4/2/10

Beach Day

This is our last day on the island. I have some stray pictures to put up when I get home. We're beginning to feel Kauai is like a second home for us. We've stayed at the same resort four times since 2003. We even looked at some condos. I don't know how that would work for me, without having any of my own garden space. We're years away from buying anything here, if ever, so the concern is not immediate. I often feel a kind of tropical over-load when we're here for a week, but I'm not really having that now. In fact, I feel like gardening.

Anyway, yesterday was a beach day. We went to Molokea just south of Kilauea (the town in Kauai, not the volcano on the Big Island) looking for tidepools. We weren't the only people there, but we were close to being the only people there.

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai

Mokolea, Kauai
Mokolea, Kauai

This beach was too rocky and rough for my meager swimming skills. I spent most of my beach time in the shallow waters off Kapa’a, rarely going out farther than I could stand up if I needed to--a meaningless insurance policy, I know how unpredictable the ocean can be. Still, no harm has come to me.

4/1/10

Na 'Δ€ina Kai Botanical Garden

We saw many nice things in this garden, but I am not prepared to deliver any kind of organized presentation. If you have specific questions, I might be able to help you in the comments. Otherwise, please visit the garden's website.

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I'm always quite enchanted by "vines" on trees. At home I have climbing Rosa 'Moonlight' in my Ceanothus and passionvines in my Tibouchina. Of course this look, with Philodendron, wouldn't work in San Francisco.

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It already seems like we have every manner of palm in the Bay Area (the palm map takes a few minutes to fully load), but I suppose we aren't quite there yet.

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I also enjoyed touring this garden's extensive hardwood plantation.

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Topping the trees thickens the trunks.

Casuarina, in the hardwood plantation

chameleon

Apparently, this baby albatross hangs out in this spot all day long, waiting for his parents to get home from work, hundreds of miles away, quite indifferent to all the human visitors passing by. I used my camera to zoom in, of course.

Albatross baby

Solandra maxima. Rarely seen in San Francisco but this woody climbs redwoods and eucalyptus in Golden Gate Park. (More common seen in Southern California where it's a-not-too-uncommon landscaping plant.)

Solandra maxima

Cotton. California grows enormous quantities of cotton. Ridiculous! Agriculture claims most of the state's water (subsidized, of course) while the rest of us live in perpetual drought.

Cotton

Cotton

Cotton

Cotton is a mallow, in case you didn't know.

Cotton

I had no idea there was another Monstera besides M. deliciosa. This is M. acuminata. I think it's kinda creepy.

Monstera acuminata.

I wish I'd taken more (better) pictures of it.

Monstera acuminata

Strongylodon macrobotrys. I think the Logees catalog is the closest I've ever gotten to this plant before now. The vine covered the entire swing-gazebo, but there were only a few flowers.

Strongylodon macrobotrys

I'm not sure what this vine is but it had as much flower as leaf.

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From the other side, with flash.

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The only plant I really want: Plectranthus ambonicus. A succulent-leafed, extremely fragrant oregano. Not a great looker, but I WANT SOME.

Plectranthus ambonicus