ALOHA
There is Warmth Here for
YOU!
it's
Thursday in WAIKIKI
Today's background music:
There is Warmth Here for
YOU!
it's
Thursday in WAIKIKI
Today's background music:
click on photos to get elevated
When you think of Hawaii,
these are probably the trees that come to mind.
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"The trees are God's great alphabet:
With them He writes in shining green
Across the world His thoughts serene."
~Leonora Speyer
these are probably the trees that come to mind.
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"The trees are God's great alphabet:
With them He writes in shining green
Across the world His thoughts serene."
~Leonora Speyer
But we have much leafy treasure, both native and introduced.
Here is a tamarind tree, a member of the bean family Fabacceae:
Tamarindus Indica
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Here is a tamarind tree, a member of the bean family Fabacceae:
Tamarindus Indica
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"If a man walks in the woods for love of them half of each day,
he is in danger of being regarded as a loafer.
But if he spends his days as a speculator, shearing off those woods
and making the earth bald before her time,
he is deemed an industrious and enterprising citizen."
Henry David Thoreau
he is in danger of being regarded as a loafer.
But if he spends his days as a speculator, shearing off those woods
and making the earth bald before her time,
he is deemed an industrious and enterprising citizen."
Henry David Thoreau
Here is a cool historical illustration
of the flowers, leaves & pods of the tamarind.
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"You can live for years next door to a big pine tree,
honored to have so venerable a neighbor,
even when it sheds needles all over your flowers or wakes you,
dropping big cones onto your deck at still of night."
Denise Levertov
Try living under a coconut palm: *BOOM!*
of the flowers, leaves & pods of the tamarind.
><<>
"You can live for years next door to a big pine tree,
honored to have so venerable a neighbor,
even when it sheds needles all over your flowers or wakes you,
dropping big cones onto your deck at still of night."
Denise Levertov
Try living under a coconut palm: *BOOM!*
Here is the Manu O Ku (White Tern) the official Honolulu bird
that oft lays it's single egg in the crook of the tamarind.
Photo Source
"And this, our life, exempt from public haunt,
finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
sermons in stones, and good in everything."
William Shakespeare
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(Note: As I write this, it is a chilly morning.
We expect today's temps to reach only 76 degrees, Fahrenheit!
The air is "cool" and dry, but the sun is most pleasant.
Kitty is laying against me for warmth.
We send this dispatch to you with love!)
A Tamarind tree was planted in Hawaiian traditional
over the PIKO (umbilical cord)
of Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop
in what is now called Tamarind Square in Downtown Honolulu.
We nourish the`Aina (land) just as it nourishes us.
As we live on the `Aina, we "make our bones" or Iwi
which should be returned to it. The bones have Mana (spiritual power)
and so are hidden away from those who might wish to use that power.
No one knows where Kamehameha the Great lays for this reason.
We honor him at his statue outside the Hawaii Supreme Court,
but do not visit a grave or tomb.
Hawaiians called the tamarind, introduced from Asia or Africa,
Wi Awa Awa.
Awa Awa means "sour" or "tart,"
which fits since the tree has both sweet and sour varieties.
It is said that this tree was brought to our shores by
Don Francisco de Paula Marin who also introduced mangos,
grapes, even the plumeria as well as many other "local" favorites.
The first tamarinds were planted near what is today's
Foster Botanical Garden.
Most of our tamarinds are old trees found in dry places
where Hawaiians used to live in traditional fashion.
Some Chinatown markets sell the tamarind fruit,
we also see it dried, canned,
or preserved with rock salt and wrapped in yellow cellophane as a sweet.
OH sweet trees!
I love you-
and I don't care who knows it!
What the?!
A local food columnist coincidentally wrote about isle cooking with tamarind HERE.
ALOHA, cloudia
that oft lays it's single egg in the crook of the tamarind.
Photo Source
"And this, our life, exempt from public haunt,
finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
sermons in stones, and good in everything."
William Shakespeare
><>
(Note: As I write this, it is a chilly morning.
We expect today's temps to reach only 76 degrees, Fahrenheit!
The air is "cool" and dry, but the sun is most pleasant.
Kitty is laying against me for warmth.
We send this dispatch to you with love!)
A Tamarind tree was planted in Hawaiian traditional
over the PIKO (umbilical cord)
of Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop
in what is now called Tamarind Square in Downtown Honolulu.
We nourish the`Aina (land) just as it nourishes us.
As we live on the `Aina, we "make our bones" or Iwi
which should be returned to it. The bones have Mana (spiritual power)
and so are hidden away from those who might wish to use that power.
No one knows where Kamehameha the Great lays for this reason.
We honor him at his statue outside the Hawaii Supreme Court,
but do not visit a grave or tomb.
Hawaiians called the tamarind, introduced from Asia or Africa,
Wi Awa Awa.
Awa Awa means "sour" or "tart,"
which fits since the tree has both sweet and sour varieties.
It is said that this tree was brought to our shores by
Don Francisco de Paula Marin who also introduced mangos,
grapes, even the plumeria as well as many other "local" favorites.
The first tamarinds were planted near what is today's
Foster Botanical Garden.
Most of our tamarinds are old trees found in dry places
where Hawaiians used to live in traditional fashion.
Some Chinatown markets sell the tamarind fruit,
we also see it dried, canned,
or preserved with rock salt and wrapped in yellow cellophane as a sweet.
OH sweet trees!
I love you-
and I don't care who knows it!
What the?!
A local food columnist coincidentally wrote about isle cooking with tamarind HERE.
ALOHA, cloudia
Ah sweet Cloudia, sweet trees and sweet Kitty--you belong together.
ReplyDeleteOh, and of course, that sweet bird too!
ReplyDelete"Note: As I write this, it is a chilly morning.We expect today's temps to reach only 76 degrees, Fahrenheit!..."
ReplyDeleteHmmmm sounds like subtle but "shady" dig to me. hahahahahahahah
No seriously it's cool to be in the frozen South Pacific...we got our seasonal enormous snow two days ago in Detroit, 1.8 inches and now it's gone. Buh bye snow.
We got tamarinds. And I love all your quotes today about trees.
ReplyDeleteAloha my friend.
We call Tamarind IMLI in Hindi language...used very frequently by almost all the states of India.Lovely quotes on tree...planting a tree over an umbilical cord is very interesting story.Aloha Cloudia.
ReplyDeleteYour post's title made me think of an old King Crimosn song called "I Talk To The Wind." But I love your choice, too! The Moodies are always neat. I really like the songs with the posts!
ReplyDeleteThat Thoreau quote is powerful and so well observed. I drove my mother crazy when I was a teenager, always out walking or listening to music or just dreaming by the window, instead of trying to get into frigging Harvard lol.
In praise of trees! Love it. I
ReplyDeletet's difficult for me to understand that 74° is cool. :)
near freezing
ReplyDeleteI like the Thoreau quote. How true, and what a twisted mindset it shows in the average person.
ReplyDeleteWe need warm here! We have snow and there is more coming!
ReplyDeleteThat bird is beautiful.
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Love your tree talk! I learned so much today, and the pictures were spectacular.
ReplyDeleteI have little doubt that they talk back to you too. :)
ReplyDeleteCC, I want you and Tom to come to my Scrabble party. Will call you next month with the details.
ReplyDeleteGreat info here! Love all those quotes. Mini vacation again, though for me temps in the 70's is very warm.
ReplyDeleteThanks for all the info on the Tamarind Tree. That bird is sweet. :)
ReplyDeleteImli, Cool!
ReplyDeleteDetroit snow buh bye LOL.
OK, Jet, I'm gonna let you slide with that ad - don't push it though!
What sweet comments. I see your names and smile, you guys are true friends who make my day!
Thank YOU
Lovely post!
ReplyDeleteI am also a self-admitted tree freak. Here in Southern California we have so many trees that are not native. My favorite native tree is the live oak, any oak, but these trees do very well in near drought conditions because they send their roots so far down for water.
I've had tamarind only as a sort jam, with Indian food. It's delicious!
ReplyDeleteLove the photos and Magic Eye's "twin', too! He's such an excellent photographer!
One of my favorite places to walk around is Foster's Botanical Garden. So many beautiful trees! Wonderful history lesson Cloudia, natural history too. Thank you so much my friend. Aloha!
ReplyDelete