We visited the PCC and Waimea Valley with Chuck and Elaine and Stephanie. New flowers and plants, and some shopping. We found a colorful eucalyptus tree trunk and jade vine flowers 40 feet up in a tree. Have you ever seen a flower this aqua color? The center is purple!
Monday, April 20, 2009
Spring
We visited the PCC and Waimea Valley with Chuck and Elaine and Stephanie. New flowers and plants, and some shopping. We found a colorful eucalyptus tree trunk and jade vine flowers 40 feet up in a tree. Have you ever seen a flower this aqua color? The center is purple!
More Kapa
Here's Dalani--on the left--with a kapa. She teaches early monring seminary
Week 2: we trimmed and sanded bamboo sticks to carve a stamp design for decorating the kapa. Greg did some lovely curvies representing humpback whales breaching. I did a boring triangle, calling it shark teeth. We all enjoy the friendly talk during class. Andrew comes. Now Greg is no longer the only male. Dalani’s daughter is at the hospital dialated to 6 in labor with grand daughter 2. The first grand daughter only stayed 5 minutes, so Dalani is very excited.
Dalani’s grand daughter is 6 pounds (Samoan babies are twice that weight), but she’s perfect and really cute. Dalani is sacrificing her baby time to come to class. Baby is named Bailey, after her gggg grandfather missionary who came to Hawaii. He was the only one who married a Hawaiian. He built a girls school. The others simply intermarried the white missionaries. Their names are Castle, Cook, and Dole. Recognize those names? They got away with huge tracts of land in Hawaii while native Hawaiians wait for a small plot of homestead land to put a modest home on.
Linda
Linda
Hawaiian Kapa Making Class from Dalani
Dalani has recreated kapa making using only the tools and finished kapa pieces left behind by her ancestors. She teaches our class at Leeward Community College from 6-9pm each Thurs. eve.
Six of us in the class. We are all teachers. Hawaii has 10% LDS, and we find that all but 1 student are LDS. And the teacher is too. Greg has her beautiful daughter in law in his lit. class at BYUH.
The first evening Dalani unloaded an 8 ft tree (wauke trees) and a large river stone for each of us. We sat on mats outdoors as she showed us finished kapas and hardwood pounding tools. The Hawaiians sit Indian style neatly. Greg and I rudely stretch a leg or two our straight. Then she set us to work. We scraped the dark bark off our trees with the edge of a large round shell. Then we sliced the inner bark from top to bottom with a shark-tooth knife and peeled the pliable 3/8 inch thick inner white bark away from the center core of the tree. We threw away the inner core, accordion folded the inner bark, placed it on a river stone, and pounded it to break down fibers. When class ended, we put our kapa into a large Ziploc bag labeled for each student. (There’s no way I can exchange Greg’s perfect intact piece for mine with shredded half length.) Dalani took the bags home, added water, and set them in the sun to ferment nicely.
Linda
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Last Week
Last week was my birthday and my sister, Kelly, visited. We had fun eating the local treats, going to the farmer's market at Sunset Beach, and seeing the ambiguous middle-aged guy from "Lost" at the 7-11 when we were loading up on steamed buns.