Ted Trimmer, Maui by Air, top
"Invention is the mother of necessity." - Thorstein Veblen
"One's real life is often the life that one does not lead."
- Oscar Wilde
"The lure of the distant and the difficult is deceptive. The great opportunity is where you are."
- John Burroughs
- John Burroughs
Lahaina Maui, one-time capitol of Hawaii, is also infamous as the battlefield of the "Whaler-Missionary War" back in the 19th Century. Missionaries were none too pleased when rough & ready sailor-men ("wooden ships, iron men") followed valuable oil - whale oil, that is - to the rich winter calving grounds of the humpback whales off Maui. These guys were no choir boys, and their hard-drinking, two-fisted, profane activities while ashore clashed seriously with the hymn singing, religious instruction, and "useful" labor that the men & women with the monopoly on God were trying to impose, er, offer the benighted Hawaiians. That "war" must have been some brawl! Imagine obscene pirates trading "licks" with fire & brimstone preachers wielding axes, and egged on by their indignant, hatchet-faced wives!
Today we lack the rectitude of the missionaries, and the pure spit-into-the-wind brio of the whaling men, but the whales still winter in Hawaiian waters and they still favor leeward Maui. Today they are protected and admired. Yet small boats of gutsy people still occasionally chase the whales, as one craft did yesterday. These pursuers were not whale-hunters but whale-HELPERS. In response to reports by recreational boaters of a whale entangled with discarded fishing line & nets (some an inch thick!) the team went in search of a giant mammal in distress. The gaffs, hooks, and blades they carried were all designed for the purpose of freeing the intelligent mammal to pursue it's hemispheric ramblings unencumbered. The ensuing water ballet would have baffled the whalers of old, as the scientists and marine specialists worked quickly but carefully to remove the debris straight-jacket. Finally the creature tired of the sport and swam for deep water. Scientists say that enough line has been removed to guarantee the oceanic visitor a good chance of healthy survival. . . To save Earth will require profound changes in our attitudes and activities; But for one afternoon, an important victory had been won. One of many . . . .one at a time . . . Experts estimate that 1700 humpback whales are currently wintering off Maui.
A L O H A ! Cloudia
As always, great quotes! You really tickled my imagination - …obscene pirates trading "licks" with fire & brimstone preachers wielding axes, and egged on by their indignant, hatchet-faced wives!
ReplyDeleteLet’s hope the whale made it without too much damage. It’s amazing and brave what these whale-helpers are doing…
Just to hear about so many whales wintering there brings a smile to may face.
ReplyDeleteI would hope that the pirates at least held their own. The other part of the story is a good lesson in that there is too much jetsam floating in the waters of the world.
ReplyDeleteHooray! Thanks for today's adventure news about the whale. I'm glad a team is ready to help. Where is the team based? Has the whale population increased dramatically in recent years? In the 3 times I've been to Lahaina, I didn't catch the number wintering in waters.
ReplyDeleteYour pics of the old Honolulu shoreline are so beautiful...so few buildings, and the peaks are more rugged than today. Change and time...many changes so Hawai'i can share itself with the world.
Your aloha melts the winter in my heart and the ice off my Kansas windows!
DrumMajor
The more I watch your blog The more I love Hawaï. Very nice photos, specially the fisrt one !
ReplyDeleteYou've got such gorgeous photos posted here, Cloudia. I'm so glad those scientist went out there to help the whale. For once, it made you proud of humanity. But then again, who put those nets out in the first place?
ReplyDeleteI love the aerial view of Maui, with the wind turbines like the knuckles of a spine. And 'the pure spit-into-the-wind brio of the whaling men' is a phrase I'll remember!
ReplyDeleteWell done the whale savers.
beautiful photos! I didn't know that about the whales in Hawaii. Very intersting!
ReplyDeleteHmm, I keep trying to imagine what a "hatchet-faced wife" looks like! ((shudder))
ReplyDeleteGreat story. I love whales...D
Always learning something new here .. always admiring your photos
ReplyDelete:-Daryl
My fondest memory of Maui was seeing the whales. More than once, they seemed to be following paths parallel to the path the boat we were on was taking. And I remeber driving along the coast and all at once seeing the whales out in the water. They are magnificent creatures. Aloha, Cloudia.
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful that you have so many whales around your shores!
ReplyDeleteFida- Mahalo!
ReplyDeleteCharles- that's funny, they smiled when I told them about YOU! ;-)
Walking Man- Yes, tough missionaries! You make a very good point!
Drum Major- Aloha! Yes, I believe that whale numbers ARE up a bit. Cool, huh?
Claude- Bonjour! Merci! Aloha!
Kay- right you are. We're the good cop / bad cop of the oceans!
Brother Toias: you are a wonder! wind turbines, of course that's what they are! You often make a comment that stays in my mind: "The clap of water on the other side of the hull." You capture a night aboard perfectly in that sentence! You & I have a 'mutual phrase-admiration society!' Aloha-
Bubble Wench - ALWAYS so great to see you! Hope this means your life is giving you some breathing room these days. . . Aloha to YOU!
Riverpoet - Thanks. Yes, I chuckled writing about those 'hatchet faced' dames! "Iron-jawed angels" indeed!
Daryl- well, i'm learning blogging from experts: and YOU are one of the ringleaders. See all the little monster-blogs you are creating? I love trading photos with YOUR blog!
Granpa- Yes! the whales do indeed enjoy interacting with boats and people. Federal law prohbits approaching them too close- but they often approach humans and linger near by. Sometimes folks on boats are shocked when they look overboard to see a giant, curious eye looking back! wonderful memory images you have of them! Aloha-
Akelamalu- Thanks, yes it is nice to have whales in the neighborhood; but YOU have Harry Potter & company playing quiddich above YOUR rooftops! aloha, Dear-
Aloha Cloudia, wonderful post about whales. I watched them in the St. Lawrence up here and was in awe with their water ballet. :)
ReplyDeleteCheryl