11/11/11 A RAINY DAY IN PARADISE
As you know, East Hawaii gets
a lot of rain and even the in drought of the last couple years Hilo ’s per year totals have been in the 80’s. Historically Hilo has reported an average of 127 inches of
rain per year at the airport (34’ elevation) and a lot more on the upland
portions of the city. The photo above is Rainbow Falls on the Wailuku River in Hilo early this month. The first week of
the month has been very wet with over 8 inches here at our house and 6.28 in Hilo . If it rained at that rate all year we’d have
416 inches annually in Hakalau yet the surprising thing is that it is still
easy (at least for a retired guy) to find nice times to be outdoors. Another
amazing thing is that there is very little flooding or erosion as there was
during the sugar cane plantain days.
Most of the former cane field area is now forest, ornamentals for
export, orchards, pastures or row crops of less than five acres. I am
also amazed that even when the Hakalau
River does flood
red-brown it is nearly clear again within less than two hours of the rain
stopping and back to normal the next day.
What potential visitors
always ask is which months to visit to avoid the rain. The answer is if you want to avoid the rain
drive to the leeward side (whichever side that is on that day) or just wait an
hour. June, May and January are the
driest months on average but the deviation from 10”/month is not great. March, November and December are the wettest
months usually. Temperature range each
day only varies on average from 79-83 f. highs and 63-70 f. lows and for the
last few years the annual monthly extremes have moved closer together .
Yesterday, a few days after
starting this entry, and 10 days into this rainy month Myrna and I decided to get
away from the rain and snorkel south of Kailua . Hilo had .36” that day, twice that at Hakalau,
but only a trace fell on the Konaside beach while the 1,000’ and up got
measurable amounts. Now the total for Hilo this month is 10”
and here nearly double that. When the
storms come from the south instead of the usual southeast then Hilo may get more rain than Hakalau. If we get storms from the west, as some
winter storms are, then Kona will get more of the rain.
I
expected to see a lot of mushrooms and fungus when we moved here but usually we
don’t and I’ve only found one that was large enough to eat and that I was
confident enough about. That was an
oyster mushroom. I’ve not tried to
identify the fungus in the attachments but the lizard with one of them is a
metallic skink native to Australia . Sinks are very fast and would normally
require a telephoto lens around here.
This day they were unwilling to move from their nearly sunny spots
because they needed to warm between showers.
Some lizards are even more sensitive to cold. Three times I’ve seen dead Jacksons Chameleons
on the ground under trees and each time it was on a morning in the 60’s. Usually Jacksons
are not seen because they live in the treetops.
Speaking
of invasive lizards, I should mention that the Day Gecko pictured on top of our
Subaru (below) had been on at least one trip on the car.
When I get near him he dashes into a space between the hatch door and the roof to hide. Once, last year, a different gecko emerged from under the windshield wiper when we were stopped at a traffic light. It is easy to see how they get spread around and how since we have harnessed the power of fossil fuel the mixing of our planet's species has accelerated.
This gun powder tree stump is showing not the signs of rot but rather a termite colony that had hollowed out the center of a healthy growing tree.
When I get near him he dashes into a space between the hatch door and the roof to hide. Once, last year, a different gecko emerged from under the windshield wiper when we were stopped at a traffic light. It is easy to see how they get spread around and how since we have harnessed the power of fossil fuel the mixing of our planet's species has accelerated.
In
spite of the bad economy, the wild pig problem seems to be getting worse here
again. Most of the lower elevations are
no hunting zones (no shooting within 300 yards of a residence). All guns must be declared upon entry to the
state, must be licensed with annual renewal and must be owned only by people
who have passed a firearms safety course and paid a permit fee every year. It is good that we don’t often hear shooting
near our home that we need to worry about but pigs are smart enough to learn
about live traps and snares are in-humane because the caught animals maybe
suffering a long time. So the pig
problem is likely to always be with us and that includes the destruction of
native plants and added erosion. One
neighbor’s front lawn looks like it has been plowed. I saw three in broad daylight 100’ from the
post office Tuesday and three after dark in another place the day before. Our dog and I visit our perimeter nearly
everyday and we’ve not had any in our yard for a year. After I get some more tree work done I’ll do
more fencing.
This
week, after having a few days of NO bananas, we found ourselves working on four
bunches at once. Yesterday we bought a
second food dryer but until I get a third there will still be times that we
need to give some away. If we had a pig
we could feed it a lot of bananas and other fruit and sweet potatoes. But then if our pig escaped we would be
adding to the wild pig problem. If we
caught a wild pig and just fed it awhile before butchering that wouldn’t be an
environmental problem and that is precisely what some of my neighbors do.
Aloha!
Aloha Rico,
ReplyDeleteI just also replied to your reply from a couple "posts" ago. I wanted to comment that you are probably seeing the two pigs that have been rooting up the soil near my lot. My lot is in eye shot just a little Mauka from the Post Office Those are some great photos of the mushrooms, skink and resident car gecko! From the gecko on the car picture it looks like your place is right on Wailea Rd, just before Wailea Town so your not too far from where my wife Chris and I will be living. I will definitely let you know ahead of time when were coming over. It'll be nice to meet you and your wife!
Take care and mahalo for keeping up with this local blog, it's very informative!
Steve