I awoke today to hear the call of a northern cardinal, a red bird with a crest on its head. I know its song and I can imitate it fairly well myself. It is the state bird of Ohio, for one. I had learned that cardinals were an introduced species in Hawaii. I followed the sound and saw my first cardinal in the USA on this trip, far from where I'd expected. I wonder how they got here? While watching the cardinal for a few moments, I saw a mongoose skulkily scurrying along the roadside ditch. This is an introduced species, too. How amazing is that, to take in a mongoose and a cardinal with the same gaze? It comes with the privilege of waking up in Aaron's Cottage in Hilo, Hawaii.


The gardens are very impressive. Once you get to the bottom of the bridge and enter the landscaped gully you find an explanation of how these gardens got here. It was a labor of love that took years of dedicated work by a retired couple to assemble. I saw evidence of this all around. After about an hour of stopping and photographing one tropical plant more breathtaking than the last, I realized that these people were as obsessed with tropical plants as are some people I know in Israel who have impressive cactus collections. This is what comes of a hobby that outgrows the bounds of a backyard. The collection is so exemplary that school groups come here on field trips and are admitted free of charge to encourage learning.


I kept my promise to Razelle and bought her her lunch at Ken's. She was grateful to have this meal and ate it with gusto.
At 3:05 PM I double-checked the note Jo Jo gave me with the time our tour was to leave for Mauna Kea. I was sure it was supposed to be at 3:30 PM, but to my horror I saw that it was 3:00 PM and we were already late. We quickly tossed a few important items into shoulder packs and raced out the door. Within 3 minutes we were at Arnott's Lodge, but our tour bus no longer was. However, Jo Jo was able to call it back, and when it showed up we sheepishly climbed aboard. Our guide and driver was Daniel. He is a large half-Hawaiian, half-Caucasian (his words) 28-year old man with four jobs: tour guide/driver, bouncer, singer, and Hawaiian language teacher in elementary school. He is licensed to administer CPR (he jokingly said he only administers it to women, though). He told us he had parkas against the cold for us and oxygen for altitude sickness, should anyone need it. Daniel is very good at this job and because of the vocabulary he taught us during this trip I am sure he is good at teaching Hawaiian. From the size of him, I wouldn't want to be the one he had to bounce out of a bar. He sang for us once at an altar that has cultural significance to Hawaiians and his singing voice was very nice to hear.

We paused at the saddle (alt ~6,000 ft) between Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea where the Hawaiian religious altar I mentioned is located. Before we could ascend Mauna Kea, Daniel asked us to bow our heads reverently while he sang a traditional prayer of supplication in the Hawaiian language. We also paused here to become acclimated to the high altitude.


We next drove to the top of Mauna Kea, we being an entire parade of buses and cars. Some of these cars had no business using this road; rental agencies forbid it, but their drivers didn't seem to care. At the top we parked and learned the identity of the different domes and structures.




In the distance, we saw other mountain peaks poking above a sea of clouds; one such distant peak was the highest part of the neighboring island of Maui! The highest peak of Mauna Kea was not the one we stood on, but one just beside it. The group of Chabad youth climbed up that peak to the site of the Hawaiian religious altar, to say their evening prayers. Daniel was pleased to see that the sacred altar was serving as a prayer site. I took a picture of them up there. I call the photo, "The Minyan on the Mount."






In the distance, we saw other mountain peaks poking above a sea of clouds; one such distant peak was the highest part of the neighboring island of Maui! The highest peak of Mauna Kea was not the one we stood on, but one just beside it. The group of Chabad youth climbed up that peak to the site of the Hawaiian religious altar, to say their evening prayers. Daniel was pleased to see that the sacred altar was serving as a prayer site. I took a picture of them up there. I call the photo, "The Minyan on the Mount."





As the sun set I felt cold enough to request a parka. The weather was still and crystal clear. It was 39°F up there (about 4°C); as cold as winter had been in Australia. Daniel said visibility was the best he'd seen in some time. It was exciting to be nearly 14,000 feet above the ocean at that moment. It was the highest place on the planet Razelle has ever been.
Half an hour after sunset, we were required to leave the mountain top. We descended to just above the visitors' center to receive an astronomy lesson from Daniel. He taught everyone the four cardinal directions in Hawaiian and then pointed out some of the key constellations in the sky. I have a background in teaching the constellations too, and just had a similar lesson on the night sky while in Australia. When we were asked to guess the identity of a planet he pointed at, I blurted out, "that's Saturn." Daniel was actually grateful to have me identify it, and the constellations Draco and Hercules too, when he traced them with his laser light. He claimed that this gave him legitimacy. In the past, groups he'd taught this stuff to thought he was making it up as he went. He thanked me.
At the visitors' center we lined up at the telescopes to look at Saturn, replete with its rings and several of its moons. It was the cap to a great experience. Razelle was very happy she'd agreed to come along.
On the way back to Hilo, Daniel played authentic Hawaiian music for us from a DVD. It is sung falsetto. One of the songs included his voice, so we got to hear him sing again.
Daniel is quite a guy.
Back in Hilo, we drove again to Ken's House of Pancakes. We ordered takeout pancakes for tomorrow's breakfast. For us, there is no other place to eat in Hilo. If you ever get there, try it and see what we mean.
1 comment:
Why were they selling "specially filtered glasses for viewing eclipses" - anything expected in the near future?
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