02.08.07

Not for the Faint of Stomach

Posted in maui at 3:41 pm by zakira

Monday we drove to Hana. 613 turns one way, 56 one-way bridges en route, and jaws hitting the floor every curve as more rich rainforest was revealed to us. Bamboo Forests intermingle with Swamp Mahogany, Rainbow Eucalyptus, and Cook Pines.  Ferns of all sizes line the dripping lavarock, vines wrap treetrunks and hang down, tarzan-style from the branches. The tips of many trees have crowns of little red flowers. Deep valleys, quaint villages, and waterfalls of all sizes. We did a few hikes along the way to waterfalls. At Three Bears Falls we clambered down the side of the bridge and through thick palm forest to get right down to the pool and the idyllic falls.  We followed a hunters trail through EMI Land (the irrigation company that owns most of the land and sucks water from the waterfall sources to feed the gaping sugar industry’s endless thirst. We ended up at a crystalline pool and a large, secluded, perfect waterfall in a lushly green, deep valley. Then back on the road (it’s a four-hour drive to hana) and onwards. There’s a little shrine in a tiny lava tube, a white supplicant praying to the benevolent virgin. She is covered in fresh leis. There’s more than I can describe, more biodiversity, more tiny towns, more beauty and more flowers, more waterfalls and more crazy locals driving at high speed along the twists of the Hana Highway.

At Hana we paid 25$ and went into the lava tubes. Inside the volcano these are the passageways the lava took out to the ocean. It looks like the skin of Jabba the Hut, moistly glistening in our flashlight’s beam. It also looks like molten chocolate, truffle mix in any number of formations. Like one of those old commercials for Hersheys that shows the smooth chocolate pouring down in an endless stream. There’s hersheys kisses on the ceiling, hundreds of stalactites. And a tiny room affectionately called the Claustrophobia Chamber that we did not go into. An adventure like no other. Absolutely worth it.

Back on the highway to the tourist centre, the 7 Sacred Pools. Full of bleating tourists desperate to swim in a natural pool, we were turned off by the sheer numbers congregated around the pools and rushed back to the car. Then the stomach churning drive home in time to help cook the rehearsal dinner. We had seen so much beauty, and the same places from a different angle showed even more to us. Nothing could ruin this.

Did I mention that every morning here in Pa’ia, two sea turtles feed in the surf by the shore? They peek up to grab some air and then dive back down, tails in the air, to eat the seaweed attached to the rocks. I look at them every morning and drink my coffee.

SuperCoral Sunday

Posted in maui at 3:21 pm by zakira

To escape the superbowl we drove out of Pa’Ia and once again across the waving green hands of the sugar-planted valley. This time to find a beach and snorkelling. Our guidebook describes Mile 14 as a veritable waste of time, a murky wasteland of dead coral and over-fed fish. We found it much different. Shallow water so placid we kept thinking we were on a lake and not the ocean, with coral at waist-deep, fish just a bit further out.

Learning to breathe only through my mouth and float with relaxed body, not to panic as water engulfed my head, I was also lost in something beautiful and unusual: the living ocean. Schools of fish, bright iridescent parrotfish and fish with bright stripes, dull fish hidden in the coral, fish and more fish and it seemed every two seconds came another distraction from the sheer miracle of breathing inside the water. There were towns down there, bustling villages of creatures going about their daily business without a thought for us pasty air-breathers.

That evening social drama took over in the house, the us- and them-ness of two families uniting. However the children played in the pool and giggled and laughed and swam and dove into the water with a plethora of pool toys.

Bride and Whale Watch

Posted in maui at 1:55 pm by zakira

Friday B& J went to the doctor, dan and I hung out at the house . When we got back, all packed in the car for a short drive to Malauka Beach, to sit in the wind and surf and play, soak in the sun and smile. A wedding was performed on the beach, the bride and groom in too-nice-for-the-beach clothes put fluffy leis about each others’ necks and a man played the conch. In the bushes, just out of sight, stood a second princess bride waiting her turn to marry her own anxious groom on the windy shore.

In the afternoon, played in the pool for a long time.

Saturday was checkout day, out of kihei and beyond. We drove up to lahaina, a congested, quaint town with old plantation architecture and almost no parking anywhere. Our goal was to look at a few neat historical sites but it was so impossible to find any parking at all we glanced at two and then hit the road. We visited the old lahaina prison, with mortared walls constructed of giant pieces of coral, and a tiny bleak wood frame building which housed the 8 prisoners they could have at any given time. Offenses included giving birth to bastard children, refusing to work on the road, and generally disturbing the peace.

We also visited a missionary house with this beautiful auxiliary building called the Master’s Reading Room (Now a gift shop and art gallery) built entirely of coral and lavarock mortared together. But overall Lahaina was claustrophobic, its lovely plantation buildings too infested with timeshare salesmen and tacky gift shops to really enjoy it there.

We meandered down to Ma’alea harbour and had one of the best meals yet at Buzz’s Wharf, a fish- and steak- house that does good burgers and kids meals. And then we boarded a small Pacific Whale Foundation biodiesel powered boat to go whale watching.

What can I say about the whales? Huge and graceful, mysterious ancient creatures floating in timespace inconceivable to us. We flatter ourselves to think they are saying hello with their disappearing tails and steamy spray, gasp and run to the side of the boat yelling “2 o’clock, there!!!!” and everyone snaps their cameras and sighs with disappointment at only getting the final tip of his tail. They lowered the microphone into the water and we floated in engine silence, listening to the whales and visualizing them hanging upside down in the deep ocean. Their tails pointed to the sky, their noses to the ocean floor, singing incomprehensible music to each other. It’s the males, calling to each other on the great mating journey through the hawaiian islands.

We drove to Pa’ia after that to meet everyone else at the new house and be in the heavy soap opera that would be the wedding party. We are on Maui time and they just got off the plane.

02.03.07

Across the Lava Fields

Posted in maui at 1:08 am by zakira

Today we went on the opposite hike of yesterday. We got it into our heads we would do a local hike in South Maui, and so we headed down south to LaPerouse Bay.  We drove at moonset, the golden disk of full moon slowly sinking below the horizon as we headed south. You drive all the way down to the end of the road and look for this incredible tropical mansion hidden in trees. You know you’re there because there are a LOT of “NO” signs. Like “no trespassing”, “no fires”, “no Parking”. We found somewhere to park and first went down the north side of the estate, along their barbed wire fence and past the signs that say “warning, no trails marked”, through a lichen-covered mesquite forest until we hit lava. We explored lava for about an hour, going along the coast from little protected cove to cove, looking in water and seeing the tropical fish you always see at the aquarium. Except these fish hadn’t gone crazy from being watched all the time. You didn’t even need to snorkel, you could just sit and watch from the lava and moorish idols and pipefish and a bunch of yellow ones I don’t know the name of all show up, swimming around like they’re just heading out to work or something.

But this, though pleasant, was not what we were looking for. Our goal was the other side of LaPerouse Bay, and the really big lava fields created in the eruption of Haleakala in 1790. These you get to by first walking onto lava rock through an archaeological site that is marked with a new set of “No” signs regarding not sitting on the rock structures or moving stone piles or removing artefacts. The ancient people lived on this. And built thatch-roofed homes, stacking lavarock into walls, and there are the remains of these homes on the lavafield. From afar, it looks like deeply fertile soil. But the closer you get the more you taste desolation. It’s made up of fist- and head-sized chunks of lavarock, a gigantic and seemingly endless quarry that stretches for a few miles.

There is a brief reprieve as you go along the shore and under more mesquite trees and along the Makena Ranch lands, who warn us not to start fires.  We passed a surfer’s grave, two crosses on little rock mounds, covered in shell necklaces. They buried the surfboard behind one of the graves, its top third sticking out of the ground behind the cross.

Past the graves, you get in the real lava field, a fluid black shape pooling by the ocean, made entirely of boulders, rocks, and lava pebbles. This land stretches too far for the mind to manage, and every step wobbles as lava shifts under your feet. The heat and humidity of this tropical desert, with no wind and no end in sight, ankles shaking in their sockets with every carefully placed footstep, we put our heads down and hiked the oddly named “King’s Highway”, piled over 14 years around 1840 to create an access… to what, I don’t know. We couldn’t look up often because of the instability of the ground. And when we did, lavarock formations played tricks with our eyes. I thought I saw birds, people, and animals in the outcroppings.  We thought we saw a little trail heading towards the ocean, but doubted ourselves after another hour in the lava field. 15 minutes of hard slogging later we turned back and decided to follow the ‘path’.

Actually, there were markers all along the way. Larger and less wobbly pieces of lava in some parts gave my sore, aching ankles a brief reprieve.  We were like Hansel and Gretel, following brilliant white pieces of coral that seemed to glow against the red-black lava boulders, a sign the ocean was not far away.

At the ocean hikers and snorkellers had made marks, the ubiquitous rock piles (these ones were alternating, coral-lava-coral-lava), to show people had been here. We saw a couple, first humans we’d seen in hours, struggling along the lava. They’d chosen to pick their own way and it looked even more difficult than the one we’d taken.

We brought coral back with us to better mark the path and put a big piece of white coral-rock at the trail entrance so people would know.  Then we hiked back.

It was like Mordor, or some dragon-burnt land, or coming from the pit of Tartarus or even narrowly escaping a kind of hell. People lived here, walked on this sharp unevenness, fished off the coastline and survived against all odds, in this a landscape that forgives nothing. We were so glad to get out.

For the rest of the day we recovered from the lava fields’ physical, mental, and emotional trauma. My ankles haven’t recovered, especially from this one piece of lava that I stepped on not realizing it would lever hard and bash into my ankle. I’ll have a nice bruise tomorrow, methinks.  But, we napped, played with the kids, took them to the park and then to the pool and suntanning.  And for sheer catharsis, this rates as an A+++ day.

I never did mention this but every night the geriatric residents of Hale Kamaole come out onto the lawn and blow the conch in each of the four directions at the moment the sun disappears, then hug and cheer and shake hands and congratulate each other.

01.30.07

First Full Day

Posted in maui, travel at 7:22 pm by zakira

First outing we see a rainbow rising up from the shoreline and disappearing into the sky.  Maui truly is the end of the rainbow. Maybe that’s why every other business seems to reference Gold. Oh, that and the strange crossover history with bc of goldrush and cowboys in the interior, herding cattle.

The sand here is red in most places and so fine you can’t brush it off completely ever.  This morning we ritualistically put our feet in the water and grinned. There are all these little white rocks on the sand that look like bones and fossilized brains. They’re full of holes – dead coral, dan tells me. And those rocks we think we see out there, those aren’t rocks, but lava flow. In some areas it looks like giant grains of pepper, a salt-and-pepper mix of coral bones and lava rocks.

Shopping for a swimsuit here reminded me of shopping for a bra at the bay. A dew-eyed old lady named Lois works the till at Maui Water Wear and is sure to warn me that the sizes are Misses, not Ladies, so I should go large to be disappointed. The stall has disposable panties so you can really see how the suits fit. I broke both my preconceived notions and ended up with a two piece number with the requisite Hibiscus flower motif.

We went down to Wailea Beach and played in the surf. I giggled like a kid and wondered if the strings holding my bathing suit bottom were going to untie and leave me bottomless. This of course did not occur, nor did the dreaded shark attack I thought would inevitably ensue.  Ember and I swirled in the surf and played and laughed and winced at the oversalty water.

We went home in this idyll and had barbecue with roasted yams and vegetables, Corona to drink. Wow. What a day.

01.28.07

We are in MAUI

Posted in Canada, maui, travel at 11:44 pm by zakira

Here’s a recap of the last 24 hours. Left work and we finally got out of town to the border. There’s a futuristic nightmare and I suppose it’ll get worse. 15 minutes to cross which isn’t bad, but the interrogation and the machine that photographs you on your way through, the checking of our plates and the surly man’s questions – I can only just imagine what it’s like for others more target-able than our cutesy cuddly little nuclear unit.

We drove through seattle, I point out the on ramps and off ramps and over ramps the interwoven network of freeways that, to me, means we are in america. Somehow it seems different, just knowing we are on someone else’s soil.  (Something happening to me lately is the poetic layering of history and life, walking in the downtown eastside i feel like i’ve got the jawbones and noses of the missing women, or of the ones whose parts were found on picktons farm, driving through seattle i am acutely aware of being in a country that is at war). We saw 4 police cars between seattle and tacoma. they were out busy that night. Then we roll in to the Days Inn, a cheap-ass motel where the room gave me asthma and stank of haywater, whatever hay water is. Use your imagination, but when the sign on the door said “business special class room” you know you’re in trouble. Our neighbours had been partying at the nextdoor bar (the one with too many neon bar signs in the window), were up until 3 so we didn’t sleep. In the morning we had a self-serve continental breakfast which we ate, gratefully, despite the sogginess of the make-your-own waffle and the wateriness of the from-last-night coffee.

We were shuttled to the airport by a surly man with some kind of problem driving – no matter the roadway, he could make you feel unsafe. Our luggage was escorted by a cheery gentleman with a graduate degree and an airport uniform, chatty the whole time and helpful in guiding us. HIs brother has dual citizenship, he says, lives in KOE-QUIT-LAM.  Sings the Canadian anthem going north and the Star Spangled Banner going south. His unexpected and unasked-for helpfulness leads to the inevitable hissing whispered discussion “what do we tip? do we tip? how much?” “I don’t know!!” and still, have no idea if we did tip him.

The Flight Was Long and Turbulent. Literally. Our landing was actually frightening as we bounced and skidded and tilted our rollicking way down the runway until screeching to a stop. There was a communal peal of terrified laughter, fading down into a sigh of relief.

Once in Maui, we’ve met surly Transport Authority People, bitchy car rental receptionists, monosyllabic car rental service teenagers, and grumpy security officers. It appeared that no one who lives here is actually HAPPY, until we stopped in at starbucks for a much-needed iced coffee. There two tanned and mellow, hairy boys who love to surf and look like they could be from tofino or long beach or anywhere but here, let us take how much time we wanted, made nice coffee for us and were the soul of an island welcome. Hopefully a sign of things to come.

We are staying in a two-bedroom and loft condo close to the beach – it’s lovely, just what you’d expect from a place like this. Bamboo furniture and occasional lamps, large pineapple shaped cookie jar in the centre of glass-topped bamboo table. The prices of fruits and vegetables here is appalling. A small head of romaine is 2.19. An english cucumber??? a luxury item at 3.19.  The per pound cost of nectarines is 3.00. In fact everything is incredibly costly. But the barbecued chicken is barbecued in soy sauce honey and ginger and still costs 5.99, same as at superstore.  There’s some gorgeous specialty sauces I want to try, too.  The price of internet is criminal, so my computer searches for wireless and every couple seconds gets 1 bar of wireless access.  Hey, it’s enough to copy and paste the blog entry in.

The last note before I pass out to sleep is this: we open Ember’s bag and get a cute note inside from the Transportation Security Authority, that HER bag was chosen for a random check. Fell over laughing at the sight of MMMM Cookies and fairy bear and all the KID stuff they opened and looked at. Imagined the TSA officers sitting around for storytime.

Travelling here we’ve been grateful at every tiny pittance we receive, from the 1/4 cup oversalted pretzels and single cup serving of cola, to the dry bun turkey sandwich and oreo cookies, to Hawaiian Air actually unfolding our stroller for us at the gate so upon departure, we could drop our twisting, grumpy, crying baby into it and she could ride along without too much trouble. hopefully the rest of the trip we’ll get larger servings of luck. :)