Saturday, July 10, 2010

Hell's Gates

I am back in Australia
for a few weeks
attending to chores...
it is wintry
but a good walk today
warmed me up...




Hell's Gates



My walk around the headland
each afternoon
takes me out to Hell's Gates
Here my friend says 
she has seen turtles
I think she confuses the black rocks
beneath the water
for turtle shells...



But wait
is that middle rock moving



Yes it is...
These turtles are Loggerheads
of which there are only 500 nesting females
in Australia



But here comes a set
of huge rolling waves



that crash through Hell's Gates



right up to the abyss


and another wave
rushes in



swirling the sand



and any little turtles



as I walk back
towards the shelter of the bay



The skies redden



and make me think



that on leaving Hell's Gates


I am passing through
Heaven's portals



*

Friday, July 2, 2010

Long Summer Days


*






















Long the summer days
patterns on the ocean sand
our idle footprints


Shiki







Sanderlings on Hanalei Bay, Kauai


*

Thursday, June 24, 2010

The Queen's Bath

Just around the corner
from where I am living 
in Princeville Kauai
is a steep path
that descends to the ocean
Daily dozens of car loads of tourists
come to bathe
in the Queen's Bath



Curious, I thought it was time
I took a look at the Queen's bath
so early one morning
I made my way 
down the red dirt track



passing little waterfalls
tumbling over lava rock boulders



that made their way into small pools
but hardly what you would call
a regal bath



and finally emerging at the ocean



mindful of the fact
that it was almost a year to the day
that I broke my left ankle



I decided not to clamber over 
the rugged lava rock
in search of royal ablutions



but it appears that in the past
others have taken 
greater risks than me



so I returned up the pathway



under the pandanus trees


and following the call 
of little brown birds
I walked along the bluff
above the ocean
hoping I could see what it was 
that enticed the holiday makers
down onto the hot black rocks



I could not see much 
other than the brown nameless birds



and the plainer coloured females



and then I noticed that I was in 
Wedge-tailed Shearwater territory



I skirted a patch of cactus


and almost fell down a hole



the Shearwaters nest in burrows
up to two feet long
that the birds make
in the cliff top
They are a dusky brown bird
with white breast feathers, 
thin wings, a hooked bill
and wedge shaped tail



They lay a single egg in June 
and take turns at incubation stints
The father does the honours first 
while the mother goes to sea to fish
for about 10 days at a time



Hawaii Information Image

The chick hatches after 50 days
and initially is fed stomach oil then solids
At 3.5 months the parents stop feeding the chick
For two weeks they go without food
testing their wings and learning to fly
When they have all their adult feathers they fledge
and go off to to sea
to find their own food



the neighbourhood dogs are a problem
in this colony
The birds cannot stand upright on their legs
and have difficulty moving about on land

The Hawaiian name 
for the Wedge-tailed Shearwater is ua'u kani
which means calling or moaning sea bird/petrel
due to their long oooo-errr call



I cautiously return to the ascending path
grateful that it is a dry day
and the red dirt is not slippery clay-mud



through the jungle


and home


No, this is not my house
but I love the gardens...

and proceeded to look up Mr Google
for pictures of the Queen's Bath



which does look rather enticing 
on a calm day


but the sea is unpredictable




and the waves 
can come crashing through

I think I'll do my swimming
in the safety of Hanalei Bay


*

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Of Birds and Beauty...


The first week we lived
in our new neighbourhood
I heard the happy shouts 
and squeals of children
playing in the streets 
and empty blocks around

And then one evening before sunset
I saw the cockatoo
from where all the raucous calling came...



I went out to talk to him
as he sat in a palm tree
in my yard

and he grabbed 
a couple of leaves of the palm
and swung around upside down...




twirling...



spinning...
like a trapeze artist in a circus



what a show off you are Mr Cocky

He belongs to a family close by
and has frequent sorties
about the neighbourhood




This beautiful Plumeria in my yard



begins as a red bud



and as it unfurls the red
seems to appear 
on one side of the petal only



what a beauty...




this one is a soft pinky whitewhen unfurled




but the simple yellow centred plumeriaremains my favourite  *