January: A Feather-legged Fly (Trichopoda pennipes) on a Tree Heliotrope (link).
Sunday Stills challenge theme this week and next week is ‘Your 2024 Year-in-Review.’ See more responses here. As usual, I’m going with a favorite photo from each month of 2024, with a caption and link to the post the photo first appeared in. This week’s post is for January through June. See the rest of the year next week.
February: A Ring-billed Gull struts at ʻAnaehoʻomalu Bay (link).March: A woman walks the beach at Kohanaiki Beach Park (link).
The idea of The Numbers Game is to enter a number into the search bar of your computer and then post a selection of the photos that turn up. This week’s number is 173. Captions are on the photos. You can see more responses here.
Building houses in Hapuna Resort, with a good view of Maui.A gin and tonic is a welcome drink on a hot afternoon.A Yellow-billed Cardinal sees itself in the glass of my car. For the full sequence, see here.Lava oozes on my first visit to Hawaii in 2010.Forgotten on the beach at Spencer Park.The very popular beach at Kua Bay.
The idea of The Numbers Game is to enter a number into the search bar of your computer and then post a selection of the photos that turn up. This week’s number is 170. Captions are on the photos. You can see more responses here.
A cool lion at The Hilton.A fire helicopter dropping water on a brush fire hot spot.Hard working cats!A Sonoran Carpenter Bee on an Agave Attenuata.As The Pretenders once sang, ‘I got to have some of your attention.’ʻAnaehoʻomalu Bay beach, more commonly known as A Bay.
Late afternoon sun over Kawaihae Small Boat Harbor with smoke in the air.
The idea of The Numbers Game is to enter a number into the search bar of your computer and then post a selection of the photos that turn up. This week’s number is 168. Captions are on the photos. You can see more responses here.
Hibiscus tiliaceus flowers.Palm trees at the beach.After the fire along Old Saddle Road.Cat at rest.Wasps at work.Changing crew in an outrigger.
This week’s Sunday Stills challenge theme is ‘Cozy.’ See more responses here.
This mother and her pup were looking pretty cozy on the beach at Keokea Beach Park. Mothers stay with their pups for five to seven weeks. During this time, the mothers generally do not feed, while pups feed on their mother’s milk. Mothers are typically huge when they give birth, but they lose a lot of weight during the rearing time, while the pups get correspondingly bigger.
This pup was very young, and it was quite dramatic to see how quickly the pup got bigger and the mother smaller!
Whittington Beach Park sits on Honuʻapo Bay, a few miles northeast of the island’s southern tip. There’s no beach at the park, but there are old fish ponds and a lagoon where it’s relatively safe to get in the water. This makes it popular with locals, since such places are few and far between on this wild and rocky stretch of coast.
The early Hawaiians established a fishing village here that lasted until the mid-1800s, when drought, earthquakes and a tsunami brought about its demise. Some years later, a port was reestablished where goods could be brought to and from the surrounding area, which was home to a large sugar plantation.
The remains of a concrete pier, built in 1910, can still be seen at the southeastern end of the park. I’ve read conflicting accounts of the cause of it’s demise, including a tsunami and bombing by U.S. planes in 1942 to prevent it being used by the Japanese in WWII!
These days, it’s a good spot to watch the waves, and the noddies, twirling through the air as they go to and fro from their homes on the nearby cliffs.
Sanderlings are common winter visitors to Hawaii and are found mostly on the many beaches here. I saw a couple at Hapuna, probing the sand around a lagoon left by the floods earlier this year.