green planet

Yesterday I took a mild, pleasant excursion billed as  "Panoramic Hilo" -  nothing to exclaim about. Today I took one entitled natural "Highlights of Hawaii" and it was outstanding.  Our guide told us about the flora and fauna of the island and how it all got there: by Wind, Water and Wings, later arrivals called Canoe additions.  She showed us the efforts being made to preserve the island and its contents, especially the water, on which everything is dependent. 

I took more pictures: one of the beach where one of he most famous love scenes in movies took place (remember From Here to Eternity?)and the view from some high place or other.   I promise I will sit down soon and try to send along some pictures. I'm so busy trying to lock pictures and memories in my mind that I resent the time it takes to activate the iPad and aim it.  I saw some red-crested birds I was told are cardinals, different from ours, smaller and quite charming. By the time I got the iPad aimed, they were gone.

We're back in the United States; Hawaii became the 50th state in 1970, I think it was.  This afternoon there is a special excursion to the Missouri, where WWII ended with official signatures. That ship is connected by a bridge to the memorial of the sunken Arizona.  I'm not going, not because I don't care but because I'm an aging Canadian and I have different memories of that war.  I visited the Arizona when I was in Hawaii in 1977 and I realized then that it's a shrine for Americans, as well it should be. I respect that, but it's not mine.

What belongs to everyone, however, can be found everywhere, including Hawaii.  Yesterday there were more and longer line-ups at Walmart than for any ship excursion.  Walmart co-operated, too. I was told that the store was running a shuttle bus between it and the ship, for shoppers' convenience. 

Travel is so broadening.

more food?

Sea Days are over for a few days. I went on an excursion this morning, an easy, short one. I'm in Hilo, Hawaii and took a "panoramic" tour.  Hilo is lovely and a living green lesson as to what to do after a tsunami.  Two, actually, in 1946 and in 1960.  The first time, apparently, the era was swept clear of houses and schools, etc. and was built up again. The second time when the same region was devastated, the land has been allowed to remain without buildings and the whole area now is beautiful parkland.  I took some pictures and I'll see what I can do with them.  I'm sill not a camera buff.  

I also took a picture of Rainbow Falls. I love waterfalls.  And also, since I was there, I tried to capture the King Kamehameha Statue.  I'll try to send that along, too. 

But not now.  I'm working on my screenplay project and I have to do some more thinking. Thinking takes a lot of time. I haven't forgotten I promised I'd tell you about the food.  Soon.