CATEGORY: Hawai’i

Speeding Tickets in Paradise

Slept al fresco last night on the lanai and awoke to a still-life version of the sky.

bed on the lanai - puna

bed on the lanai - puna

Deceptive calm

Saddle Road stretches languidly between the two big volcanoes, their stately and ethereal landscapes passing by slowly, even as the car speeds by (18,000 cubic miles of material doesn’t escape the eye very quickly). Still, the wide stretch of road urges you to drive fast, and the last stretch heading down towards Waimea is a miles-long, downhill roller coaster.

Saddle Road above the Kohala Coast

Saddle Road above the Kohala Coast

Pushing the limits

Saddle Road was the site of Arvin’s first speeding infraction. We’d gone to Costco on the other side of the island to pick up a new tent for the tractor. On our way back—it was a compressed 5-hour shopping journey, not a leisure trip—he passed a slow-moving car and got clocked by an oncoming cop going about 20 miles over the speed limit. The fact that he didn’t have his driver’s license was gratefully forgiven, representing a savings of nearly $150.

Ticket #2 occurred a few days ago, on our way back from the beach. Passing through Laupahoehoe, again after passing a slow-moving car, he was going 67 and got officially clocked at 62. This time the good officer knocked the fine down to the cost of a basic over-the-limit ticket. Back in Virginia, 20 miles an hour over the speed limit got you a reckless driving citation.

Happy trails…

Off to Hawi to write in solitude for a couple days. Will drive the limit, I suppose.

Shelter and the Void

Something about travel both fills a void and creates one.

pololū valley overlook, big island of hawai'i

pololū valley overlook, big island of hawai

First, the Void

The void that is filled is the one that yearns for new places…new spaces… unfamiliar experiences. It is a bucket with holes in it, though, and sometimes the holes are small and recent adventures retain and percolate, only slowly seeping away; sometimes though they flow like water through fully opened floodgates and disappear.

lapakahi hut

lapakahi hut

The void that is created is the void of loss: all loss, our losses, all time gone by. Visiting historical sites that were once thriving, if struggling, communities, now earmarks on downturned corners of a tour guide and casual photo opp’s. Their significance is discernible but not entirely tangible. (Who can truly imagine the essence of a place a hundred years after its demise?)

The void is history. The void is that desire to know but to be unable to grasp.

lapakahi - ancient hawaiian fishing village, Big Island of Hawai'i

lapakahi - ancient hawaiian fishing village, Big Island of Hawai

Onward to Shelter

The wind that blows today on the north Kohala Coast of Hawai’i is the same blustery wind that blew on the Hawaiians of the fishing village of Lapakahi centuries ago. These days, folks visiting Lapakahi get back into their climate-controlled cars when the wind gets strong and head back to their hotel, the beach…whatever’s next on the list.

There’s a certain hunger we all have to know what it would be like to not have that option. To only have the hut with pili grass roof to guard against the elements. To have to build and maintain and wonder if our skills are solid enough to keep our walls sturdy enough. We’d like to know if we could do it, but most of us don’t really want to find out if we can.

wind in hala tree, lapakahi, HI

wind in hala tree, lapakahi, HI

Our Shelter

This is where Arvin and I stayed on our overnight visit to Hawi. The Kohala Village Inn is affordable and nice. Classic old Hawaiiana. The real article. It’s a little bit noisy at times, but that’s what you get for staying in a village inn in the middle of an old, once-sugarland-now-artsy village on the green slopes of the Kohala coast. If you stay there, spend a few minutes and talk story with Annie, who’s been working the desk for 7 years. She’s a delight. Genuine. Born and raised.

If you go to Hawi, you must have dinner at Bamboo Restaurant & Gallery. Or lunch. They’re closed Sunday dinner and possibly Monday.

Kohala Village Inn, Hawi, HI

Kohala Village Inn, Hawi, HI

Recollection of Heading (back to the urban) Home

I’m cannibalizing a note to DDS (aka Denise) for this entry…Time / effort / competition don’t allow me to do a proper summary of the Christmas 2008 trip to Hawaii, which was rich and productive and magical and ceaselessly rainy. The urge to recap it in its entirety is strong, but there are only 40 pages to go on the first full draft of the novel; the resume needs updating and a visual refresh in these workless uncertain times; dinner’s cooking; and so on and so on…

From Monday January 11, 2009…

The last few days of our stays in Hawaii are crunch time for us—got to get those last minutes plantings in, distribute the gravel, clean the spider nests from the eaves, top the water off in the solar batteries, cut the last two acres of lawn…Friends fall by the wayside on these final days, unless they come by the house and help us eat up the remnants in the fridge. It’s not how we like it but it’s how it is. (Nicki and Sev were sweet and had us over for a lilikoi martinis as a farewell…)

Thursday morning the boarding passes will be printed. In the afternoon presumably we’ll say goodbye to the hawk. (He came by today for a lengthy and raucous visit but he got no raw chicken from us.). Friday, with a sigh and a bit of a rush, we will load the luggage in the car, put the trash bags in the trunk and drop them at the refuse center on the way to Hilo, where it is likely that rain clouds will be hovering, obscuring the snow-covered summit of Mauna Kea. (It wasn’t. There was a 5-volcano view on the way out.)

And in eight hours after that we’ll be home to a city that seems, with each successive trip back from Hawaii, a little bit less familiar.

Sunrise on the day of departure

Sunrise on the day of departure

Last inspection of the ferns along the lava wall

Last inspection of the ferns along the lava wall

A gecko pays a visit - captured magnificently by Arvin

A gecko pays a visit - captured magnificently by Arvin

Another familiar friend comes calling - from high within the albizia

Another familiar friend comes calling - from high within the albizia

A last squawk from our wild friend, who has been an occasional visitor of late

A last squawk from our wild friend, who has been an occasional visitor of late

Mauna Kea - a beautiful day to fly back to the mainland.

Mauna Kea - a beautiful day to fly back to the mainland. (Click to see the full-size; it was a gorgeous day.)

Pacific

pacifica

A hui hou.