Aloha flower,
Ruby throated Hibiscus,
Sunshine on the vine.
Monday, January 14, 2008
Hibiscus
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 10:01 PM 2 comments
Thursday, January 3, 2008
Lily of Pending Doom?
This is a Grand Crinum Lily. I spent weeks looking for the perfect photo op. The blossom begins to wilt almost as soon as it opens and it is difficult to find a fresh, crisp flower. In this photo you can see a few buds and many wilted remains -- and, miracle!, a few fresh flowers.
We were driving along the main road of our housing complex. As usual I glanced over these bushes near the entrance. I expected to see ... nothing spectacular. Instead ....
"Stop!" I yelled. "Pull over!" Luckily my partner is a mind reader (or experienced with my quirks) and he knew, despite my hysteria, that there was no real crisis pending. However, he also knew there would be a crisis pending if he didn't let me out of the car. He stopped.
"Hurry up!" He said, "We're blocking traffic!"
I hopped out of the car, climbed into the bushes and began snapping photos.
My partner pulled the car as far off to the side of the road as possible. The street there is narrow and the curbs are high. There really wasn't any place for him to go. He left the engine running and stayed behind the wheel in case he had to move, and I tried to snap quickly. The bushes were tall, so for the most part I was holding the camera above my head, snapping the shutter and hoping for the best.
At home I downloaded the photos. My partner didn't seem too impressed. "You certainly didn't center those well," he muttered.
"Hey, I'm short." I answered. "I was taking these shots blind. I think, under the circumstances, they came out pretty well. You could have come and helped me, you know."
"I was helping," he said. "I was making certain nobody crunched your car."
You know, [insert head shaking] sometimes I wonder about that guy's priorities.
Oh -- and with a little digital slight of hand, the photos are framed just fine.
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 7:58 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
Diversity, Part I
I love visiting the University of Hawaii at Manoa campus. Diversity abounds: the buildings, the languages, the people & their skin colors, and the plant life. Each step along every path brings something new and amazing.
For instance, this Coral Tree simply took my breath away. I stopped to photograph it, and a gentleman on campus stopped to query me. "What purpose is there in taking pictures of flowers?" He asked.
"Purpose?" I parroted and shrugged. "I just thought they were pretty."
"Pretty is not important." He flicked his hand like he was brushing away dust.
"But look at them," I pointed and said. "The shape --. The texture --. The amazing color --."
"Listen," he said. "If you want to see something truly amazing you need to study mathematics."
"But numbers aren't very photogenic." I replied.
He looked at me quizzically, shook his head and walked away. I was shaking my head as I watched him go.
Diversity.
Erythrina crista-galli, Fabaceae, common coral tree, origin, Brazil.
Zosterope japonicus japonicus, Zosteropidae, Mejiros or Japanese White Eye, named for the ring of white around it's eyes, is a song bird from Japan.
Diversity.
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 7:16 AM 5 comments
Labels: birds, fauna, flora, flowers, humor, Oahu, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Tuesday, January 1, 2008
Hong Kong Orchid
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 10:46 PM 2 comments
Labels: flowers, orchid, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Friday, November 30, 2007
Seasonal Change
Hawaii has no daylight savings time. For those of us accustomed to 4 distinct seasons, Hawaii's minuet seasonal changes may slip by unnoticed. Here is the transition from Summer to Fall, in three photos.
Did you catch that dramatic change between the death of the Summer flowers and the birth of the Fall flowers? No! What a surprise .....
I love it here!
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 6:45 PM 2 comments
Saturday, October 20, 2007
The Imposter Tree
Tonight I am sitting on the couch with my partner -- the two of us side-by-side, each with a laptop computer in our laps -- and I showed him a photo I took today. I said, "Honey (he's a botanist/oceanographer), what is this flower?" And he casually says, "Gopher wood."
I can't tell you how many times some one in church has muttered to me, or me to them, "Just what the heck is gopher bark?" And the answer is, "Who knows?" I looked at my love and sang, "God said to Noah to build me an arky, arky ... That kind of gopher wood?"
He answers, "It's Acacia and some scholars think it might be golpher wood. Others claim that gopher wood is really cypress."
Acacia trees come in many types and there are a startling number of varieties here on the island. The Acacia Koa is one of my favorites. In the photo above the white fuzz ball is the flower of the plant, the green knobby ball is the flower bud and the brown behind it is a withered flower. (Another of my Acacia favorites is the Rainbow Shower Tree, which you can see here.)
The leaves first drew my attention to the plant. They look like the Sensitive Plant, so I touched them expecting them to curl. They didn't. The scent of the flower came to my nose -- very lite and sweet. I snapped the photo, returned to our condo, uploaded my memory card, opened the photo and queried, "Honey. what's this?" And received a lesson in Biblical history.
Update: With just a little online research my partner discovered this tree is an imposter! It is the Koa Haole*. It is a cousin of the Acacia and the Rainbow Shower tree, but is is NOT gopher wood. The natives gave this tree the name, haole, because it is an import and an impostor of the real thing. OC started his research when I mentioned that the leaves of the plant are what caught my attention. The leaves I described were very different from the leaves he knew grew on the Acacia Koa. He started looking online. Then I got a lesson in scientific integrity. The photo now bears the correct name and the information given is now accurate.
*Haole is the Hawaiian word for foreigner.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Shower Tree
As I said before, much of the flora on Oahu is breathtaking. The Shower Tree is three of my favorites. (Don't get out your grammar checker, I wrote that correctly -- mostly.)
The Golden Shower Tree, [Cassia fistula], came to Hawaii via Indonesia. It produces huge clusters of bright yellow flowers. It is vibrant and captivating.
Pink Shower Tree [Cassia javanica], sometimes called the Coral Shower Tree, also came from Indonesia. This tree produces blossom clusters of soft pink to bright white flowers. It is an elegant and stately tree.
Rainbow Shower Tree [Cassia fistula x C. javanica], a sterile hybrid, originated in Hawaii from the cross pollination of it's Asian ancestors, Golden Shower Tree and Pink Shower Tree. The Rainbow Tree is bright, beautiful and elegant. It's blossoms range in hue from deep pink, to soft yellow, to snowy white.
Posted by Pacific Quilly at 10:11 AM 2 comments
Labels: flora, flowers, Hawaii, horticulture
