Hawaii - Obama's backyard (Part 1)
ALOHA FROM THE BIG ISLAND
Hawaii ā what a kip! No, no, of course it isnāt, legions of
honeymooners canāt all be wrong, it is indeed Para-para-paradise .
With the fumes of London still fresh in my hair I landed in
Kona International Airport (it makes Shannon airport look like JFK). Having
been apart from Dom for two months I thought Iāll have plenty of time to nip
into a ārestroomā and eradicate said hair fumes, etc, before our epic romantic
movie reunion in the arrivals hall...
I should mention at this point that we decided not to hire
movers for our translocation (is that a word, sounds painful) to the States.
We decided to move ourselves, easy when youāre a bloke who doesnāt really care
if half his cr@p ever arrives or not, different when youāre a girl with a shoe
collection that you are emotionally attached to (hey, even on a fat day shoes
still hug you back).
So there I was, in Hawaii, part of the way to our new home
in San Francisco, I had suitcases snapping at my heels, bags slung over each
shoulder like a deranged postman, a rucksack on my back counterbalanced by its
twin on my front. I was wobbling around in the Hawaii heat, giving evil glares
to this tanned skinny dude who was grinning at me from the barrier. Hang on, I
know that grin...wobble-wobble-wobble-crash-
wobble-drag-curse-wobble-wave-wobble-grin-wobble-run-wobble-crash-bang- BOOM! Cue
epic romantic movie embrace.
Hawaiiās Big Island is like landing on the moon, I know this,
not because I am involved in Irelandās top secret space program āSpace ā the
final hurdle, my moneyās on Shergarā, but because I have watched many Hollywood
movies about it. The āmoonā feeling is due to the lava fields, flows of lava
from eruptions that have dried over time into black crust littering the
landscape. Among the black rock tourists and locals use white coral to
spell out messages, e.g. āJoanie loves Chachiā, āJoanie married Chachiā,
āChachi is a loserā, āJoanie hates Chachiā, āChachi R.I.Pā. Itās actually very
cool to spy on all the commemorations and dedications and you do have to resist
pulling the car over on the highway and adding your own two cents.
Oh, speaking of the car, in true āwhen in Hawaiiā fashion,
Dom had procured a red mustang convertible, Magnum PI eat your heart out. I
should point out the reason for Domās enviable tan and recent skinniness was
due to his training and completion of the Hawaii Half Ironman compeition. Apparently
the cool kids call them 70.3ās which reflects the distance they cover ā 1.2
mile swim, 56 mile bike ride, and 13.1 mile run. Incredibly impressive and Iām
very proud of him for doing it. I will never do one myself, because I am not
certifiably insane. Incidentally Lance Armstrong took part and won!
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Fairmont Hawaii |
One interesting excursion was to a Kona coffee plantation (Greenwell Farms, the tour is free- donāt
see free stuff that often in the States). I am definitely not a coffee aficionado, at a push Iāll drink a latte
which I think might be to the coffee snobs what Blue Nun is to the wine snobs.
The whole experience was a revelation to me, coffee and its addicted followers
have filtered their way to the top of my frappacino :o)
I didnāt realise that coffee grows on trees and comes from a
berry (a berry!! Who knew). Hawaii makes for good coffee growing conditions
because of its rich volcanic soil, plus in parts of Kona the clouds roll in
everyday, hit the slopes and dump a bucket of rain on the berrys. When the
coffee orchid is in full bloom in the springtime the trees produce a white
flower which the locals nickname āKona snowā, awww, how cute is that. Then
something happens between the berry tree and the cup of coffee in your hand, I
canāt remember, harvesting, pulping, rolling, drying, probably not in that
order. I do remember that Kona coffee supplies its beans to Starbucks, so in
theory you may have drank a coffee that came from a tree that I saw with my own
eyes (as opposed to seeing it with
someone elses eyes?!)...Oh man, we dream the same dream.
Lava tubes ā have to be seen to be believed. They are
essentially caves, lava caves. Iām not a geologist (shocker) but I imagine itās
something like this...volcano erupts, lava flows creating a channel through
rock, the outer lava cools and hardens, the inner lava is belched out of the
channel into a neighbours garden. Job done. (I am available for any National Geographic
gigs, speak to my agent). In all honesty though, nature always provides the
most spectacular sights and a lava tube wonāt fail to impress. Put it this way,
Bruce Waynes Bat Cave has nothing on a āLā tube.
Alas Dom had to return to work (whatās that again :op) but
Stacey had landed in from LA so off to Oahu we went. Would I finally get to surf? Would I meet Obama?...Read on to find out
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wow I didn't recognize that skinny tan guy either! :)
ReplyDeleteSo excited to read my first post! Love love love!
Makes me excited for our trip to Kauai in December!
That song makes me well up every time I hear it! Really want to go to Hawaii now.
ReplyDeleteYou've captured the magic of Hawaii... Love the Magnum PI reference. Sensational stuff...
ReplyDeleteAdore that song and this post is bringing back some great memories, sure 23 hours isn't that long a journey, right?!!
ReplyDelete