We are going to the Visitor
Center at the top of Mt. Haleakalā. Our
departure time is around 7:30 am which means we will not be there for the
sunrise. Carmen is not coming today and
has decided to go shopping instead. Anyway on
our way I was able to get this sunrise over the mountain.
We are looking into the valley
towards the Iao Needle where we were the other day when we first got here.
We are on our way up Haleakalā
Crater Road and as we switch back and forth, we are able to see the west Maui Mountains. The mountain here is Pu’u Kukui at 5788 feet
and the town at the bottom I think is Waikapu.
About half way up the mountain
this owl was flying over the field. I
was luck to be able to get a quick picture of it as we started to turn
away.
We get to the Visitor’s Center
and stop for a break, partly because of Park regulations. Here there are some of the silversword, a
rare plant. This one is not flowering
and I find out that none of the silversword was in bloom although some of the
plants had bloomed.
There is also this flower which I
think is a variety of poppy.
At a little over 7,000 feet and
almost near the summit we can see all of the west side of the island and Pu’u
Kukui.
At the observation center we have
this view. Looking east into the crater
it looks like a different world. It is
easy to see why NASA would use this location to train astronauts.
From the parking lot and
observation center there is a trail leading up to this peak. Pā Ka’oao can be reached by the trail and so I decided to hike up.
While
I was walking up, I see this spider. I
wander how it is doing at 9800 feet?
One of the hiking trails through
the crater that can be hiked if you have the time. Many of the people I’ve seen on the trail
have full back packs with tents and sleeping bags. They must be planning on staying for several
days.
Looking north from the overlook
you can see the variations of lava and the ground lava sand that cascades along
the wall.
Before heading back down the trail
I get a picture of myself overlooking the crater.
We are beginning to get more
clouds coming in from the east and I must say it looks pretty dramatic.
Looking east southeast over the
crater rim, you can see the two mountains on the island of Hawaii – Mauna Kea,
on the left, and Mauna Loa, on the right.
We are very close to the
observatories on the top of Haleakalā another 250 feet and we are there.
Here is one of the silversword
plants near the parking lot. As you can
see, the plant recently flowered and the stalk is still with the plant. Too bad we missed the flower, I hear it is
really nice.
Heading back down the mountain,
it is getting cloudier the further we go.
Here the cloud fog is just in the trees.
Looks like the beginning of a horror movie.
One last picture before we are
off the mountain. The valley below looks fairly flat from this height. Our hotel is around the left side of the
mountain.
We drive into Makawao and drop
the tour guide off to get donuts on a stick.
While she is getting the donuts we continue through town and turn around
at the Maui Veterans Cemetery. Along the
way we pass this nice horse pasture.
Along the coast road to our hotel
we pass several beaches and they all look inviting, to bad we don’t have time
for a swim.
When we get to Lahaina those that
are going on the whale watch cruise gets off, this is our stop. For those that want to spend the afternoon in
town also get off. I head over to the
town center and from the second floor of the museum I get a picture of the 2nd
largest Banyan tree in the world – the 1st is in India.
While I walk around town killing
time, I see this guy with several Macaws.
This one is a Blue Brazilian Macaw and is very pretty.
There were two other birds on
stoops and they seem to be wrestling with each other. One has the other in a head-lock. Should I count to three for the pin?
I look north along the coast and
see these building built over the water.
What a great place to sit on the deck and have a drink. I wonder if you could even build like this
now.
The bus drivers from a couple of
islands have mentioned a flowering tree where the color of the flower changes
during the day. The flower changes
colors, one color in the morning, another in the afternoon and finally an
orange color in the evening before wilting.
I think this is that flower.
I
t’s getting close to the time
that I will get on the boat for the whale watch. Then I come across Captain Bob (yes, I’m
calling him Bob) begging me to come in for a drink. Too bad I don’t have the time; a nice cold
grog would do in this heat.
This is the dock where we will
meet our catamaran for our whale watch.
While we are waiting to go out,
this “yellow submarine” was coming into the marina. The name is Reefdancer, so I figure it is a
glass bottom type of boat and allow people to view the fish on reefs without
snorkeling.
We take off for our whale watch,
but I’m not going to have those pictures in this posting. Instead I will post the whale pictures in a
separate whale watch posting, since there are quite a few pictures. Here though is the sunset behind a catamaran
that we have this evening.
The sun is half-way set behind
Lanai and you can see the streaks of sunrays under the clouds – spectacular.
The sun is now completely down
beyond the horizon. The clouds in the
distance behind the island have the golden lining seldom seen. From the beach of our hotel we have this
fantastic view.
Tomorrow we leave to return to
the mainland and home, so tonight we have to do some needed packing.