As I’ve mentioned in previous posts, we aren’t fans of cruise ship organized tours. We’ve taken a few but prefer to ‘do our homework’ prior to a trip and set out to explore a port of call on our own.
That is why our first stop in Pape'ete, Tahiti was its "Le Marche". We'd arrived on an early morning in October, the first of three stops in French Polynesia on board the Celebrity Solstice.
Shortly after docking, we set off on foot to find the town’s public market, Le Marche, as part of our own walking tour; one that filled our morning hours. The afternoon was spent on a bus tour – that we booked independently on shore – and we rounded out our day with a fabulous meal on shore before returning for our 9 p.m. departure. (the dinner I told you about a few weeks ago.)
We wandered the market’s aisles first north and south, then east and west; upstairs and downstairs. There was no doubt, it was a 'real' market for locals – not one filled with tourist trinkets and souvenirs as evidenced by the products for sale.
From vegetables. . .
To fruit. . .
And fish. . .the market was alive with color and smells. It was just the first of many sensory overloads we were to experience in the South Pacific.
But the sight that made my heart skip a beat, was the overwhelming flower displays. . .those tropical stems that can cost $10 or more each back home in the States. . .
The towering bouquets above could be had for 2,500 French Polynesian Francs, about $29US.
Fragrant, colorful bursts. . .
Flowers, flowers everywhere. . .including halos for the hair. Again, this wasn’t just for tourists (although a few halos were later spotted on ladies from the ship). One of the prettiest sights in these tropical islands were the flowers being worn in the hair of local ladies – young and old.
We have more Tahitian tales for you and those will come in future posts. Remember that local tour I told you we booked on our own? Well this was the vehicle in which we rode. . .but that story is also for another time. . .
If You Go:
Le Marche is said to be the island's oldest surviving institution. It is located in the heart of the city, a few short blocks from the port. It is open Monday to Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sundays until 9 a.m. (a busy time there when families stock up for their Sunday meals).
We are linking up today at Budget Travelers Sandbox for Travel Photo Thursday
and with Travel Photo Discovery on Monday
and Sweet Shot Tuesday .
If you like our travels and want to see more photos, start following us on Instagram.
And please don't forget to come back here - soon!
Until then ~ Happy Travels ~ Joel and Jackie
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Bookin’ it to the Beach: Novel Destinations
Winter – whether you spend it basking on a beach or snuggled up in an easy chair by a fireplace – is one of the best times of year to escape to a ‘novel’ destination. I wrote this post while still back in the Pacific Northwest and used a photo taken last year in Hawaii at its start. Good thing I did as we've had very little beach time in Hawaii this year - wet and wild weather, the norm the last couple of weeks, as I told you in the previous post - has kept us inside for much of the time. All the more reason to have stuffed the suitcases with some good books!
Some of our favorite destinations are reached by simply turning a page. So, let me tell you about some of the 'novel' places we’ve been in recent months:
New Zealand:
We traveled to New Zealand aboard the Celebrity Solstice last fall and then I returned via “The Bone People” by Keri Hulme, a Maori who grew up in Christchurch and Moeraki.
This Booker Prize-winning novel was published in 1983 and I first read it more than a dozen years ago and will likely read it again and again. Part mystery, part love story, this contemporary novel highlights the relationship of three central characters as well as the Maori and European cultures in New Zealand.
Italy
“Beautiful Ruins,” was written over a 15-year period according to its Spokane, Washington author, Jess Walter. And the work he put into it is evident as you travel between places and times, fiction and reality.
This is, flat-out, a love story with unexpected twists and turns some of which take readers from mid-century Italy’s Cinque Terre to modern-day California, Northern Idaho and back to Italy. Walter moves the reader forward and backward in time, his smooth transitions between times and places made this one of those books you didn’t want to put down.
Seattle, Washington
Jamie Ford’s “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet,” was my favorite read of the summer. Another love story; this one set in the heart of Seattle’s Japanese/Chinatown – The Panama Hotel --during World War II.
Regulars to TravelnWrite will recall I wrote about the hotel following my first visit there. Click here for that post. I’ve since been back to the TeaRoom/CoffeeShop and recommend it as a 'must visit' if your travels take you to Seattle and reading this book is a definite must whether you ever visit or not.
Greece
TravelnWrite regulars also know of our love of Greece, so anything written about that country, is a popular read at our house.
This book, written by British journalist Marjory McGinn, with a groaner of a title, “Things Can Only Get Feta”, is non-fiction, but an easy and entertaining read about her first-hand experiences living in Greece as an ex-pat. She and her partner and dog had a three year adventure living in the southern Peloponnese . . .one of our favorite places.
For you blog readers and writers out there, she also writes a blog, www.bigfatgreekodyssey.com
And some of our 'novel' destination travels we are taking while in Hawaii this month include:
Cutting for Stone, by Abraham Verghese, a professor at Stanford University’s School of Medicine, opens in mid-century Ethiopia and follows the story of two brothers coming of age as the country hovers on the brink of revolution.
This book came recommended by many who told me it was the best book they had read – I had a hard time getting into it (too much medical detail for my taste) but once I got past the medical jargon, it really was hard to put down.
The Scout has been reading “Lost Luggage”, by Jordi Punti, the story of four brothers living throughout Europe who share the same father and don’t know that until . . .
(You’ve got to read the book to find out, just as we will). This is the first novel by Punti and it has already been translated into 15 languages and is the winner of the Spanish National Critics Prize and the Catalan Booksellers Prize. I will be heading to it next!
And who can go to Hawaii and not read a Charlie Chan Mystery? I am currently re-reading “The House Without a Key” by Earl Derr Biggers because it is set in Honolulu and features our favorite detective, Charlie Chan. I am loving it as much as the first time I read it when it was republished in 2008.
“The Potato Factory” by Bryce Courtenay, is set in the 1800’s with the first half of the novel in London and the second half in Australia – following the lives of characters who arrived at ‘the fatal shore”.
And this is the one that got away; well, it didn't arrive before we left. The books by this author get rave reviews -- this one was recommended by an acquaintance from Sydney -- but the only negative seems to be how difficult it is to get them in the United States. This one shipped in early January but had a delivery date range of three weeks! It didn't make it before we left. This book is the first of a three-book trilogy, . . .they need to get some copies here!!
So what reading recommendations do you have for us? Leave a comment below if you are reading the blog or send us an email if you receive the posts in your inbox. . .we’d love to hear where you’ve been traveling via the written word!
And note: I am putting all of these on the Amazon wheel found on the lower right corner of our home page. Click here for the link. The FCC* requires that I tell you if you click on it and purchase a book, we get a few pennies from the sale. (In full disclosure: I must tell you that I've had books on that wheel for nearly three years and I have yet to receive the minimum check of $10 . . .so much for salesmanship!! (*yes, bloggers are regulated by the FCC. . .)
Beach at the Outrigger Canoe Club - Honolulu, Hawaii |
New Zealand:
Bay of Islands - New Zealand |
We traveled to New Zealand aboard the Celebrity Solstice last fall and then I returned via “The Bone People” by Keri Hulme, a Maori who grew up in Christchurch and Moeraki.
This Booker Prize-winning novel was published in 1983 and I first read it more than a dozen years ago and will likely read it again and again. Part mystery, part love story, this contemporary novel highlights the relationship of three central characters as well as the Maori and European cultures in New Zealand.
Italy
Tuscany, Italy |
This is, flat-out, a love story with unexpected twists and turns some of which take readers from mid-century Italy’s Cinque Terre to modern-day California, Northern Idaho and back to Italy. Walter moves the reader forward and backward in time, his smooth transitions between times and places made this one of those books you didn’t want to put down.
Seattle, Washington
Panama Hotel lobby - Seattle, Washington |
Regulars to TravelnWrite will recall I wrote about the hotel following my first visit there. Click here for that post. I’ve since been back to the TeaRoom/CoffeeShop and recommend it as a 'must visit' if your travels take you to Seattle and reading this book is a definite must whether you ever visit or not.
Greece
View overlooking The Mani - Peloponnese, Greece |
This book, written by British journalist Marjory McGinn, with a groaner of a title, “Things Can Only Get Feta”, is non-fiction, but an easy and entertaining read about her first-hand experiences living in Greece as an ex-pat. She and her partner and dog had a three year adventure living in the southern Peloponnese . . .one of our favorite places.
For you blog readers and writers out there, she also writes a blog, www.bigfatgreekodyssey.com
And some of our 'novel' destination travels we are taking while in Hawaii this month include:
Cutting for Stone, by Abraham Verghese, a professor at Stanford University’s School of Medicine, opens in mid-century Ethiopia and follows the story of two brothers coming of age as the country hovers on the brink of revolution.
This book came recommended by many who told me it was the best book they had read – I had a hard time getting into it (too much medical detail for my taste) but once I got past the medical jargon, it really was hard to put down.
The Scout has been reading “Lost Luggage”, by Jordi Punti, the story of four brothers living throughout Europe who share the same father and don’t know that until . . .
(You’ve got to read the book to find out, just as we will). This is the first novel by Punti and it has already been translated into 15 languages and is the winner of the Spanish National Critics Prize and the Catalan Booksellers Prize. I will be heading to it next!
And who can go to Hawaii and not read a Charlie Chan Mystery? I am currently re-reading “The House Without a Key” by Earl Derr Biggers because it is set in Honolulu and features our favorite detective, Charlie Chan. I am loving it as much as the first time I read it when it was republished in 2008.
“The Potato Factory” by Bryce Courtenay, is set in the 1800’s with the first half of the novel in London and the second half in Australia – following the lives of characters who arrived at ‘the fatal shore”.
And this is the one that got away; well, it didn't arrive before we left. The books by this author get rave reviews -- this one was recommended by an acquaintance from Sydney -- but the only negative seems to be how difficult it is to get them in the United States. This one shipped in early January but had a delivery date range of three weeks! It didn't make it before we left. This book is the first of a three-book trilogy, . . .they need to get some copies here!!
So what reading recommendations do you have for us? Leave a comment below if you are reading the blog or send us an email if you receive the posts in your inbox. . .we’d love to hear where you’ve been traveling via the written word!
And note: I am putting all of these on the Amazon wheel found on the lower right corner of our home page. Click here for the link. The FCC* requires that I tell you if you click on it and purchase a book, we get a few pennies from the sale. (In full disclosure: I must tell you that I've had books on that wheel for nearly three years and I have yet to receive the minimum check of $10 . . .so much for salesmanship!! (*yes, bloggers are regulated by the FCC. . .)
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Wet and Wild in Hawaii
That would be the weather to which this title refers, not Hula Babe and Beach Boy.
Our time here began 10 days ago in a picture-postcard setting; the type for which Hawaii is known. . .
. . . Mai Tai weather . . . . with tropical breezes, blue sky and plenty of sun. These shots were taken during an outing we took along the coast to Ka’ena Beach Park at the tip of the western side of O’ahu.
Within a couple days of our arrival came the first ‘weather front’ – a storm strong enough to close the beaches on the island because of the dangerous high waves. A tourist was killed while golfing when a tree branch was blown down. A half dozen homes lost their roofs.
That tropical sunshine went into hiding behind heavy dark clouds; being fickle and peeking out for a brief ‘sunset’ one day. So this week’s photos show you O’ahu when it isn’t postcard perfect – on the other hand, when it sure is interesting:
Our second outing was a Sunday drive under gray skies – the kind of skies we have in the Pacific Northwest . We passed Aloha Stadium an hour before kickoff for the Pro Bowl – I snapped the photo above between swipes of the windshield wipers.
Those gentle Hawaiian tropical breezes have gusted throughout the week, sending sand and leaves flying. Grounds crews at Ko Olina, where we are, have been kept busy cleaning up fallen leaves and blowing sand that has covered the grassy areas.
And the sea gods really threw a hissy fit this past week, tossing enormous waves at the shore– some the largest they’ve seen in 20 - 30 years.
We are reminded that while you can control many things about travel, Mother Nature still calls the shots on the weather. The photo on the left was taken a week ago, the photo on the right this Tuesday. Admittedly we aren’t suffering freezing temperatures like the mid-western United States nor fighting snow in Atlanta, but we are having a rather unusual, wet and wild time in Hawaii.
Gotta run. . .the sun’s finally out and the surf is finally down. . .just sprinkles and some wind. Time to get some rays. . .Hope you’ll return here soon. . .
Linking up this week:
Travel Photo Thursday at Budget Travelers Sandbox
Travel Photo Discovery on Monday
Our time here began 10 days ago in a picture-postcard setting; the type for which Hawaii is known. . .
. . . Mai Tai weather . . . . with tropical breezes, blue sky and plenty of sun. These shots were taken during an outing we took along the coast to Ka’ena Beach Park at the tip of the western side of O’ahu.
Within a couple days of our arrival came the first ‘weather front’ – a storm strong enough to close the beaches on the island because of the dangerous high waves. A tourist was killed while golfing when a tree branch was blown down. A half dozen homes lost their roofs.
That tropical sunshine went into hiding behind heavy dark clouds; being fickle and peeking out for a brief ‘sunset’ one day. So this week’s photos show you O’ahu when it isn’t postcard perfect – on the other hand, when it sure is interesting:
Our second outing was a Sunday drive under gray skies – the kind of skies we have in the Pacific Northwest . We passed Aloha Stadium an hour before kickoff for the Pro Bowl – I snapped the photo above between swipes of the windshield wipers.
Those gentle Hawaiian tropical breezes have gusted throughout the week, sending sand and leaves flying. Grounds crews at Ko Olina, where we are, have been kept busy cleaning up fallen leaves and blowing sand that has covered the grassy areas.
And the sea gods really threw a hissy fit this past week, tossing enormous waves at the shore– some the largest they’ve seen in 20 - 30 years.
These photos were taken on the day after ‘the front’s’ arrival – yet the waves still pounded the shore with a deafening rhythm.
We are reminded that while you can control many things about travel, Mother Nature still calls the shots on the weather. The photo on the left was taken a week ago, the photo on the right this Tuesday. Admittedly we aren’t suffering freezing temperatures like the mid-western United States nor fighting snow in Atlanta, but we are having a rather unusual, wet and wild time in Hawaii.
Gotta run. . .the sun’s finally out and the surf is finally down. . .just sprinkles and some wind. Time to get some rays. . .Hope you’ll return here soon. . .
Linking up this week:
Travel Photo Thursday at Budget Travelers Sandbox
Travel Photo Discovery on Monday
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Hawaii: Tales from the Hale. . .
Hale ~ ‘home’ in Hawaiian.
A week has passed already and we are settled in to our Hawaiian lifestyle. We went from replacing a driveway and tree trimming at our Pacific Northwest home two weeks ago, to our carefree (no home improvement projects) lifestyle in a high-rise condo where our view of the Pacific Ocean reaches the far horizon.
I’ve written several times about our timeshares – or as we think of them, 'second homes' – in Arizona and Hawaii. I've told you how we’ve extended our stays by purchasing and using two-bedroom ‘lock-off’ units. Lock-off, as the name implies, means we lock off one side, and use each of the two sides consecutively: two weeks for the price of one!
I’ve written about living in ‘the big house’ side before, so this time I wanted to give you a tour of our first week 'hale' at Ko Olina in ‘the lock-off’ or small side -- an over-sized hotel room with small balcony and kitchenette.
I’ve jokingly called it a ‘glamping’ (glorified camping) because you need to be a bit imaginative when menu planning and shopping to stock up a tiny kitchen; although it probably is as big as many in Paris apartments. It is definitely small compared to the big side.
The week in the small side is always a good excuse, . . .ahem. . ., reason, to visit the many Happy Hours that are within an easy walk of home.
But we also eat most of our meals in; dining on that table in our nest-like balcony. The small in-room microwave and the communal barbeques simplify the task.
In fact, gathering at the bank of bbq’s is one of our favorite features of this lifestyle. We’ve met fellow owners as well as those who’ve just come for a visit -- and they come from all over the world.
The Scout, aka Beach Boy, in the photo above is visiting with a friend from Gig Harbor and fellow Ko Olina owner while the two sip wine and cook our dinners.
The room is 360-square-feet with the balcony adding another 18-square-feet. In reality, it’s plenty of room for two people who spend most of their waking hours outdoors at the beach, pool, gym or off exploring.
You do need to improvise at times. . .for instance that is my beach bag, shoes and a box of papayas (from Costco!) sharing a bit of storage space. I photographed the door because it is the link to the full-side condominium -- had we booked the whole unit for a single week it would have been open.
Yesterday we moved into the large side -- ‘the Big House’ as we owners call them --which is home for the next three weeks. . .I am in the real den, The Scout’s in the living room, we’ve been to the gym, I’ve done laundry, and tonight we are dining at home – we’ve got a couple big steaks to grill.
Last night, a woman clad in a swimsuit, and riding the elevator as we headed back to the room with our grilled Mahi Mahi and roasted corn on the cob exclaimed, “Oh! You actually cook on vacation??!!” I almost replied, “No we are cooking at home tonight.”
That’s it for this weekend. I know I promised some ‘novel destinations’ but those will come soon. We’ve had to get settled into our island lifestyle first. Mahalo, or thanks, for visiting today. Hope you’ll be back often!
If You Go:
Ko Olina is a planned development on O’ahu’s West (Ewa) Coast, about 20 minutes from Honolulu International Airport; the nearest city is Kapolei.
A week has passed already and we are settled in to our Hawaiian lifestyle. We went from replacing a driveway and tree trimming at our Pacific Northwest home two weeks ago, to our carefree (no home improvement projects) lifestyle in a high-rise condo where our view of the Pacific Ocean reaches the far horizon.
I’ve written several times about our timeshares – or as we think of them, 'second homes' – in Arizona and Hawaii. I've told you how we’ve extended our stays by purchasing and using two-bedroom ‘lock-off’ units. Lock-off, as the name implies, means we lock off one side, and use each of the two sides consecutively: two weeks for the price of one!
I’ve written about living in ‘the big house’ side before, so this time I wanted to give you a tour of our first week 'hale' at Ko Olina in ‘the lock-off’ or small side -- an over-sized hotel room with small balcony and kitchenette.
I’ve jokingly called it a ‘glamping’ (glorified camping) because you need to be a bit imaginative when menu planning and shopping to stock up a tiny kitchen; although it probably is as big as many in Paris apartments. It is definitely small compared to the big side.
The week in the small side is always a good excuse, . . .ahem. . ., reason, to visit the many Happy Hours that are within an easy walk of home.
But we also eat most of our meals in; dining on that table in our nest-like balcony. The small in-room microwave and the communal barbeques simplify the task.
In fact, gathering at the bank of bbq’s is one of our favorite features of this lifestyle. We’ve met fellow owners as well as those who’ve just come for a visit -- and they come from all over the world.
The Scout, aka Beach Boy, in the photo above is visiting with a friend from Gig Harbor and fellow Ko Olina owner while the two sip wine and cook our dinners.
The room is 360-square-feet with the balcony adding another 18-square-feet. In reality, it’s plenty of room for two people who spend most of their waking hours outdoors at the beach, pool, gym or off exploring.
You do need to improvise at times. . .for instance that is my beach bag, shoes and a box of papayas (from Costco!) sharing a bit of storage space. I photographed the door because it is the link to the full-side condominium -- had we booked the whole unit for a single week it would have been open.
Marriott Vacation Club - KoOlina, O'ahu |
Last night, a woman clad in a swimsuit, and riding the elevator as we headed back to the room with our grilled Mahi Mahi and roasted corn on the cob exclaimed, “Oh! You actually cook on vacation??!!” I almost replied, “No we are cooking at home tonight.”
That’s it for this weekend. I know I promised some ‘novel destinations’ but those will come soon. We’ve had to get settled into our island lifestyle first. Mahalo, or thanks, for visiting today. Hope you’ll be back often!
If You Go:
Ko Olina is a planned development on O’ahu’s West (Ewa) Coast, about 20 minutes from Honolulu International Airport; the nearest city is Kapolei.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
South Pacific: A Tender Tale
We think of them as ‘life boats’ during that – thankfully brief, but necessary – drill at the beginning of each cruise.
The safety drill, for you non-cruisers, is that time when passengers gather at their ‘muster stations’ near those small looking craft that dangling like bright orange ornaments from the side of the ship.
Then crew members review with us the steps to be used in the event of an emergency evacuation. We are assigned a specific life boat and that is the one we will head for in the event it should become necessary.
Those bright orange bobbles are actually called the ship’s ‘tenders’ and in a less serious vein are used to transport passengers to and from ships into ports-of-call where either the ship is too large to navigate the harbor, or too large to fit the dock or in some cases, or when there are just too many cruise ships already there (Alaska, in the summer months).
Somehow that tiny looking deck that hangs above the water seems a bit bigger when you are using it, but it does take a bit of balance sometimes to get from it to the tender and back (thank goodness, staff members grab you by the arm to make sure accidents don’t happen.)
We’ve come to so enjoy this mode of transfer, that we keep our fingers crossed that we will be among the first on-board so that we can climb up the ladder and sit on the roof of the tender as we bobble our way to and from a dock.
And while not all cruise ships can accommodate differently-abled passengers, we’ve noticed that on our last couple sailings on the solstice-class Celebrity ships, the portable dock at the side of the ship was equipped so that those with mobility issues could use the tender (but it is always wise to check in advance of booking a cruise). There were no access accommodations for the rooftop seats.
Riding atop a tender we got a close up view of our ship and the surrounding beauty of the island of Mo’orea.
Maybe we enjoy this part of cruising because it affords us a different perspective on the places we visit and maybe it is because while we are ‘sightseeing’ the crew members are taking the navigation of this short boat trip as seriously as they do the entire cruise.
Sometimes on repositioning cruises, the weather, like the cruise is in shoulder season – it is sometimes too cold to sit on the roof but that’s fine because there are good views from some inside seats as well. (They close this hatch before taking off – I just got the photo before they did.)
And so our 'tender’ tale from the South Pacific comes to a close.
Thanks for sailing with us today and we hope you’ll be back soon! You can receive posts in you inbox by signing up on our homepage, TravelnWrite. Or follow along on BlogLovin or Networked Blogs – or become our newest Google Friend and Follower and add your photo to the page as well.
We are linking up with:
Nancie’s Budget Travelers Sandbox Travel Photo Thursday
Noel Morata’s Travel Photo Discovery on Monday
The safety drill, for you non-cruisers, is that time when passengers gather at their ‘muster stations’ near those small looking craft that dangling like bright orange ornaments from the side of the ship.
Then crew members review with us the steps to be used in the event of an emergency evacuation. We are assigned a specific life boat and that is the one we will head for in the event it should become necessary.
Those bright orange bobbles are actually called the ship’s ‘tenders’ and in a less serious vein are used to transport passengers to and from ships into ports-of-call where either the ship is too large to navigate the harbor, or too large to fit the dock or in some cases, or when there are just too many cruise ships already there (Alaska, in the summer months).
Bay of Islands, New Zealand |
We love riding the tiny tenders that bob and bounce up close to the side of the ship as passengers line up for the short rides to and from shore.
Somehow that tiny looking deck that hangs above the water seems a bit bigger when you are using it, but it does take a bit of balance sometimes to get from it to the tender and back (thank goodness, staff members grab you by the arm to make sure accidents don’t happen.)
We’ve come to so enjoy this mode of transfer, that we keep our fingers crossed that we will be among the first on-board so that we can climb up the ladder and sit on the roof of the tender as we bobble our way to and from a dock.
And while not all cruise ships can accommodate differently-abled passengers, we’ve noticed that on our last couple sailings on the solstice-class Celebrity ships, the portable dock at the side of the ship was equipped so that those with mobility issues could use the tender (but it is always wise to check in advance of booking a cruise). There were no access accommodations for the rooftop seats.
Riding atop a tender we got a close up view of our ship and the surrounding beauty of the island of Mo’orea.
Maybe we enjoy this part of cruising because it affords us a different perspective on the places we visit and maybe it is because while we are ‘sightseeing’ the crew members are taking the navigation of this short boat trip as seriously as they do the entire cruise.
Sometimes on repositioning cruises, the weather, like the cruise is in shoulder season – it is sometimes too cold to sit on the roof but that’s fine because there are good views from some inside seats as well. (They close this hatch before taking off – I just got the photo before they did.)
And so our 'tender’ tale from the South Pacific comes to a close.
Thanks for sailing with us today and we hope you’ll be back soon! You can receive posts in you inbox by signing up on our homepage, TravelnWrite. Or follow along on BlogLovin or Networked Blogs – or become our newest Google Friend and Follower and add your photo to the page as well.
We are linking up with:
Nancie’s Budget Travelers Sandbox Travel Photo Thursday
Noel Morata’s Travel Photo Discovery on Monday
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Hula Babe and Beach Boy Head to Hawaii
Hula Babe and Beach Boy, clad in tee-shirts, shorts and flip-flops, are back in Hawaii!
If you’ve been with us at TravelnWrite for the last few years, you know that this is our tropical season – the time we head to Hawaii -- and that’s our nom de blog while living in the Land of Aloha. (Hey, if Ree Drummond can be Pioneer Woman, we certainly qualify as Hula Babe and Beach Boy!)
We’ve settled into our Ko Olina timeshare ‘playhouse’ on the island of O’ahu.
It is here we will be living during the next few weeks.
Lucky for us several friends need temporary quarters while we are here so we have a built-in cadre of house-sitters back in the Northwest.
“But how can you be gone so long?” “Don’t you get homesick?” So many of our Pacific Northwest friends have asked that I decided yesterday to answer those questions by use of photos:
This would be the fog-shrouded Seattle Tacoma airport Friday morning as we taxied for takeoff. . .nice view, huh? (It looked like that all over the Puget Sound.)
It cleared a bit as we flew over the Washington State coastline.
About five hours into the flight, as we were finishing the complimentary MaiTais . . .
. . .the view out the window improved. . .
Honolulu was coming into view. . .
And then came Ko Olina and O’ahu’s Barber Point as the plane banked to land at the Honolulu Airport.
The three tall white buildings and the four lagoons to the center/left of the photo are Marriott’s Beach Club Vacation villas. I am writing this from our condo in that complex.
This is the view looking out the window here:
Guess that answers those questions!
While we are here, we hope to make some new island discoveries. . .have any tips for us? Out of the way restaurants? Beaches? Must see or do? Tell us about your favorites in the comment section below or by sending a quick email!
We’ll be ‘booking it’ to the beach next week so do come back to explore some ‘novel destinations'! And mahalo for your visit today!!!
We are linking up with Noel Morata's TravelPhotoDiscovery.
If you’ve been with us at TravelnWrite for the last few years, you know that this is our tropical season – the time we head to Hawaii -- and that’s our nom de blog while living in the Land of Aloha. (Hey, if Ree Drummond can be Pioneer Woman, we certainly qualify as Hula Babe and Beach Boy!)
We’ve settled into our Ko Olina timeshare ‘playhouse’ on the island of O’ahu.
It is here we will be living during the next few weeks.
Lucky for us several friends need temporary quarters while we are here so we have a built-in cadre of house-sitters back in the Northwest.
“But how can you be gone so long?” “Don’t you get homesick?” So many of our Pacific Northwest friends have asked that I decided yesterday to answer those questions by use of photos:
This would be the fog-shrouded Seattle Tacoma airport Friday morning as we taxied for takeoff. . .nice view, huh? (It looked like that all over the Puget Sound.)
It cleared a bit as we flew over the Washington State coastline.
About five hours into the flight, as we were finishing the complimentary MaiTais . . .
. . .the view out the window improved. . .
Honolulu was coming into view. . .
And then came Ko Olina and O’ahu’s Barber Point as the plane banked to land at the Honolulu Airport.
The three tall white buildings and the four lagoons to the center/left of the photo are Marriott’s Beach Club Vacation villas. I am writing this from our condo in that complex.
This is the view looking out the window here:
Guess that answers those questions!
While we are here, we hope to make some new island discoveries. . .have any tips for us? Out of the way restaurants? Beaches? Must see or do? Tell us about your favorites in the comment section below or by sending a quick email!
We’ll be ‘booking it’ to the beach next week so do come back to explore some ‘novel destinations'! And mahalo for your visit today!!!
We are linking up with Noel Morata's TravelPhotoDiscovery.
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