SMRT

Feb. 6th, 2007 11:10 am
escapewindow: escape window (raptor)

The US wants the world's scientists to develop technology to block sunlight as a last-ditch way to halt global warming.

Phew! And here I thought our brilliant idea would involve nuking the fuck out of the Middle East when it's facing the sun, and hopefully the combination of pushing us further out in our orbit and nuclear winter would cool us down a bit. And we could give Halliburton a contract to deal with the cleanup afterwards. Shweet.

But why would we nuke our oil supply? Maybe concussive neutron bombs would work.

In other news, I don't know what my parents do to get this stylish lowest-quality jpeg look. But here are a few more pics from Hawai'i, with people in them.


hiro & me

+3 )

feral kitty

Jan. 2nd, 2007 03:40 pm
escapewindow: escape window (escape(window) typewriter)

I could just title this "nearly 200 photos of the ocean".


The Hilton little-Disney compound.
More night shots from Monday here.


On Wednesday, we drove a mile off the main highway down a small twisty road to Laupahoehoe Point, which was gorgeous: roaring surf crashing against black lava rocks and manmade concrete barriers; the lush green of the land juxtaposed against the tropical blue waters.
More here.


On Friday, we went to Kana'a Beach to see Maui from a distance... clouds blocked our view from the beach but we saw it from the highway.
A feral kitty lurked in the rocks...
More here.

The entirety of my Hawai'i pics are here... meaning I'll move on and post about other stuff now ;-)

escapewindow: escape window (Default)

On Thursday, we were split about the drive up Mauna Kea, and it wasn't as much of a must-do for me as photographing the lava flows. So we went snorkeling again, this time at Anaeho'omalu beach, which was within walking distance of our hotel.

Afterwards the parents drove back, while Hiro and I walked a bit with our cameras, waiting for sunset. I photographed a sailboat and the sunset; Hiro also took pics of me taking pictures.

tree
Damn sunspot/fingerprint smudge.
If only they made some sort of software in which you could edit digital photographs. =P
Guess I'm feeling lazy.

palms
I think I had my polarized filter on for these last two.

sunset and sailboat
Been a long time since I've been sailing.

More here.

lava

Dec. 31st, 2006 08:18 pm
escapewindow: escape window (xray)

On Monday, our petroglyph guide recommended we hike to the lava flows in late afternoon, arriving around sunset so we could see the lava glowing orange, then hiking back in the dark. That sounded perfect to me.

On Wednesday, we made the drive around to the other side of the island to the Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park.

I ended up hiking most of the way alone, since my brother and mother had stayed at the hotel due to exhaustion and my father wasn't up for the treacherous terrain so soon after chemo. In a way, I was glad he decided to turn around, since I was worried for him, his balance, his general energy level.

It was three, three and a half miles one way. The first leg was paved, then reflective markers every few feet across large lava rocks. Then the markers stopped and we were guided by six plastic posts with blinking lights, spaced a third of a mile apart. These often disappeared from view until I made my way back to high ground and stopped to scan the horizon.

I tried not to think too much about how lava caves formed and how the tops of seemingly solid lava rocks would sometimes collapse.

I made my way to the rope barrier with time to kill before sunset. I ate my onigiri, took some photos, and waited. As more and more people arrived and ignored the rope barrier, and as I noted how my view was nowhere near as good as it could be, I, too, decided to disregard the "The rocks beyond this point could slide into the ocean without warning at any point" signs and made my way past the rope for a better view. We watched lava hit the water: huge clouds of steam; sometimes lava would spray high in the air as a particularly big wave hit.

This was one of the two times I wished for a stronger zoom in Hawai'i, but for the most part I'm in love with my new lens.

The hike back was difficult. My mind was no longer on collapsing rock; I was just concentrating on not tripping, not stepping into a crevasse. And yet I figure this wasn't the most dangerous photo walk I've taken ;-)

lava
more here.

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