We are focusing this blog on our travels. We have the opportunity to take long road trips and will chronicle these trips and offer educational content when feasible. Additional content created by Mark Grabe can be found at http://learningaloud.com
Saturday, February 29, 2020
Allerton Gardens
The Allertons had immense wealth with one being the son of a Chicago stockyards baron. The son never worked and spent a great deal of time traveling and in Hawaii. The son was gay and had as his partner a younger man that he adopted to allow for the passing on of his estate. The garden was created as an outdoor living space (their traditional home was far more modest) consisting of "rooms" the couple would use for entertaining and living their lives. Meals were enjoyed outdoors. You have to imagine the rooms shown in the following photos containing furniture and used for banquets, dancing, etc.
The rooms were planned very carefully and the trust that sustains the gardens is based on precise instructions for what is to be grown where. Hurricanes have done severe damage to the rooms and these instructions were followed carefully in the regeneration of the desired plantings.
Thursday, February 27, 2020
Cone guys
I think I mentioned in a previous post that they use an unusual approach to adjust what can be a heavy flow of traffic to and from Lihue (home of Costco). I finally was in the right place at the right time yesterday to get a photo. The road is three lanes moving towards Lihue. I mean a total of three lanes and not three lanes in one direction. After the morning rush and by rush I mean the number of vehicles and not the speed at which this traffic flows (max 40 for much of the trip), these cone guys go out an pick up these cones that signal they side of the road marked for two-lane traffic is now one lane and the second lane has been assigned to the other direction. There are multiple trucks in this convoy. The trucks in the back signal to traffic to be cautious and then move up when the truck in the front is loaded. Evidently some time in the early morning, this cones must be put down again. Five days a week. Steady work and I guess a cost effective solution.
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Hibiscus
I frequently walk to or from a coffee shop I like to inhabit to read and write. It is a little over two miles away from the condo we stay in. With the exception of the golf courses that line part of this road, much of the rest of the hike is through areas lined with hedges of hibiscus. I don't know where the hibiscus can be grown and I understand these lengths of hibiscus plants were planted and are carefully maintained. The percentage of plant covered with flowers has been increasing in the last couple of weeks and the variety of the huge blooms has to attract your attention.
Cindy warned me.
Sunday, February 23, 2020
Not all palms bear coconuts
So, we like acai bowls and know that the redish/purpleish slush that is the base of the acai bowl comes from a berry of some sort. The images that follow are acai bowls. You can't see the acai because it is located at the bottom of the bowl. I think you can get an acai bowl at the COSTCO food stand and this would be a way to taste what I describe. You can also purchase the frozen berries there to make your own (acai, granola, bananas, and peanut butter is a great combination).
Saturday, February 22, 2020
Kauai Coffee
To my knowledge, Hawaii is the only state that grows coffee as a farm product. Contrasting coffee as grown on Hawaii (big island) and Kauai is interesting. We have visited multiple coffee "plantations" in the Kona region of the big island and these farms are small. None we visited would be viable unless they had some supporting activities such as tourism or coffee processing. The planation we have now visited multiple times on Kauai is huge - 4 million trees (coffee fact - a coffee tree produces about one pound of coffee). Size matters in some interesting ways. Kona coffee is picked by hand with the pickers taking the cherries from the trees at different times to focus on the ripe berries. Kauai coffee is picked once by special mechanical pickers. The overripe cherries float so immersing the fruit in water allows the fruit that is too ripe to be discarded. However, underripe cherries are processed along with the ripe cherries which could be argued to change the quality of the product. I am guessing few can tell the difference or care.
Friday, February 21, 2020
Loco moco
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Least-Heat Moon
I spend about the same amount of time here reading and writing I would spend at home. The coffee shop changes and the route to walk there is different and warmer, but the core activities are very similar.
I have been listening to Blue Highways a book by William Least-Heat Moon I first read several decades ago. There are so many books I want to read that I have already purchased that rereading a book from "the early years" is very rare. Blue highways refers to secondary roads which at the time the book was written were blue on paper maps. My appreciation of the book is based on the quality of the author's ability to write very interesting prose telling the stories of his adventures linking to my own interest in travel by car for extended trips. Finding the book again as an audiobook available from one of the libraries I frequent was great.
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
Kite boarder
Monday, February 17, 2020
Fine Physique
I thanked her and said not many women tell me that.
Oleg and Natasha
Saturday, February 15, 2020
Bridges of trust
The roads of Kauai are interesting. They are often crowded and have low speed limits. There are many traffic circles and frequent zipper merges. There is one length of road we travel frequently that consists of three lanes. The lanes are divided by cones into a single lane and two lanes and this arranged is switched mid-day so that was the one lane direction in the morning is the two-lane direction in the evening.
The most interesting feature of the road systems to me is the one-lane bridges. It is like one-lane bridges were added at an earlier time when traffic was sparse and now they remain despite the number of vehicles that must use these roads and bridges.
The characteristic of these bridges that fascinates me most is the lack of a formal traffic control system. The approach reminds me of that trust exercise in which you fall backwards and trust others to catch you. I discussed this exercise with Cindy concerning whether it was real or just the basis for jokes. I have never been part of the actual use of the exercise, but Cindy assures me that she has and it is part of team building.
So, the way these bridges work is people take turns crossing the bridge. There is a sign that recommends 5-7 cars at a time. There is no control of any type and it is not clear who is to count and whether it is 5 or 6 or 7 cars that go. The mystical basis for the decision is important because I know of one stretch of road that involves two separate bridges connected by a short stretch of land so a poor decision would result in a lengthy reverse drive by someone. Hawaii drivers are not necessarily any more courteous that drivers in other locations and they frequently cheat when participating in a zipper merge. The bridge thing, however, just seems to work.
One other comment on the road system. The island suffered extensive damage in the floods of a year ago and you can still see recovery efforts going on. Roads were evidently closed by hillsides sliding onto the roads and barriers are now being constructed to limit the damage of future heavy rain events.
Thursday, February 13, 2020
With Kauai you get rainbows
Wednesday, February 12, 2020
Spouting Horn
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Libraries
Monday, February 10, 2020
Fish pond
Time share promoters have a bad name for exploiting old folks (like us). We explained that we had invested enough in real estate and now want to the money we have available in a flexible and spontaneous way. We also said we did not expect to be able to travel like we do now for too many more years so getting ourselves locked in did not make a lot sense. These pitches remind me of buying a car. After the salesperson who is always nice and patient gets to a certain point, the manager comes over and offers some opportunities the sales person may have overlooked (which seems to be the case). Once, you have said no to these folks, you are sent to the final guy who makes one final pitch and may offer a new opportunity. The new opportunity was actually interesting as it involved simply buying points for a couple years rather than signing a long term contract. He suggested this would allow us to evaluate time shares. Two things - I don't trust any pitch I must respond to on the spot. Why is this actually necessary? Secondly, the final proposal was of some interest, but they should have led with this. I might be interested if I had a taste of the time share thing, but when this is their final offer I am skeptical. Anyway - no.
Sunday, February 9, 2020
One fine chicken
One way to spot the tourists on Kauai is to watch to see if they take photos of the chickens. I try to limit my chicken photography to one or two shots per visit so I don't stand out.
There are other birds to photograph here, but these chickens seem special (and they are abundant). These are not your standard white chickens or even Rhode Island Reds. these birds are big and beautiful.
The chickens in Kauai are far more abundant on other islands. I found this resource for those who would like to learn a little more or who are not willing to trust my story telling. These birds were brought in from Polynesians, but like other purposeful or accidental biological transplants, they have few natural predators to keep them in check. I thought last time we were here I saw more cats which would prey on the babies, but I don't see the cats this year. I have been told that the meat does not taste like domestic chickens so there is little interest in killing the for food.
The do crow in the early morning and to a lesser extent throughout the day. Loud.
It could be worse. They seem to leave behind far fewer droppings than the Canadian geese that are the plague of our lake place.
Saturday, February 8, 2020
Port Allen Whales
We were out for two hours and saw both whales and dolphins. I have no spectacular photos, but we did see the whales breach and fluke slap. My photos are mostly of the disappearing tails.
Here are some dolphin photos. They were close to the boat and do swim along we boats for a while.
Cindy and Natasha