Thursday, March 3, 2011

Motor Oil Prices In Walmart

Big 5th

Sun, 3 days on an island must meet: To the flight to the Big Iceland. Our neighbors on the Keanae camp have certainly not bad liked because we got up after the lightning night shortly after 5, packed and left at 6:10 on the square. It took us 1.5 hours to the airport, took off at 9:25 and landed at 10:05 in Hilo, on the east coast of Big Iceland. The woman in our economy motel gave us a few tips for exploring the coast. Actually, a few beach stops were planned, but it was bad rainy!
The Lava Tree State Park was closed because it rebuilding. But even the entrance to the vast Monkeypod trees, rain tree, Albizia saman was impressive!
can be seen yet sure what these gentlemen here, right? You are at the Cape Kumukahi, the easternmost point of the Big Island and Iceland as Iceland, the eastern Big Island of Hawaii Island and in front of a far and wide as the Pacific is nothing, you can breathe the freshest air in the world. The researchers should have measured!
Bissle swim in the rain was fortunately possible here because the water is warm (90 degrees Fahrenheit = 32 degrees C). This is the Ahalanui Beach Park where a warm spring feeds the concrete basin that is separated by a wall of sea.



MacKenzie State Recreation Area

We went to Kalapana, where the road ends. Kalapana was before 1990 a small town that was buried by lava. And until then, the famous black beach Kaimu Beach was then destroyed. You can walk across the lava to the newly emerging beach and admire hundreds of newly planted coconut trees. Planted by the residents to set a sign! Photography is hardly possible. The sky was overcast (gray-white), the sea churned up (white) and the black lava formed such a strong Kontrat that everything seems hazy. You only see lava up to the horizon. Awesome!


the young coconut
can
left is the sea





only about 1km inland to park at the end of Hwy 130 and to a lava viewing site running. On 4 February is here the last time lava came over. On this map you can see when they ran out! At the end of the path that we must run it's really warm. Completely oblique, is that people have built not far from here on the new lava. They are fully self-catering: electricity, water, waste water must organize themselves. Heating one need not ... They are holding their land!

in this photo you can see how the air shimmers in the heat!


that was not enough for us. We drove up next to the volcano Kilauea caldera!
This is the crater. Currently, he is quite active. We see smoke and it makes noise. Interestingly, it is in the dark. So we had to wait bissl!


???!!! Is not that impressive


Here is someone already noticed that the place names here seem somehow all the same? There are Hawaii's only 13 letters: the 5 vowels, 7 consonants (h, k, l, m, n, p, w) and Okina, the voiceless glottal plosive. For Glottisverschlusslaut in the spoken Hawaiian language was first written not a sign. Therefore appeared as the letters cited in the place name Kapaa, although before the last vowel is spoken of a Glottisverschlusslaut. Ever since the appearance of Hawaiian-English dictionary is increasingly with the correct spelling Okina by (Kapa a) . The Okina is now increasingly seen not as a symbol but as a full letter. For example, the word "Hawaii" correct "Hawaii i" written. Another example is the word " Oahu (the most populated island of Hawaii is) is. The emphasis here is on the "a", not on the "u". And then come under a name like Pu'u'O'o or Pu'u Huluhulu. Beautiful, eh?

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