Monday, October 31, 2016

Hotel Halloween

31 October 2016
 
Our hotel in Hawaii had a special mid-day Halloween event that probably was geared toward children.  (Don't you love that they do this???)

Richard picked up a Halloween map this morning.  The plan was to have people pick up a special bag at registration, and follow the map.  There were five trick or treating stations around the hotel, all on the map.  Each "station" had a printed picture of a jack-o-lantern on the door, so it was easy to find the places.

We're talking the registration desk, the executive offices, the sales office, the catering office, and the shop where they book excursions.

I'm always up to acting silly.  So I drew a lightning bolt scar on my forehead with eyeliner and a little blush, put on my Harry Potter reading glasses, and wandered around outside to find a twig for my wand.  Wearing a white blouse and black capris.  Because Harry Potter wouldn't wear his blazer or robe in the tropics, right?

I headed down to the registration desk, brandished my wand, and said, "Wingardium leviosa!"  The lady behind the desk was so happy to finally have someone for the trick-or-treating program, and she loved my minimal costume.  She told me I was the first and only person thus far who was doing the trick-or-treat route, which of course we laughed about.  So she gave me the special bag and loaded me up with some candy.  Made sure I knew where to go on the map, and sent me on my way.

It really was funny.  I went to the various offices and everyone was so happy to see someone.  My favorite was the woman who said, "Oh good, we have chocolate, I know adults like chocolate!"  

And everyone recognized I was Harry Potter.

I was chatting with a Hawaiian woman who was selling jewelry, and we saw a little girl with her mom following the candy trail.  Finally, someone else!  Then another little girl came by with her family, but they didn't have the bag or map - so I handed over my map and told them to get the bag in registration, then they could trick-or-treat with their kidlet.  (Little girl then proceeded to jump up and down at the thought of candy.)

So Richard and I shared some candy, and the rest is set aside for the next few days.  Fortunately, everything is the mini size, so three mini Snickers are all of 128 calories.  Decent snack for a day.

Oh, and there was a tiny bag of special mini pretzels - they were in the shapes of bats and jack-o-lanterns!  I've never seen anything like it, that was pretty exciting!

Plus I got in 2.5 miles of walking, LOL!  That's what I call a good trick-or-treating day!

Don't you love retirement???

 

Friday, October 28, 2016

Visiting Pele, Goddess of Volcanoes


27 October 2016

Wow!  This was one of the more incredible experiences of our travelling life.  Richard and I have been up a number of volcanoes:  Turrialba in Costa Rica, with steaming and smoking fumeroles; the slumbering Mount Maunganui in New Zealand, where we nearly fell off the mountain; the huge caldera of Mount Eden, also in New Zealand; as well as numerous huffing and puffing and smoking volcanoes in Central and South America.

But this was our first ever volcano spewing lava!  Live fiery hot burning red-orange-yellow molten rock lava!!!!!  WOW!

Kilauea Volcano (star #5 on the map at the end of the blog) is sort of a baby-sized volcano sitting or leaning on the side of Mauno Loa, the mother-sized volcano that comprising roughly 51% of the big island of Hawaii.  More on Mauno Loa later, though.  (And it’s pronounced kill-ah-WAY-ah.)

Kilauea at this point in time is mostly a huge caldera, or crater, with a smaller lava lake in the middle of it.  Yes, a lake of lava.  Not a lake of water in the crater, a small crater full of molten rock that glows at night.

This lava lake has its own name in Hawaiian:  Halema’uma’u.  And this crater is considered the home of Pele, goddess of fire and volcanoes, because it is the most active volcano in Hawaii. 

We were lucky, because the lava was bubbling up like a fiery fountain, with two or three plumes of lava that are an estimated 20 to 30 feet in height.  (About 7 to 10 meters high.)  The US Geological Society has webcams and scientists monitoring the volcano, and their instruments can measure the side of the lava lake that is visible – right now, it’s about 40 feet (13 m).  The lava plumes are about half or almost three-quarters as high as the side – therefore about 20 to 30 feet tall.  Wow, that’s two or three storeys tall fountains of LAVA!!!!!!

It was as amazing and incredible and truly awe-inspiring as you might imagine.  Especially when we looked through the telescope at the viewpoint, because then we could see all the detail of these bubbling and exploding fountains of molten rock.  My photos barely begin to capture the power and might of this sight.  The viewpoints are roughly a mile away, and there’s a constant stream of steam mixed with sulphur dioxide gas that makes the view a little blurry.

But it was absolutely one of the most wonderful sights ever!  I literally was bouncing up and down and squealing at my first view of the lava.  As was Dad’s hat.  Live lava isn’t an everyday sight, even for a geologist.

Plus there are steam vents not only at one end of the lava lake, but scattered around the larger caldera, as well as along the road as one drives up the Crater Rim Road up to the various lookout points.  (Really, can you imagine having that as your address?  Crater Rim Road???)

So we wandered around for a few hours, at the various lookout points, marveling at this overwhelming sight.  Huge spurts of lava bubbling up into ever-changing sculpture.  We thought about staying until dark, because the entire lava lake glows – there’s only a very thin crust of cooling lava floating on top of the lake, and in the photos you can see that this crust moves with the fluid lava underneath.

But it was getting chilly, and rain was imminent.  So we left.  Turned out it was raining on our way home, so we’re glad we didn’t stay until after sunset.

Okay, some facts and figures to go with my multitude of photos:

Kilauea Crater is in the Hawaiian Volcanoes National Park.  (website:  https://www.nps.gov/havo/index.htm) 

If you have a national park card, bring it with you for the entrance fee.  We now have a senior pass, which is good for a lifetime.  (You can get one at a park, or online.)

The Volcanoes National Park encompasses 250,000 acres of volcanic landscape, including the crater at the top of Mauna Loa, little Kilauea, and a huge forested area that covers much of the lava flows from both volcanoes.

Kilauea itself is now only 4,091 feet high (1,227 m), having erupted and lost its peak.  The peak is now the huge caldera, with the smaller crater filled with lava forming the lake in the center.  Kilauea is considered the youngest but most active of the Hawaiian volcanoes, which is why it was named Kilauea, which means “spewing” or “much spreading.”  Since 1918, the only prolonged period of dormancy was an eighteen-year pause from 1934 to 1952.  Quite an active little volcano!

The summit caldera of Kilauea is shaped more like an oval than a perfect circle, roughly two miles in each direction (but 3.2 by 4 km) with walls up to 400 feet high (120 m).  The Halama’uma’u Crater is about 3000 ft in diameter (920 m), and 280 feet deep (85 m).  But this is constantly changing with the continuing lava flows.


The coastal region of the park was once home to a number of villages, and the ruins of various homes and temples can still be found.  There are also petroglyphs in the rocks.

A vent opened up in 1986, on one of the old lava flows on Kilauea’s south side, called the East Rift Zone, or Pu’u O’o in Hawaiian.  Lava has been flowing over the highway since 1986.  Nearly nine miles of road have been inundated by the lava, as well as various homes, and one of the park’s visitor centers. 

Another lava flow emerged and has been slowly flowing toward the sea.  The lava flow finally reached the coast, and is now dripping into the ocean, solidifying and forming new land!  Of course, there’s a possibility that this new igneous rock will become too heavy and break off, dropping into the ocean and capsizing any boats in the vicinity.  Aerial observation has found prominent cracks on this new point or delta, and there was a small collapse earlier this week.  (So no boat trips to see the dripping lava.)

Now, Kilauea sort of leans on Mauna Loa.  We haven’t seen this volcano, the top is always hidden in clouds, even on the clearest and sunniest days.  The peak seems to have its own micro-environment.

But, Mauna Loa is a really impressive volcano.  She hasn’t been very active recently, though about 30 years ago she and Kilauea were erupting at the same time.  Fortunately, these are shield volcanoes, something about the structure and the way the five volcanoes lean on each other.  It means they don’t erupt explosively anymore, or at least they don’t most of the time.  The lava bubbles out and flows down the sides, but there are rarely the violent eruptions with huge boulders flying miles away.  Although this has happened in the distant past, it hasn’t happened in recent history.

Mauna Loa is the largest of the five major volcanoes on the island of Hawai’I, though most of the volcano lies hidden below the ocean’s surface.  By volume, it is about 100 times larger than Mt. Rainier, an older volcanic peak of about the same elevation in Washington state.

Mauna Loa has an elevation of 13,677 feet above sea level, and more than 31,000 above the ocean floor.  With a volume of 10,000 cubic miles, Mauna Loa is the largest mountain on Earth!  (I know, it’s odd to hear the dimensions of a mountain measured from the ocean floor.  But with Mauna Loa making up 51% of the island of Hawai’i, and the rest of the island comprised of four other volcanoes, the underwater base of Mauna Loa really does factor into her size.)

According to the information at the park, Mauna Loa’s huge mass is being built by successive flows of lava.  The thickness of an individual lava flow averages 12 feet, or about 4 meters.  (Lava is magma that has broken through the earth’s crust.  When it’s still below the crust, the molten rock is referred to as magma.)

Mauna Loa and Kilauea are both shield volcanoes, with gently sloping sides resembling a warrior’s shield lying flat.

It has taken hundreds of centuries and countless eruptions for Mauna Loa to reach its present size.  During the last 100 years, the volcano has erupted more than 18 times.  The next eruption could occur any moment!

To end this blog, I want to quote from a few displays at the Jaggar Museum overlooking the Halama’uma’u Crater.  There were all kinds of scientific displays explaining how volcanoes are formed, different kinds of igneous rock, all the usual scientific stuff.  But I really liked the artwork by Hawaiian artist Herb Kawainui Kane, who included short versions of a few myths about volcano goddess Pele.  I love indigenous myths that explain natural phenomena, especially when such phenomena are anthropomorphized.  I also love the fact that volcanoes are seen as a woman – obviously a strong and powerful woman!

“Pele is short for Pelehonuamea, the goddess of the volcanoes.  Pelehonuamea has many names:  Ka Wahine ‘Ai Honua, the woman who devours the earth.  Kaluahine, the old woman of the pit.  Ka Wahine ‘Ai Lehua, the woman who devours the lehua blossoms.  These names describe the many volcanic forms Pele embodies, for native Hawaiians believe that she is all things volcanic – steam, lava, and volcanic eruptions.

“Her most common chant name is Pelehonuamea (Pele of the sacred earth).  Her home is the active crater Halema’uma’u within the Kilauea volcano on the Island of Hawai’i.  In Hawai’I Pele lives in Hawaiian hearts and minds as the supreme personification of volcanic majesty and power within a cosmos in which all natural forces are regarded as life forces, related by kinship to human life.”

Painting by Herb Kawainui Kane
  “Pele Searches for a Home”

“Pele, goddess of fire, passed southeast from island to island.  On each, she attempted to dig a home in which she could house her family.

“But at each location, as she dug her fire pits, she heard the voice of her sister, Na Maka o Kaha’I, goddess of the sea.

“At last she came to Hawaii, where she could dig deep without hitting water.”

Painting by Herb Kawainui Kane  

“In a dream Pele’s spirit wandered to Kauai, where she fell in love with the chief Lohiau.  She sent her sister Hi’iaka to bring the chief to her.

“Hi’iaka was loyal to Pele, but her sister had a jealous imagination.  Pele believed that she had been betrayed.  She destroyed Hi’iaka’s sacred grove and her friend Hopoe.

“Hi’iaka returned with Lohiau after a dangerous voyage.  She was overcome with grief at Pele’s destruction and embraced Lohiau.  The enraged Pele then consumed Lohiau with flaming lava. 

“Hi’iaka restored Lohiau to life and returned him to his island.”

Aren't they great stories?  

So some more photos of these mesmerizing fountains of lava.  Just because they're so cool.

And the map at the end.


















Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Turtles Sleeping on Black Lava Sand


24 October 2016

Beaches come in a variety of colors.  Sand is basically teeny tiny bits of shell, coral, glass, and various minerals from the soil at higher elevations. 

So on an island that was once a couple of volcanoes and is covered with igneous rock, it makes sense that some of the beaches would be comprised of lava rock.  Teeny tiny fragments of black lava.  Making these black sand beaches.

Black sand retains the heat from the sun, so on a sunny day you can really burn your feet while walking on the dark sand.

But sea turtles like black sand beaches for their nests, to incubate those turtle eggs.  And the same sea turtles like to relax on the black sand and warm up a bit after swimming around in the chilly ocean all day.

 
Punalu’u beach (poo-nah-LOO-oo) is the most famous black sand beach on Hawaii, and is known as Black Sand Beach.  It’s a fairly long beach for this island, though there are the usual headlands of volcanic rock at both ends of the beach, and half-buried boulders littering the shoreline.

And green sea turtles (honu, in Hawaiian) sleeping in the sun, absorbing the warmth of the sand, even when it isn’t turtle nesting season.

There was a high surf advisory today, so the waves were pretty high and rough.  Punalu’u isn’t a great place to swim, having really strong currents since this is just barely on the southeast corner of the island.  But the turtles were out, and it was a wonderful place to visit.  In fact, we spent so much time hanging out with the turtles, we never made it to the Kilauea crater!

One area of was smooth and had a shallow entry to/from the water, and this was where most of the turtles were napping.  There were four, in a little space that was bordered with black rocks.  I’m not sure if the park service people created this space to protect the turtles, so that people didn’t enter the area, or if this was to keep the turtles from climbing higher up on the beach.

But the people all crowded around and marveled at these huge creatures just basking in the weak sunshine.  (It was a fairly grey and overcast kind of day.)

I walked the length of the beach, and there was another turtle hanging out way at the far end, away from the turtles and their human groupies.

I think this was the Greta Garbo of turtles.  “I vant to be alone.”

On my way back, I stopped to look at the gang of turtles hanging out in their magic circle.  The tide was coming in, and one turtle decided it was time to head back out to sea.  It took her (him?) forever to move the eight or ten feet to the water (maybe three meters).  Plus there was another turtle sleeping in the middle of the route the first turtle was taking – Turtle 1 slightly bumped Turtle 2, who stretched out its neck and nipped Turtle 1 on the shell!  Twice!  Big turtle fight!!!

Turtle 1 would haul forward on the front fins while pushing with the back fins.  Two steps, then rest.  Another two steps, then rest.  Over and over again, and maybe ten minutes later the turtle was finally at the water’s edge. 

Then several more steps in the shallow water, with waves rolling in and increasing the water depth.  Some turtle navigation around the rocks and boulders in the shallows, with all of us gathered around cheering on or giving directions.  Finally, FINALLY, the turtle was in enough water to swim – but still needed to push past the huge waves rolling in.  We saw the occasional fin or back sticking up as the turtle was rolled by a wave, and sometimes the head reaching up for a breath of air – but eventually the turtle was headed back out to sea, to do whatever it is that turtles do with the rest of their day.

Lots of turtle photos to share, plus a map.  Our hotel is located at star #1, at Keauhou Bay.  The closest town, where we’ve spent some time, is Kailua-Kona, star #2.  And today, we drove along Highway 11 (the red line), to star #3, Punalu’u Beach.

Tomorrow's plan is to get to Kilauea Crater, so that'll be a separate blog.