Monday, February 14, 2011

Off to Japan


After a Thai breakfast we drove back to civilization with a stop a Paia beach. The next several days we have spent paddle boarding, and snorkeling. Paddle boarding has easily become my new favorite sport.

We dropped off the rental car (that helped serve as a bed for a couple night) and then jumped on a plane to Oahu. 20 minutes later I'm in Honolulu bargaining with Thrifty(whose add-ons I am starting to despise) for a rental car. Went up to No Sho for sunset and back to get a few hour of sleep before a 4am wakeup.

China Airlines flight to Narita, Japan was delayed 2 hours. While many might find this annoying and inconvenient it made me smile because I quickly realized I am on my way back to the chaotic and inconvenient continent that I love so much. When it comes to traveling in Asia Murphy's Law could not be more applicable.

John and I make up half the handful of westerners about to travel on this 747. As I here boarding calls in Mandarin, Japanese, and then English I realize it is time to get on the plane.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

David doing a backflip





The Road to Hana....

After spending the last 3 weeks of my life in Hawaii 2 things have become apparent to me:

1) You cannot trust anyone wearing a Hawaiian shirt (in the service industry) and

2) Hawaii is the most amazing place in the US.

John and I have spent the 2nd part of our Hawaiian adventure on Maui where we were politely welcomed to accommodations at the Trout residents. The first couple days of leisure were spent snorkeling, cliff diving, and paddle boarding with Tanner Trout and his brother Slater (Currently the 2nd best paddle boarder in the world).
We are staying in a guest house outside their main house in Lonipoko that has an amazing view of both the mountains to the East and the water to the West. Our bathroom is an outdoor shower, toilet, and sink surrounded by concrete walls and beautiful Hawaiian flowers.

They have been exceedingly generous to provide us with a place, but we wanted to break up our visit and took a 3 day detour down the road to Hana. Where we car camped in the lush rainforest surrounding Hana. Our daytime meals were made up of tuna sandwiches and nights were full of uncooked chef boyardi with a $9 box of wine. Activities during this time included heaps of hiking, swimming in the sacred pools, body boarding on the beach, walking to blow holes, and taking in the local culture. The Hana rainforest has the 2nd highest amount of rainfall on Earth (Kauai has the 1st). Each night of car camping I was in a constant battle between rolling down the car window to let the ocean breeze come through and quickly rolling them back up when the sporadic torrential downpours began. Needless to say I did not get much sleep and the more somber sleep I did receive was relative to how much rain I slept in. The rain swept in at an angle from the West and we parked facing north. John was in the passenger seat. He slept like a baby . FML.

At the beach the next day we met a 20 year old Hawaiian named some form of the word Chason. He politely asked us to borrow a light to smoke his joint and further proved his hospitality by allowing us to drive him around Hana until we found a family member that could give him another ride. Chason had lived his whole life in Hana and spoke in thick pigeon (broken Hawaiian English). This was at times difficult for me to understand but I managed to make out that 50% of the people in Hana grew their own marijuana product in fields behind their homes, and he started smoking at the age of 6 (which explained a lot after getting to know him). He lives with his family and doesn’t work (which is culturally customary of many Hawaiians). In talking to Chason I learned a lot of insight on Hawaiian culture (but I guess after smoking that much weed everything might sound insightful. Hahaha jk). For example most westerners believe strongly in the idea of private property. Many Hawaiians believe that since people are mortal and the land is everlasting no one really owns the land we are all borrowing it so it should be shared among everyone (I have to side with the Hawaiians on this one). The logic makes sense. Because of this westerners who buy land are often agitated by the many Hawaiians who squat on it. “Sorry bra, should have colonized another culture”. Anyways we gave Chason a ride into town where he met up with his uncle (in Hawaiian uncles, and aunts are just terms used to refer to a friend who is older than you.)

It interests me to know what it must be like to live in such a small isolated land for your entire life. It makes me think what kind of person I would be if this was all I knew.

Monday, May 3, 2010

No Ice in Paradise














Our next day in Kauai John, Aaron, and I woke up early and cruised the coast. We decided to go south and ended up stumbling across a beach where dozens of sea turtles were nesting. It was real cool and the first time I have ever seen a sea turtle. After that we off roaded to another beach where we climbed black rock and had a great photo shoot. Then we went southward and cruised down a magnificent canyon. We then grabbed a few drinks and watched the sunset before a dip in the pool and went to the ______ restaurant where we met Katie the bartender who told us about some great things to do. We scheduled a tour with the Wayaluka River Guides and went to bed.


The next day we got up at 6:30 for our river tour. Luckily it was only John, Aaron and I on the tour so we could move faster and see more stuff. Our guide was a girl named Annie who originally lived in St. Louis Missouri and after a vacation to Hawaii she packed up her things and moved there about a year ago. After a nice kayak down the Wakalua river we stopped at a rope swing to do some jumps and then hiked through shrubs to a beautiful waterfall and kayaked back. The trip was well worth it and somewhere along the way Annie offered us jobs on the river as guides and became very persistent on wanting us as guides. It seemed like the perfect job so I got her information and told her I would give her a call after I finish in Cambodia. After we got back to shore we ate at a great locals place (The Pono Market). After lunch Aaron bought a Ukelele and we decided we were not yet tired from our journey so we drove up the coast and hiked the Napali trail for 4 miles. Probably the most beautiful hike I have ever done. We got back snorkeled for awhile and watched the sunset on the beach.






We woke up on Kauai, packed up our things, and headed to the airport. After 2 short flights and a little confusion in Honolulu we were in Maui!! At the airport we picked up our jeep, went to a restaurant called Da Kitchen for our overwhelmingly large lunch and waited near the airport until 2pm when Davids flight arrived. Once we got Dave we drove up the coast north of Lahina where we stayed at the Ashton Papakia. This was more like a retirement home but we made the best of it. We checked out the town which was more touristy than Kauai and had some dinner where we soom realized we had to be up at 230am for our 30 mile bike ride down the volcano. It took us a hour to drive up the volcano to about 10,000 feet where we watched the most gorgeous sunrise. Then started biking down the trail. Julio and Tom were our guides and the 30 mile cruise down the volcano was more like a roller coaster ride than anything else. It was a great time and I am glad we did it. We got back worked out, did some snorkeling at Honolua Bay and met some more friends on the beach to watch the sunset. I think this might have been the first day of my life where i actually got to watch both a beautiful sunrise and sunset.

Today we did more snorkeling at a better spot north of Honolua Bay and the took a road trip north around the coast on loosely paved roads on the side of the northern pacific.



Today is Aaron and Davids last day so we went down to Hana and went to Twin Falls before are Luau (Feist at LeLe) at 6pm. We saw 4 beautful waterfalls and did some jumps off of 2 of them. Then went to the great Luau where we ate and watched dances from Simoa, Hawaii, New Zealand, and Tahiti. We met some girls from Canada and went out with them after for a fun night!

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Aloha

Since I last spoke Eric, John and I drove up to San Marcos (about 30 minutes north of San Diego) to stay the night at Aaron's lavish apartment before flying to Hawaii. Aaron's physical therapy class was having a party that night so we decided to go. Aaron forgot to tell us the party was a prom themed party where everyone was dressed to impress and we showed up looking like a bunch of Canadian lumber jacks. The people were very nice though. I soon realized that Aaron's PT school had a 4 to 1 girls to guys ratio. They were very friendly to say the least.


The next day we woke up drove 2 1/2 hours to LA where we took a 5 hour plane to Honolulu. The funniest thing about this plane ride was that the Pepperdine volleyball team was on board and their massive height created a wall blocking all of the inflight televisions. ha. It was actually a good movie I wanted to see too (Up in The Air) but I just ended up reading. I am onto a new book called Three cups of Tea it is a true story about a rock climber that got lost going up K2 and ended up in a Pakistani village where villagers basically saved his life by nurturing him back to health. In return he came back to build the village a school and since then he has built over 100 schools in different parts of Pakistan and Afganistan.

We got into Honolulu at 930 and got to our hotel at 11pm. Everyone had a queen sized bed to ourselves and there was a living room and kitchen as well. I woke up and red the news paper to find out we had arrived in Waikiki just in time for the Kokua festival. This is a Earth day concert to promote sustainable living that Jack Johnson, Ziggy Marley and Taj Mahal were performing at. We scalped some tickets, went to the beach, met a local named Sean, and at 4:30 we all went to the festival together. Everyone performed great and I was impressed when Ziggy Marley brought out his mother and son, and sang a tribute to his father Bob.

 






The next day we woke up at 530 am to hike Diamond Head mountain. It was an hour hike and ended up having an old army bunker at the top with a great view of Honolulu. After hiking down we had breakfast and took are 1230 flight to Kauai.

 



 


 




Once we got to Kauai we rented a jeep (thank you Mona) and found our lavish resort on our own private beach next to our own private pool. This place is much nicer than the one in Waikiki (not to say the other hotel was bad)!!! We got in the jeep and just cruised for a couple hours through rainforests and spectacular views. Stopped to eat the best Ahi Tuna wrap of my life at Mermaid Cafe. We caught a great sunset at a national park on the western part of the island. I will have to find out the name. Drove back to our place in the convertible jeep and got some groceries for a cookout at our place. Life is great!!!

 



 



 




Tuesday, April 20, 2010

 
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Erics place