Revisited my favorite tiny temple next to Yushima Tenjin.
I was very happy to read that 18 baby turtles were born in late August. They are being kept separate for now, because their shells are still very soft.
Unlike the last time I was here, the turtles were all quite small. So small in fact, I didn't even realize that there was a turtle crossing the bridge when I initially took this photo.
The turtle on the left is not real, the one under the maple leaf on the right is.
This one was unmoving for so long, and his head was submerged in the
water, I flagged down an old man nearby and asked his opinion. His
response? "Turtles don't really move all that much. It's definitely
alive."
November 5, 2014
Rainbow Shower Tree and Other Plants
The rainbow shower tree, my favorite.
The ends look like asparagus.
They look beautiful even when half dead on the ground.
A flower caught in a spider web.
Closeup of a naupaka flower.
Hibiscus flowers that I rescued from an over-zealously trimmed shrub. They do very well in just water!
Closeup of hibiscus with Easy Macro.
The ends look like asparagus.
They look beautiful even when half dead on the ground.
A flower caught in a spider web.
Closeup of a naupaka flower.
Hibiscus flowers that I rescued from an over-zealously trimmed shrub. They do very well in just water!
Closeup of hibiscus with Easy Macro.
Waimea Stop
Waimea, a small town on the north end of Hawaii Island. It's up in the mountains, so the air is always crisper than Waikoloa or Kailua-Kona.
It also rains intermittently throughout the day, making for some of the most beautiful mountains you'll ever see.
The Waimea Homestead Farmers Market, on Saturday mornings.
Coconut carving.
The Parker Ranch, which visitors can enter freely. A huge swath of Waimea is owned by this family, and their family history is fascinating. Unlike the oft-told tales of a (white) newcomer coming to an island and taking its land away from the native dwellers, in the early 1800s John Palmer Parker landed on the Big Island and essentially married into a prominent Waimea family.
Their self-guided tour is worth looking into.
Horses on the ranch.
It also rains intermittently throughout the day, making for some of the most beautiful mountains you'll ever see.
The Waimea Homestead Farmers Market, on Saturday mornings.
Coconut carving.
The Parker Ranch, which visitors can enter freely. A huge swath of Waimea is owned by this family, and their family history is fascinating. Unlike the oft-told tales of a (white) newcomer coming to an island and taking its land away from the native dwellers, in the early 1800s John Palmer Parker landed on the Big Island and essentially married into a prominent Waimea family.
Their self-guided tour is worth looking into.
Horses on the ranch.
Labels and categories:
Animals,
Hawaii,
Shops and markets
Animals Seen on the Big Island
Photos taken in August on the Big Island, Hawaii.
A fish (angler fish?) washed up on the beach after a hurricane.
A family of quails running away in Waimea.
Horses on Parker Ranch in Waimea.
Praying Mantis captured with Easy Macro lens.
A lizard on the beach, captured with Easy Macro.
A huge cluster of these birds were fighting with this mongoose.
Fruit-shopping at Kona Farmer's Market
My annual visit to the farmer's market in Kailua-Kona.
This year, I was much more ambitious about what I purchased.
Salamanders blending in with the fruit.
Papaya, star fruit and chicko. The lady at the fruit stand was spectacularly unhelpful when I asked chicko tasted like: "It tastes like chicko."
It tastes like a cinnamon-laced persimmon.
The rambutans were the easiest to eat, and the most delicious.
Labels and categories:
Food,
Hawaii,
Shops and markets
The Dolphin Tour
A little bit off Kawaihae on the Big Island, Hawaii. The Ocean Sports dolphin tour is always excellent.
Mother and baby.
Labels and categories:
Animals,
Hawaii,
Oceans and beaches
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