Saturday, March 1, 2014

Oahu - VRBO for 5 nights at the "quiet" end of Waikiki

Celebrating Louie's retirement from full-time work with a return to Hawaii after five years, we started with five nights at a Vacation Rentals By Owner (VRBO) studio on the far east side of Waikiki overlooking Diamond Head, the Honolulu zoo, and the quieter part of the famous beach.

Diamond Head in the morning as seen from our balcony


Louie at Waikiki Beach at dusk

Entrance to the small, but sweet, Honolulu Zoo
Entrance to Honolulu Museum of Art

Scottie at the zoo






















One of several lovely courtyards at the museum

Sunset views from our balcony


Oahu - Sharing Our Oahu Favorites with My Sister

Louie and I traded one of our timeshare weeks for one at Ko Olina. About 20 miles west of Honolulu, it sits along the quieter side of Oahu. My sister, Nancy Kay, joined us. It was a perfect vacation, especially because we escaped harsh winter weather in DC and Charlotte.

Kay arrives at HNL

















Our balcony (lanai) at Ko Olina














View from our lanai at Ko Olina
The end of the road on the leeward side of Oahu



Note the person standing on the cliff watching the waves crashing. Stunning!



Polynesian Cultural Center demos and luau












Bishop Museum in Honolulu

http://www.bishopmuseum.org/

Fabulous shell leis from Niihau, traditional hula, scale models of the canoes Polynesians used to move to Hawaii




Visit with our friend, Evelyn Wight

Evelyn Wight, a long-time friend and former colleague of Louie's, now lives on Oahu and works for the Nature Conservancy. She graciously showed us special parts of the island we'd be unlikely to see on our own. In the process we learned a lot about the ecosystems of Hawaii, native and invasive species of plants & animals, and restoration efforts... all just fascinating.


Byodo-in Temple (1968)




Kaneohe Bay & Beach






Molokai Day Trip from Honolulu to Visit St. Damien's Mission to the Hansen's Disease Colony

In the fall of 1969 Mom and Dad (Dorothy and Ralph Cochrane) visited Hawaii, Fiji, American Samoa, Australia, and New Zealand.

Mom came home with thrilling tales of their stop at Kalaupapa, Molokai, to visit the remote Hawaiian colony for patients with Hansen's Disease (commonly called leprosy) founded by the king in 1866 as an isolation site for sufferers of the disease, which was considered highly contagious. With the discovery of Sulfa drugs in the mid-20th century, the number of leprosy patients, medical staff, and resident families started a slow, steady decline.

Most of all Mom told us about a 19th century Belgian priest, Joseph de Veuster (Father Damien, who was declared a Saint in 2009). He came to Molokai in 1873 after nine years as a missionary in Honolulu to serve the leprosy patients. Eventually, he contracted the disease, and died on Molokai in 1889.

In 1980, eleven years after our parents' visit, President Jimmy Carter signed the law creating the Kalaupapa National Historical Park. Administered by the National Park Service, the mission is to protect the surviving patients/residents and halt potential development, at least so long as the patients and their children who grew up here survive. That population is now fewer than 20 people, all in their 70s and 80s. Once the last resident dies, the fate of the park is in doubt. Given that this is one of the last truly undeveloped and unspoiled places in Hawaii, we and others are contacting our representatives in Congress, as well as Hawaiian authorities, to urge its preservation.  

Kay, Louie, and I embraced the idea of taking a day trip from Honolulu...here are the photos to prove it... It was a highlight of this trip and of our time together reliving something our parents did 45 years ago.


Striking off on Makani Kai Air for the 30-minute flight

Reminds Kay and me of our childhood flying with Dad in his small plane

Lighthouse near the  "Kalaupapa International Airport," Molokai

Kalaupapa from the air...the cliff to "topside" Molokai is 2,000 feet.
Some visitors ride mules or walk down from topside. We preferred to fly in!
Waiting for our local guide and resident, Norman, to arrive in his old yellow school bus
Kalaupapa harbor
St. Philomena Church in Kalawao (built by Father Damien)
It's the site of the original colony established in 1866 a few miles from Kalaupapa.
Residents eventually moved to the other side of the peninsula to take advantage of the drier climate and more accessible harbor.
Cemetery where Father Damien was originally buried. The grave stone survives (the dark cross), but his remains, except his right hand, were sent back to Belgium decades later at that government's request.


Time to return to Oahu...the short runway ends very close to rather spectacular waves!
Topside Molokai from the air

Molokai is sparsely inhabited.































Honolulu's Punchbown Crater National Cemetery

View of downtown Honolulu

Honolulu harbor where cruise ships dock


Landing at Makani Kai Air's runway adjacent to the main Honolulu airport