsels to pick at amongst the coral heads.

I would be remiss in my storytelling if I did not reflect on the fact that there was an undercurrent of stress during this period of time, as Hurricane Mathews was meandering it's way north towards along the Florida coast towards South Carolina.  Our friend Beth, was particularly distracted, she being Hilton Head Hospital's designated lead for Emergency Management.  Hilton Head Hospital had to eventually evacuate and close down temporarily,  following the evacuation orders from the Governor.  Our friends Barbara and Bob, decided to leave paradise a day early to try and fly into Savannah figure:)  They made it as far as Dallas before being rerouted to their secondary choice for evacuation, Philadelphia.   Barbara's brother looked after them at his home until they could rent a car and return to Hilton Head after the evacuation order was lifted on Sunday Oct. 9th.  The same day they left, Andrea, Ryan and Beth went skin diving down at Sharks Cove with her Go-Pro.  Unfortunately they left their three small backpacks on the beach, which promptly got stolen with everyones I.D.s and credit cards.  The balance of that day was spent on police reports, cancelling credit cards, ordering new cards to be delivered to the Big Island and getting new cell phones.  

After tying up as many loose ends from the thefts as we could, we had drinks and a light meal that evening on the lanai overlooking the infinity pool with Susan, John and Ellie and Ryan.  With the question of how Beth and Andrea were going to get through security with no/limited I.D. (Beth had her Hilton Head Plantation I.D.),  we got up extra early and were on the road by 3:30AM to catch our flight to Hilo.  After getting Ryan checked in at the airport and giving him some cash, he took off for Honolulu, as his flight didn't take off for the mainland till four that afternoon.  Beth and Andrea had some extra quality time with PSA,  as they had to prove who they were, but it turned out to be relatively painless, though a bit longer due to questioning, plus body and bag searches.  They noted however that the PSA did their job with Aloha which ameliorated the otherwise stressful process.  

For future reference, the flight to Hilo is one of the best scenic passenger airline flights I know of, provided you sit on the left hand side of the plane.  You cross over both Molokai,  then the uninhabited side of Maui with it's imposing seaside cliffs, before passing right over Haleakala Crater and onto the Big Island.  Hilo met us with occasional wet mini sprinkles (nothing new there), and we found our quaint B&B  (Hilo Bay Hale) just a short walk from the old downtown area.  This old Hilo home had been saved from the wrecking ball by two gentleman who restored the home while adding more bathrooms and individual lanais for each room with varied overlooks of koi ponds, a palm treed back yard with Chinese Cemetery in the background, or Japanese gardens.  We had dinner downtown at the Pineapple Restaurant, which is nestled amongst the often forlorn, somewhat derelict looking wooden frame buildings whose storefronts often proclaimed some Chinese or Korean name.  The Pineapple Restaurant, sits at a key intersection of two streets, has open air seating and served plenty of tasty local grinds as they say in the Hawaiian vernacular.

Andrea and John Brant by the Hale Mau Mau Crater
The 7th of Oct found us driving up to Volcano with a short stop at the municipal zoo where there were some tiger cubs, now maturing, along with various parrots and assorted tropical animals from around the globe.  A short thirty minute drive later, we found the Volcano Forrest Inn where we had all four rooms for our entourage.  While near Volcano town, the long driveway in provided complete privacy.  This was our base of operations to tour Kilauea Volcano, which started that evening with a view of the bubbling lava in the Hale Mau Mau Crater.  Old Dante would have been proud of Pele, as it looked for all the world like the fires of Hell, which danced in the shimmering waves of heat, their orange/red glow piercing the steamy cauldron that is the active crater.   

Beth AKA the Mountain Goat after her climb out of Kilauea Iki
Ellie, Andrea, Boyd, Susan and John on the rim of Kilauea Iki


Andrea with shrimp on a skewer cooking our lunch in the fumarole


Andrea and Boyd along Kilauea Iki Rim Trail
One of the highlights of this segment of the trip was walking across Kilauea Iki (meaning small) Crater.  Having done this before we were well prepared with fresh shrimp from Hilo which we carried out on to the crater and steamed inside one of the fumaroles (a steam vent coming up below with what is usually superheated steam).  The interesting twist to this story, is the there were very few active fumaroles unlike our crossing of the crater some 12 years earlier.  It soon dawned on us that the lava beneath us had been cooling all these years, and what was left of the molten lava was likely hundreds of feet below us.  My travel mates had been informed that the surface temperatures would be hot and bring suitable hiking shoes.  They thought this advice a bit strange since the surface was no more hot than any of the surrounding dark lava rock in the area.  Time = change particularly in the land of volcanoes.  
My cute sister Susan on Chain of Craters Rd. by Pacific Ocean Overlook

That same evening, Ellie, Andrea, Beth and I drove down to the eastern rift zone of Kilauea near where lava was flowing into the ocean.  We wanted to see the spectacle at night and did we ever.  After renting bikes and riding some 4.5 miles down a gravel roadway we came to the road's closure where off toward the coastline you could clearly see the wall of steam/smoke arising perhaps a 1/4 mile distant.  Walking on the ropey black lava, we made our way to the precipitous coast and as the sun set,  Pele revealed herself with rivulets of lava often cascading and frequently exploding into the sea.  A tour boat ($200 a head) was making circles in towards the lava flows, but generally staying a 100 feet or so from the boiling cauldron.  Within recent weeks, one person had died as part of the cliff he was standing on fell away into the boiling cauldron, and then one of the boats sustained significant damage, as an exploding rock turned into a projectile that went right through it's aluminum hull.  We were tired puppies upon our return to the Volcano Forrest Inn having hiked Kilauea Iki in the AM then biking to the lava flows that evening.  


Hot lava flowing into the ocean from Pu'u O'o on the eastern rift zone of Kilauea Volcano
Ellie Heath in backyard of Waimea Gardens B&B with Rainbow





For our last three days, we chose the town of Waimea in the north of the Big Island.   En route, Boyd, Beth and Andrea stopped at Laupahoehoe,  a relatively small cluster of homes with an ocean front park, that is down a winding road from the highway.  As we got out of the car, I could hear music coming from the open air pavilion.   Upon investigation it turned out to be a religious celebration of harvest by the Russian community on the Big Island.  This religious service with children singing in Russian and babushka wearing woman in the audience, put me in mind of the theater of the absurd.  Just how did this group of Russians come to be celebrating on a beach in Hawaii.  I didn't find the answer to that puzzling question in the short time I  observed the service. Those in attendance were most friendly and welcoming, while all the while offering to translate the Russian songs for me.  That being said, the prospect of a cold beer by the ocean with Andrea and Beth tipped the scales away from my curiosity, to a more traditional way of enjoying a tropical interlude on dramatic Pacific beach. 
Boyd selfie overlooking Waipio Valley & Black Sand Beach

Visiting horse on Waipio Valley Black Sand Beach
Further north beyond Honokaa, we parked our car, and the three of us walked down the four-wheel drive only road to Waipio Valley, with  perhaps the most picturesque black sand beach in Hawaii.  The grade of the road was 25% making it a challenge to get down to sea level some 1000 feet below.  As tiresome as the hike down and back up is,  it is always worth the effort.  There are few more picturesque landscapes than this narrow ultra green valley with falls in the background and the black sand beach with it's transecting river running through it to the ocean.  Like many valley communities, this one had been completely wiped out by a tsunami in years past, as is only marginally resettle by a combination of Hawaiians and others who seek a lifestyle removed from the everyday.  Many couples and families who were fortunate to have a four-wheel drive vehicle were enjoying a day on the beach and in the surf.  While we walked the beach, a lone horse came down to visit, and we found a nest of sea turtle eggs in the sand embankment.  After a 45 minute hike back up the steep incline, we found our car and cache of cold beers, downed them, and made our way to Waimea some thirty inland.  

John on his 75th Birthday with Susan and Andrea
Waimea was originally a Paniolo (Hawaiian cowboy) town made famous by the Parker Ranch which owns most of this part of the island, and is know for it's succulent grass fed beef.  We took over three cottages at Waimea Gardens B&B.  All agreed this was the highlight of our Hawaiian accommodations.  Separate cottages tastefully decorated in old style Hawaiian decor, nestled at the base of the foothills with a stream running through the ever green lawns transposed this into a quiet retreat.  Rainbows behind the cottages were bestowed upon us daily, and we celebrated John Brant's 75th birthday at Merriman's, a noted local restaurant in Waimea. 
Ellie at the Haawi Black Sand Beach

Just Chilling on the beach at Kiholo Bay
Black Sand Beach near Haawi
In the morning, the black sand beach near Haawi on the northern most shore of the Big Island beckoned.  Driving some 45 minutes on this pastoral road brought us into Haawi, a laid back, some would say Hippie town.  We scored some sandwiches, then headed east to the end of the road where we parked before hoofing it down a fairly steep descent to the black sand beach below. 

Andrea and Beth at Kiholo Bay, a sea turtle sanctuary
The sea turtle sanctuary was on the next day's agenda.   This brought back memories for Andrea and I of an idyllic interlude before marriage of bathing au naturelle  in the tranquil, lite-green, translucent sea water.  We parked near mile marker 83 on the Kona Rd. and had about a thirty minute walk to the beach before then proceeding right to Kiholo Bay.  The walk was longer than in prior years, as the path used to transect the remains of an old mansion with saltwater streams running through it.  This was now closed off with a big "KAPU" (forbidden) sign and evidence of recent construction activity.  The lite-green, translucent water arises from the fact that there are fresh water springs feeding the bay.  This bay was of vital importance historically to the Hawaiians.  The area in the surrounding countryside is relatively inhospitable due to the long expanses of lava and lack of freshwater resources. When the Hawaiians of old had to make the trek from Waimea to Kona, they would stop at Kiholo bay with specialized gourds that could be easily open and resealed.  They would dive beneath the water, locate a fresh water spring and fill their gourds underwater.  In this way, they could assure enough water to finish the walk to Kona, then a thriving fishing village.  Even though this sanctuary has made it into the tourist books, it remains relatively undisturbed and infrequently visited, likely due to the lack of amenities, limited parking on the road and a vigorous walk to the bay.  The turtles really don't care about any of that of coarse, and I surmise come to the area to rid themselves of parasites that can't survive the brackish water, and for the easy sloping black sand/ pebble beaches they can sun themselves on.  

Beth, our beer connoisseur,  had previously scoped out a micro brewery she wanted to visit in Waimea, so that became our go-to dinner place in the evening.  A lively place with outdoor seating and a relatively wide selection of brews was found  to be pleasurable on all out palates.  
Andrea, Boyd and Beth enjoying the Waimea Micro Brewery
All good things come to an end as my mother was prone to tell me in my impetuous youth, and we needed to make the long trek back to Savannah.  It ended up being some 23 hours long from start to finish, with the United Lounge in Newark providing a needed respite during the almost four hour layover to Savannah.  Arriving in Savannah, there was one more hurdle.  I had to get into my SUV without keys (they were Andrea's backpack that was stolen).  Prior to my round the U.S. trip in 2015 I had stowed a hide a key on the vehicle and luckily it was still there, and allowed me egress, but wouldn't start the car.  Andrea searched in the glovebox and brought out the spare ignition key and after a few turns of the motor, the Toyota that had weathered Hurricane Mathew kicked to life.  We returned home to Sun City, which had few visible clues that a hurricane had passed through.  

This concludes the latest chapter in Travels Now and Then.  Wishing you all Aloha, Boyd





Monday, March 14, 2016

Sanibel Kicks Off the Blog for 2016

Well, not exactly timely, since I haven't posted on this blog since July of 2015 and here it is the 14th of March, 2016.  I will not rewind through all the travels that have elapsed since then, but suffice it to say, am on the road again.  It' been the island of Sanibel, on the Gulf Coast of Florida that has been graced by not so august presence.

Sanibel, is particularly well know as having great shelling beaches, and my sister Susan has been doing her best to deplete the beaches early morning for sunrise and again getting in her Fitbit walking in the afternoons.  Me, well, not quite such a draw, though I have been known to do the Sanibel stoop and pick up a couple of nice Coquina shells (those fingernail size shells of multi-hues), or a Lightning Welk.

Reddish Egret in the Ding Darling Preserve
Sanibel is also known for the Ding Darling reserve, a national wildlife reserve amongst many on Sanibel set aside for wildlife as opposed to condominiums and private homes, which still abound on this sunny, sandy isle.  The reserves are most often populated by mangroves and have a water source from Tarpon Bay.  The Ding, abuts  Tarpon Bay, and the ebb and flow of the waters feed inland lakes which are in turn populated by stay- around and also migrating water fowl, including most all the egrets, roseate spoonbills, night herons etc.  We have taken numerous walks and drives through these reserves, with the family all birdwatchers by nature.  The water has been high in some of the reserves this year due to heavy rains in January, so wading birds like the egrets are not as frequently seen in these areas as on previous trips.

A Pan Handling Great White Egret on the Fishing Pier





















I first visited Sanibel in 1961, when it was sparsely populated and had no causeway.  Transportation to the island was via Bailey's car ferry, and most of the roads were still sandy stretches between mangroves.  We were fortunate to have experienced the old Bailey Store and meet old an Bailey at that time.  Here is a pic of the old Bailey Homestead.
Old Bailey Homestead
Family at sunrise near Sanibel Lighthouse

Swamp Potato plant in Bailey Homestead Preserve

While Cassie and Andrea with with us we took a boat tour out of the South Seas Plantation Marina to Cabbage Key, where Mary Roberts Rheinhart, the author from the 1930s and later owner of Rheinhart Publishing had a home in the late 1930s early 1940s.  Here is one of the denizens of Cabbage Key, a Gopher Tortoise, found strolling the grounds of the home cum restaurant.

Gopher Tortoise

Joining me on my Sanibel trip is the ever effervescent, Bettina McCleary, my mother, who at a spry 96 is enjoying all Sanibel has to offer, while providing historical perspectives along the way.

Bettina enjoying Sanibel
Enough said for now.  Am told these blogs of mine are too long winded, and there is probably truth in that statement.  Aloha, Boyd