Category Archives: Kaaawa

Flashback: Labor Day Dogs, September 5, 2011

We’ve been enjoying neighborhood dogs for a long time.

This little video was taken eleven years ago, Labor Day in 2011, when we were living in Kaaawa.

It’s fun to see this cohort of Kaaawa dogs, now all long gone.

You’ll notice that back in those days, we distributed large Kirkland dog biscuits from Costco, not the “Small” MilkBones we carry now. In Kaaawa, I carried a bag on our walk to hold the day’s supply of big dog biscuits.

Oh, they liked to see us coming!

Anyway, here’s to the morning dogs, then and now.

Fifteen years ago in Kaaawa

Here’s a flashback, rediscovered as I browsed through images I uploaded to Amazon Drive several years ago.

An afternoon sometime in 2006, and the ice cream truck drove slowly up Huamalani Road along the lower side of our property and stopped when our neighbor ran out to greet it.

As I recall, I had just received a new telephoto zoom lens for my Canon digital SLR camera and was out wandering in the yard taking some test photos. The new lens made it possible to zoom in on the scene.

Are there any of these trucks still operating in Honolulu?

Throwback Thursday: Kaaawa goes bananas

We bought our house in Kaaawa in May 1988, and for a while lived part-time in our townhouse mauka of Kahala Mall, while spending weekends in Kaaawa.

There was a whole banana patch along one side of the house which was pretty prolific. Here’s a crop harvested in November 1988.

We had plenty of bananas for years, at least until the arrival of the bunchy top virus. It infected all of our banana plants, and we had to cut them all down. It was years before we were successful in growing bananas again, but bunchy top is still a threat in the area.

Kaaawa Lost and Found. Part 3. Buried Treasures.

Anticipation. That was the theme as we waited to see what was in the box waiting at the Kahala Post Office, unsure what could have survived buried under a rock on the side of Makaua Stream after being taken in a break-in at our house in Kaaawa somewhere between six and 18 years ago.

When we finally got the box home, Meda opened it to reveal the dirty and worn plastic Safeway bag, cut a slit in it and then peeled it back to expose the contents. That gave us our our first look at what was inside. It wasn’t a pretty sight.



At first, it just looked like a tangled mess. A rotted wallet. Disintegrated manicure set. Broken bits of jewelry, debris, and dirt. But Meda spotted a pair of glasses that had belonged to her grandmother, who she was named after. That boosted our spirits. Then she saw the small gold Phi Beta Kappa key she was awarded at Whitman College in 1968, remarkably unscathed, its engraving easily read. She then proceeded to methodically sort and separate the items, piece by piece, untangling chains and necklaces, trying to match broken pieces with their mates or missing parts. A long, slow and tedious process.

There were disappointments. Beautiful Ming’s ivory jewelry reduced to junk. That went into its own sad pile. Single earrings and bracelets that might clean up nicely, or might not. A few rings with colored stones. Brooches with missing or damaged pins. But slowly, as she untangled, sorted, repaired, and cleaned, we began to see that a remarkable number of things had survived.

Ever so slowly, the process moved forward, and led to more happy endings. Opal jewelry from made by her grandfather using gemstones he had collected in the Pacific Northwest, or obtained through trades with other collectors. At least one opal pendant we bought while visiting Australia years ago. Strands of freshwater pearls. One necklace of vintage glass beads. Silver earrings. A Tiffany silver pendant. Things we had long assumed were forever lost.

And here are the best items that emerged from the process. It’s hard not to be amazed, comparing these to the first photos taken when the plastic bag was discovered along the stream.

Next: Kaaawa Lost and Found, Part 4. Sorting out the history.