January and February 2012

The beginning of the year brought new friends, friends moving around, friends recovering from illness, and a new time for bonding. With the changes revolving around us, Neil and I are still centered in our little cottage by the sea. It is small but fulfills our needs as a beautiful living and working space.

My bonding time was with Quentin. I took care of him for almost three weeks in January and another week the end of February. The reason is Quentin’s grandmother, Marjorie, was diagnosed with a brain tumor late in 2011. Her major surgery took place in mid January on Oahu. I am happy to say that the doctor feels he got out the majority of disease and Marjorie is stable and happy at home again. Vajra accompanies her mother to Oahu as caregiver. Vajra also look the Certified Nursing Assistant course on Oahu in January while her mother was recovering from the surgery.

I spent the nights with Quentin in his Kula home and would drop him at school in the morning, come to Kihei for the day, then pick him up at end of day, and we would have evening time together before his bedtime. On weekends, we would would spend a night or two in Kihei with Neil. For the sunsets, we went to Kalama park where Neil and I enjoyed the shore walk and the sunset colors while Quentin got to ride his new bike! Being new to bike riding it was a bit scary at first but soon he was going faster than the wind!

After the surgery Vajra and Quentin moved from Kula back to Paia to share the house with Marjorie. Quentin remains at the same school and is very happy about that. I helped with packing and cleaning the Kula home, then spent another week with Quentin in Paia when Marjorie needed an emergency surgery. All successful.

Our friend Sue is off to Egypt and Ireland for 3 to 4 months of exploring plus energy and spiritual work. We are so excited for her. Those are countries I haven’t yet visited so I’m living vicariously through her emails and blog. She introduced us to a new friend, Brigitte, from the big island. Brigitte was spending a few months visiting Maui. We enjoyed a few afternoon teas, went for a beautiful hike in Iao Valley together, and another day Neil and Brigitte drove around East Maui to hike and explore. Neil continued to work with the new camera and has processed a few more High Dynamic Range composite photos that are at the end of the gallery below.

Whale watching 2012

It’s whale season again on Maui! We enjoy watching them from our lanai at morning tea time! Now in addition to carrying our breakfast items, we carry out the binoculars, and sometimes the camera on its tripod. We like to see the mothers and calves nursing close to shore because often play time follows with the baby practicing breaching and tail slaps. Through the binoculars, we can watch the whales on the horizon including competition pod activity. The other morning we saw an incredible three whale simultaneous breach straight off our driveway on the horizon.

Neil has continued to explore the cool features of our new camera (Sony Cybershot HX9V) including the HD video features. He shot several segments and has edited a three and a half minute video of whale activity viewed from our lanai. [Clicking on the link will open a window in youtube. You can click on the gear looking icon in lower right of the play screen to choose HD 1080p (high definition) if you have fast bandwidth downloading and thenĀ  expand to full screen.]

We took an excursion on a whale watch boat the end of February in hopes of getting up close viewing. Sometimes it feels like it is really a whale search excursion because even though there are lots of whales around the Hawaiian Islands in the winter months, they aren’t active at the surface in the area we’re cruising. An unusual highlight on our trip was having a Booby bird land on the railing and hang out with us for nearly 10 minutes. It wasn’t in the least concerned by all the people getting close and photographing it. The species appears to be a female or subadult Red Footed Booby.

Another camera feature Neil has been experimenting with is the high dynamic range settings, some are automatic in the camera and some require manual processing. For manual processing, it saves three shots when you take one photo: one under exposed, one normal light, and one over exposed. Then the three can be merged in Photoshop which brings out the colors in what would normally look too dark or too light in a standard photograph. This photo of the West Maui Mountains with the windmills is a high dynamic range to bring out the clouds above and the shoreline below. That one was an extra challenge because the boat was moving and the water was rippling and the camera was unsteady, so combining the three shots seems to have given it more visual depth than usual.

Sophie visits Quentin and Vajra over Christmas Break

I am catching up with pictures from a few months ago. Over Christmas break, Sophie spent two weeks on Maui visiting her mom and brother. She is currently residing in Portland with her dad. Vajra had their two weeksĀ  packed with fun filled activities and outings. Neil and I practically had to get scheduled in to get to see them šŸ™‚ Actually we had several great outings with them and they made a Christmas delivery to us!

Sophie and Quentin came bearing gifts of homemade Christmas cookies and live fish to add to our fresh water tank! They bought us a pair of Rosy Barbs which they named Dasher and Aqua. They are the only ones of our 16 fish that have official names. We sometimes call the Spotted Green Puffer “Lil’ Piglet” or “Jo Jo” depending on what he’s doing. The namesake Jo Jo is a parrot belonging to Neil’s aunt who is content to playfully amuse himself for long periods of time. And the Spotted Pictus Catfish is sometimes “Mr. Snuffle-up-aguss” when he’s frantically sucking up all the food he can lay his whiskers on. Aqua is currently pregnant (so full of eggs her sides bulge out) and Dasher follows her around attentively ready to fertilize the eggs when she is ready. He seems to want her to hurry up with that, by the way. We don’t have any hope of little fish babies because there is no nursery section in the tank which could protect the eggs or hatchlings from the other fish.

While Quentin and Sophie were here, they got to open their Christmas gifts from us, Quentin’s dad, grandparents, and great-grandparents. There was much more excitement about that than watching how the fish settled into their new home! Imagine!

Sophie loves the water. Vajra set up an above ground pool in the yard for the Christmas break which they played in several times a day she said. There was also lots of beach and ocean time. As a special treat, Vajra arranged a night at the Wailea Marriott so the kids could play on the water slides and in the adventure kids pools. We visited them for an afternoon so we could play on the water slides too. We all had a ball.

For a fun outing I took them to the Maui Golf and Water Park which has two Hawaiian themed 18 hole miniature golf courses and water bumper boats with spray blasters. Guess what was the hit! We made it through about half a golf course before Sophie lost interest. The bumper boats are in a large pool with two waterfalls pouring into it. We all got some good spray blasts at each other and Vajra caught on film the kids giving me a real soaking.

Sophie specifically requested to visit the aquarium. Quentin has been there “a thousand times (he says with a dramatic sigh)” and has no interest in going anymore, but of course he wanted to come too when he found out I was going to take Sophie on one of her last days here. We all had a great time exploring and moving from exhibit to exhibit. What a fun visit!

 

Christmas Day on Maui

We woke to a beautiful sunny warm morning on Christmas day. Yes, like every morning we enjoy on Maui! We have started a ritual of having our morning tea, fruit, and scones on the lanai. We like to watch the antics of our freshwater fish in their aquarium as we give them their breakfast. We also like watching whales frolic offshore.

We find it hard to find surprise gifts for each other so we wrapped some little things for the stockings and also wrapped some of the things we already knew we were getting.

Later, we went to our friends Roger and Wanda’s for a Christmas feast and enjoyed time with their family, watching college football, and playing a game of cards.

Happy Holidays 2011

Nan and Neil in TucsonIt’s the time of year when we think of our family and friends and are grateful for all that we have in this beautiful life. We pray for love and peace in the world that we may all be as one family.

My mom, Audrey, and Bill just visited us on Maui for two weeks and we had a wonderful time together. It is a very restful and rejuvenating time when they are here. They are in good health and still love traveling.Bill and Audrey My dad, Bob, and Jane are also in good health in Ohio and enjoy car travel. I expect I will visit in the spring.

We are fortunate to have Neil’s mom, Jean, and her husband Morley living in the house right next to us. They enjoy the Maui climate and we can share sunsets together.

Neil, Ari, Nan in TucsonWe were able to visit both of Neil’s daughters this past year. We visited Ari in Tucson in February where she was working on her nursing degree and she and her friend Eric showed us around the area. Ari completed her degree in August and is now an RN. After a difficult job search in a competitive market (they all want someone with at least a year of experience) she took a job at a hospital in Santa Maria, California in the telemetry department. After one year there she hopes to transfer into labor and delivery which is where she really wants to be. I previously posted photos of our visit with Mailea and Greg in June.

We look forward to sharing the holidays with our local family and friends, feasting and celebrating. And we will think of all of you in your own celebrations and sharing the joy of this time of year.