Summer Land

Time for the summer plan update!

Summer, a time that I have for the past few years had off, is busier for me this year because I’ll be going to the lab most days a week to work on my experiment. However, I still have a good deal on my ‘to-do’ list during these next three months.

On the lego front, I’ve made good work of the backlog of kits I picked up over the spring. This past week I finished the Slave 1 kit and this weekend I will work on a kit I truly love, a crane from the Lego City line. Once that is complete work will begin on the mother of all lego kits, the Death Star II. 3449 pieces! Fifty centimeters in diameter! Approximately 15 hours construction time! I plan on taking many photographs to blog the entire process.

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On the game front I made a good few purchases recently. I’m nearing the end of Super Paper Mario for Wii (fantastic) and well into the hardcore postgame of Etrian Odyssey for DS (one of the more difficult, strategic and challenging RPGs I have played in years). Next on the list is Baten Kaitos Origins for Gamecube, followed by Rogue Galaxy and Odin Sphere for PS2. It is always possible I may renew World Of Warcraft as well, just to see how things are going in Azeroth (it’s been four months since I cancelled).

Summer also sees Heroscape dragged out of the storage again. Anti-Yossie measures will have to be implemented. For instance, I won’t be able to build the map and leave the figures out while we are away since she may nibble on them. But I have a plan. Last year I bought the castle expansion for the game and have not even opened it, so I’m looking forward to making a map with a castle on it. Again, this will be blogged.

And also – if I have time – I still have a good few FF gamebooks to delve into. I want to (re)play each of them at least once, and there are nearly two dozen of the higher numbered volumes I haven’t gotten to. I also bought a couple of high-number Lone Wolf books in Hawaii (of all places…) that I wanted to play through at least once.

I’d like to go camping as well. Over to Ohio, somewhere near Cedar Point and Kennywood…


Hawai’i

The next five days of our trip were spent on the largest of the Hawaiian Islands, known as Hawai’i (and often called ‘The Big Island’ to avoid confusion with the state name):

Image4.jpg < Hawai'i Our hotel (located at the yellow star on the above map) was called the Outrigger Keahou Resort, and was the best hotel of our vacation. Not for amenities or the beach, but for the fact it was located on tidal rockpools that contained a wealth of sea life. You can see the extent of the rockpools in the image taken from Google Earth: Dsc08879.jpg Dsc08942.jpg outrigger.jpg

One could look down from the patio into the pools and sea all manner of brightly coloured tropical fish, as well as more exotic creatures such as eels and turtles. Every time we passed through the open air lobby we made it a habit to see what was there (a large puffer fish seemed to resident just south of the patio) and during low tides we’d clamber over the rocks for a closer look.

Hawai’i was the most laid-back part of a trip. If I were to characterize the island in terms of tourism, I’d say it caters to the tourist more interested in getting out-and-about. While the area we stayed in (near Kona) had it’s fair share of tourist oriented attractions (such as snorkel cruises or helicopter rental companies) Hawai’i also has a great deal to offer to those who rent a car and hit the road. As we did.

On our second day we visited Volcanoes National Park (red star on the map). Before you ask – no we saw no actual flowing lava. But the evidence of recent flows (and I mean ‘recent’ in the planetary sense) was impossible to miss. The landscape in the park is alien, with large sections devoid of any vegetation (or apparent life). The scent of sulphur is in the air, and a feeling of imminence – these volcanoes are not extinct, after all – lingers.

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The middle and rightmost images show the crater believed by Hawai’ians to be the home of their fire god Pele. The lei, placed on the edge of the crater is an offering to her. Believers also leave piles of rock around the park in offering. If I recall correctly, Pele’s caldera has not had molten lava in it for about 30 years (which is no time at all in the geological scale).

The volcanoes are still spewing lava, but the current flow is not near the tourist locations. Determined hikers can potentially see lava though, but as you can see one must be very prepared (including for disappointment):

Dsc09022.jpg < How to see lava Also in the volcanoes park we visited an ancient lava tube, which is a tunnel left behind by an underground lava flow. Thursten Lava Tube is located in an area of dense tropical jungle (mostly ferns), heavily populated by various types of birds. It was a strange contrast to the dead lavarock plains of only five minutes away. Dsc09073.jpg Dsc09074.jpg Dsc09079.jpg

A company called Atlantis Submarines offers submarine cruises on each of the three main Hawaiian Islands, and we went on one while on the Big Island:

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We went down to 107 feet during the hour-long cruise, and it was really, really cool. Absolutely one of the highlights of the entire vacation. If you are ever in an opportunity to do this (they run subs at 14 locations worldwide) then I recommend it highly!

We also drove up around the north coast to the town of Hilo. The scenery on the northern side (blue star) of the island reminded me much of the Australian country (such as around Maitland). This is where the Hawaiian cowboys live, and much of the land is taken up with enormous cattle ranches. Furthermore, eucalyptus trees are to be seen in this area, and the warm climate is not as tempered by the sea breezes as closer to the coast.

The main reason we drove over to Hilo was to see some notable waterfalls (green star), and even though the rainfall had been low we weren’t disappointed. The rightmost image shows Akaka Falls, over 400 feet in height, and the leftmost shows Rainbow Falls (considerably shorter):

Dsc09276.jpg Dsc09245.jpg < Falling water Here's some shots for my parents benefit, of a very famous (and very tiny) catholic church just a couple of minutes walk north of our hotel: Dsc07848.jpg Dsc07853.jpg Dsc078541.jpg

The lavarocks next to this church harbored a colony of tiny black mice…

Sometime in the 19th Century, mongooses were introduced to Hawaii in an attempt to curb the rat population (rats themselves being unwanted invaders that originally immigrated to Hawaii via the European ships). However the mongooses are diurnal, and the rats nocturnal, and never the twain have either met. The mongooses apparently took to Hawaii, and they can now be seen in the wild with about the same frequency as we see squirrels here in the northeast. (To put an Australian slant on that, they are about as common as…um….er…..galahs maybe?)

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And last but not least, here’s a shot of a really, really fat dog:

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The Big Island was great. For us, it was the best of the three island, perhaps because it was the most relaxing, perhaps due to the amazing breakfast buffet put on by our restaurant (and for which we received ten free tickets, covering our entire stay). If I was ever going to go to Hawaii for any significant length of time (such as to live), my destination would be The Big Island.

The Incognito Bandito

One of the following four events did not actually occur today. Can you guess which is not true?

  1. In the Price Chopper carpark on the way home today, I was almost * attacked by an EVIL SNAKE!
  2. On the drive home, I had to give right-of-way to a pair of GIANT HORSES!
  3. A friend of mine (good naturedly) rejected a Hawaii souvenir on the basis of it being OFFENSIVE!
  4. When I got home, I knitted a model DALEK!

Here’s a hint for which one is a fabrication (geddit):

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Which means the other three must be true…

* – some details omitted