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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I\'m an opinionated, snarky, gay academic with a predilection for the history, the Arab world, languages, photography, food, and music. I live in Austin, Texas. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘vacation’



I just want to bang on de drum all day …

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

There’s always something zen about the first day back at work after vacation, which I truly came to appreciate yesterday.

I got to work slightly early (Bev was off and I never know how to judge when to leave the house if I’m not carpooling), gave out the silk leis I bought everyone, and was sitting at my computer going through copious amounts of e-mail (“Want to enlarge your un!t?”) that required no attention when the phone rang and Natalie’s extension popped up on the caller ID.

Me: “It’s too early for you to be calling.”
Her: “Tough.  We just lost the Executive Education Center.”

Backstory: every June we have a workshop, and for the past four or five years, our partner in the Business School has arranged for us to use the conference space at the Executive Education Center, which is a swank — if now slightly aging — facility.  Every time we use it, there’s a bit of a sword of Damocles situation because the EEC reserves the right to re-take the room if they want to schedule their own programming, and we’re only locked in thirty days out.  We’ve been lucky before, but this year they’re actually calling in that favor.  Although the memory that we used to actually book a backup space but got lulled into complacency did pop into my head, I decided it would probably not be good to mention it.

Essentially, that means that we had 26 paid attendees (on our way, hopefully, to another sell-out year at 40) and nowhere to house the workshop.

Me: (extremely calm) OK.  We’ll deal with it.
Natalie: I mean, what are we going to do?  We have to find another space.
Me: Yes, we do.  I’ll put my assistant on it.  We’ll work something out.
Natalie: (pause.) You’re being irritatingly calm about this.

Panicking would accomplish nothing, of course, but even I was surprised at how unfazed I was by the potential trouble.  We did, however, find an alternate space within about 45 minutes.  It’s not one we’re particuarly happy with, but, as I pointed out, does significantly reduce the possibility of needing to hold the workshop out on one of the spacious grassy malls on campus (which are not so pleasant at midday in June).

I kinda like this zen thing.  I know it won’t last very long (I give it a week, tops), but it’s nice to be the calm one for once because I’m actually calm, and not because I’m just not as big a spazz as everyone else in the room :mrgreen:

Pele’s Cold Shoulder

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Many years ago, the story goes, when it was habit for English nobility to practice primogeniture, it was the responsibility of the oldest brothers and cousins to take care of their hordes of less fortunate younger siblings and relatives by hosting them for extended stays. There was no set limit on how long one “should” stay in a particular place. Rather, one evening at dinner, the guest in question could expect to be served a slightly cold shoulder of beef. This was the polite nod from the host to the guest that it was time to leave. Hence the phrase “Giving the cold shoulder.”

In Hawaii, they have a volcano goddess who does that, and she has clearly spoken to us, and told us that it’s time to head out.

Today was our last full day here on the Big Island. We have most of the day tomorrow here — we fly back to Honolulu in the late afternoon and then back to the mainland on a late evening flight that arrives Thursday morning.

As we left our room this morning, Michael, the innkeeper of the little bed and breakfast where we’ve been staying, hurried to meet us. “I don’t know if you’ve heard the news,” he said, “but Civil Defense has issued an evacuation order for Volcano village. It’s OK, though, because the wind shifted this way for a bit and then shifted even further east, so it’s missing us and going for Hilo.” We hadn’t actually heard the news, but we’d seen the plume in the sky — watched it erupting out of the crater and even went back to see the plume glowing in the night, too. The wind had been blowing the volcanic gasses – mainly sulphur dioxide – out to sea, but the long feared inland shift had happened and now the plume had reversed to flow over the island. We’re staying maybe four miles from the eruption sight, so there’s a large swath of directions that would take the plume right over us.

Vog

Thus reassured, we set off in the rental car not toward Hilo, as we’ve done many times over, but in the opposite direction, toward Kona. Kona, on the west coast of the island, is resort central. It’s where the bigger of the two airports on Hawai’i is located, it’s got the biggest share in all the tourist brochures, and the Hard Rock Cafe (till June, when it closes because they can’t afford the rent). In short, I thought no visit to the Big Island would be complete without poking over to see what the fuss was about. I even had A Plan. We’d go over, have lunch, visit a coffee farm, hit the beach, and hit the unpronounceable Pu’uhonua O Honaunau National Historic Park on the way back. Simple plan, yes?

If only.


Off we went down Highway 11, the Hawai’i Belt Road. We stopped at the Pu’na Lu’u Black Sand Beach to walk on the black sand (it’s really black — and warm) and watch the Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle who was sunning himself on the beach and seemed in no particular hurry to get anywere (I guess that’s what happens when you live 150 years).

Sea Turtle

Then it was off down the road, around the tip of the island, and up to Kailua, the main city on the Kona Coast. It’s like Cozumel, only with more kitsch shops and less nightclubs.

Kona.
We succeeded in finding a place to have lunch, and wandered through a few souvenir shops purchasing trinkets. We keep looking at Macadamia nuts — Mauna Loa makes Milk Chocolate Toffee coated macadamia nuts that are truly orgasmic, and they’re overpriced everywhere. We check the prices routinely, but the cheapest is (so help me) at the Wal Mart in Hilo, which we’re going to hit in the time between when we have to check out of the bed and breakfast and the time that we have to be at the airport.

And then I made the mistake that turned the tide on the day.

You would think that after thirty odd years of being me, I would have learned not to utter thoughts like this one when they come out of my mouth, but I’m just not that bright, and the thought was out before I had a chance to process it.

“I’ll bet they’re cheaper at Costco,” I said.

You see, when we were on Oahu, we did at one point find ourself in Sam’s Club looking for Aloha Shirts (for the luau we went to), and since Sam’s specializes in tacky, it was a natural thought when we stumbled across it in Waikiki. We also noticed the massive quantities of Mauna Loa products they had. There’s no Sam’s on the Big Island, but there is a Costco, and it’s in the Kona area. And oddly enough, Costco is one of the points of interest pre-programmed into my GPS. Ray, whose ears perk up at the idea of shopping, especiallly when bargains are involved, said, “OK.” And off we went.

An hour later, we were pulled over to the side of the road in the rental car in a section of Kailua that people who live there probably never see (with good reason) not speaking to one another. I had yelled obscenities at the GPS, Ray had attempted to temper my irrational behavior with logic, so I yelled obscenities at him, then he yelled back — hence the silence and the fuming.

The GPS had attempted to guide us to a one-block long street in a purely residential area that did not, have a Costco. Ray called information and was connected to a place that seemed bewildered that we needed directions, and was even more bewildered as to how to give them. I plugged in those coordinates on the GPS and we went off to discover ourselves outside of a machine parts company named Cosco. (Minus the T).

I should add that the GPS doesn’t take elevation into account, so it kept taking us up and down the 1,000 foot mountain range immediately east of Kona — through a residential area, and at one point tried to steer us down someone’s driveway. Whoever fact-checked the Hawaii maps did an atrocious job.

After the silence and the fuming, we did locate the Costco (for the record, it’s on the road to the Kona airport between the airport and Kmart), although we didn’t actually go because we’d lost an hour of our day and I’d spent more on gas than we could possibly save on mac nuts. Besides, the Hilo Farmer’s Market is tomorrow, and we plan to hit it for bargain souvenirs before we leave.

Coffee
Then we went off to the coffee farm I wanted to visit. The GPS couldn’t handle that one either, and we eventually found it in spite, not because, of the GPS. (The coffee farm was in an area that lay in between two maps in our guidebook.)

At this point, we were 0 for 2, so I decided that we’d have a couple of relaxing hours on the beach. Ray later point out that this should have been remarkably easy. “It’s an island,” he said. “Drive any direction, you’ll hit beach.” You’d think so, wouldn’t you? Except on Hawai’i, most of the shores are actually rocks with no sands, which is why the beaches tend to have resorts on them.

I found a beach in the guidebook and off we went, to discover that the “beach” was the size of a sandbox, and had clearly been trucked in. I know this because there was a wall separating it from the ocean. At this point, I declared the day a wash and suggested that we head off to Pu’uhonua O Honaunau and then go home.

Pu\'uhonua O Honaunau

Pu’uhonua O Honaunau is a quiet, reflective place. By the time we got there, neither one of us were feeling quiet or refelctive, so we zipped through and left in about half an hour.

Ray and the tikis

As we were driving back, an indicator light on the dashboard of the rental car popped up. Once Ray found the owner’s manual and decoded the symbol (it was an exclamation point – how useless is that?), he announced that it signalled low tire pressure. We pulled over — when I could, which was ten minutes later, and looked at the tires. They all looked fine. We decided to stop at the next gas station to check the tire pressure.

The next gas station was in the self-proclaimed southernmost town in the US — 25 miles away. At this point, you’re out in the middle of nowhere. We pulled in to discover that their air hoses were out of order, but no longer needed a tire gauge: the rear wheel on the driver’s side was nearly flat as a pancake.

Flat tire.

So, we added a flat tire to the day’s events. We put the mini on, I tried unsuccessfully to call the rental car office to see what they wanted me to do about it, and drove off toward Volcano.

Apparently in the middle of the day, the wind shifted again. The vog–volcanic fog–was thick as we came up the mountain, and pulled into the B and B. We had dinner in the village at the Thai restaurant. Half the village must have been in there — the rest of the town is closed under a voluntary evacuation order. As of now, the sulphur dioxide levels are back to normal, but the national park is still closed.

We’re both not ready to go back to work, but today maybe helped us get ready to end our vacation.

Hilo Hai

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

We’ve moved on to the Big Island today, courtesy of Hawaiian Airlines. I was a bit nervous because of the weird arrangement through which the tickets were procured (they’re American Airlines miles used to purchase Hawaiian Airlines tickets), since I couldn’t log on to check my reservation through the Web site. As you may have heard, Aloha Airlines, one of the two main interisland carriers, ceased operations quite abruptly last Monday (there were a number of people on our flight from Houston who didn’t know, and had actually checked in with Continental expecting to connect to Aloha on arrival in Honolulu). Hawaiian has been picking up a lot of the slack, and the line at the airport in Honolulu — this being the first day that Hawaiian wasn’t giving anyone with an Aloha ticket a free ticket to fly standby — was insane. The ticket agent had a couple of raised eyebrows as she typed … and typed … and typed … into her computer, but we got on the plane with no problem.

This is all neither here nor there. We landed in Hilo at noon. Even though the forecast was for rain, rain, and more rain, it was bright and sunny and we had a stunning view of Mauna Kea as we drove downtown and immediately ran into a parade that had traffic snarled in every direction. Having just left Honolulu where my blood pressure went up just thinking about driving, this made me less than happy. However, once we battled our way to a restaurant and had lunch, the parade ended and we spent a happy hour in downtown Hilo, where the true “hang loose” spirit of Hawaii really seems to exist. We also discovered several stores that carry the same schlock that we saw in Honolulu, only here it’s much less expensive. Alo-ha!

I haven’t downloaded the pictures I shot today, so we’ll finish up with yesterday — there’s some lovely photos of hot shirtless guys in there, too :wink:

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The first thing we did yesterday was climb Diamond Head, which involves a lot of stairs. The view from the top is rewarding, however:

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Following the Diamond Head venture, we drove out to the east of Honolulu to the Hanole Blowhole (yeah, yeah … gays, blowholes, we already thought of those jokes). It’s a rock formation where the tidal pressure causes water to shoot out through the rocks a la Old Faithful. It’s pretty neat:

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Then it was off to Sandy Point Beach for a bit to sit and (in my case) burn, and watch the surf come in:

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As you can see, the surf was up … way up. Fortunately, there were some young surfers ready for the challenge (see what I mean about surfers bodies?)

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After getting exhausted watching other people surf, we went back to the hotel, and then hit downtown Honolulu for some last minute photos of landmarks, like the famous statue of Kamehameha the First:

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And, finally, on the way back toward Waikiki and re-packing, I finally got a photo of a street sign I noticed the other day. Koula was my grandmother’s name, and I never expected to see her name adorn a street … certainly not one in Hawaii.

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Anyway — if you’re feeling masochistic, here’s the whole lot of photos from yesterday’s outing (well, a sampling of them).

Random Hotness

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Third day on vacation.

Random Hotness

Man, doncha just hate it when a really hot guy walks right in front of your photo of Diamond Head? Jeez!

More photos from day 3:

Goin’ to the chapel

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Ray and Chris

It’s been one helluva week for me. In the runup to going on vacation (yes, yes, I know, I’ve mentioned it a zillion times), we had a major conference with a really disappointing turnout, and our friends Bianca and James tied the knot after 15 years of living together in untied happiness.

I was a ball of stress through most of it, and have spent the past two nights going to bed early and sleeping as late as possible. Now, with two days left, we’ve got lots of laundry to do, a house to clean, suitcases to find, etc.

Anyway, since photos of Ray and I are relatively rare (one of the downsides to being the photographer is that you rarely get to be in the photos), here we are at the church yesterday looking spiffy. It was a photo-worthy moment.

 

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