
A blenny looks up from a tide pool, blending into its surroundings so that it is hard to spot.

A blenny looks up from a tide pool, blending into its surroundings so that it is hard to spot.

I saw these two fishermen on these rocks at the foot of a cliff in North Kohala. By the time I got organized, this is the photo I got. The photo I was after happened moments earlier, when the pair were being soaked by spray from a big set of swells breaking against the rock shelf the right of this photo. By the time the next big swells moved in the two of them had moved farther away from that spot and the photo opportunity had gone.

The sun sets off the old Hawaiian settlement of Lapakahi on the North Kohala coast.

A look down into a tide pool reveals patterns in the water and a single different-colored rock.

A typical early Saturday morning at the beach. The campers set up Friday night, but not too many are up and about until it starts getting warm. This photo was taken just after 7 a.m. when coffee and breakfast is the priority for most of those who are up, though not the kids of course!

I found this picnic table at Punalu’u Black Sand Beach Park and thought it gave a wonderful view out over the ocean. If you swim out from shore here, your next stop is Tahiti, some 2,700 miles away!

A view of the Kau coast looking down towards Whittington Beach Park and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park beyond.

The high winds of a few weeks ago caused a fair amount of damage around the island. At Lapakahi State Historical Park, this tree was toppled and took out a bench that had been set up in its shade. The bench will have to be fixed and set up somewhere else because that shade isn’t coming back anytime soon.