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Live for today but work for everyone's tomorrow! Any views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of any organisation/institution I am affiliated with.

Sunday 24 August 2014

Hot and humid in Malta

I don't know what this is about but it is a great image - on a semi-derelict building on the sea front in Paceville in Malta
My mum tells me that I was last in Malta when I was about nine. I remember it being sunny and warm but I suspect no where near as warm and close as it is now (33 C and 73% humidity).

(Probably the Simmonds family holidayed in September or October, as mum and dad worked through the main summer period, and this is August - the peak of the heat and tourism here.)

Anyway, I have some vague memories of being scared when snorkeling by a huge jellyfish (a big pale globe of jelly that loomed up out of the gloom) and of rocky shores and closely-packed yellow stone buildings around narrow roads. I think I may be mainly remembering the old town of Valleta. This time I am in Paceville a few miles further north and party-central for young visitors from around Europe.

I am here for just a few days for my first meeting of the Council meeting of the European Cetacean Society.

Here are some views (of Paceville not the ECS Council):

Harbour View at sunset

Traditional fishing boat

The Jellyfish are still here - the poster
encourages reporting.

And it seems I was right to be concerned all those years ago!

Another local harbour

A view across Paceville to the private beach of the Intercontinetal hotel

Monday 11 August 2014

Oahu calling - in the path of hurricanes

I was in Hawaii to convene and chair a workshop on marine debris. As the preceding blogs show, I  arrived a couple of days early to acclimatize and take a look around, but what I did not expect was to find that two hurricanes were tracking straight towards the islands!

Tuesday 5-8-2014 Headline local paper
The last hurricane to make land-fall in the Hawaii was in 1992 and it caused widespread devastation. The islands are hit by tropical storms on a more regular basis but these are lesser events featuring strong winds and heavy rainfall but typically significantly less damage to property or threat to life. Anyway, a day or so into my visit, local TV started to feature Hurricane Iselle (at that point a grade 4 hurricane - 5 being the highest grade) and the weather authorities showed her predicted track pointing firmly towards the islands. That track was maintained over the following days and then we started to hear that following immediately behind her was coming tropical storm Julio on much the same trajectory. As the days passed, Iselle lost some power as the cooler waters she was moving westwards over slowed her - although she maintained the classic hurricane configuration and status (now grade 1) with a mass of cloud circling around an eye at the centre - but, conversely, Julio gained power and so also became a hurricane. So, pretty quickly the situation developed where the Hawaiian Islands were being threatened by the  unprecedented likely arrival of two hurricanes only three days apart

As we got on with our workshop, whist keeping an eye on the news and weather reports, the authorities on the islands started their preparations for Iselle and Julio's arrivals. Shelters were opened and everyone told to expect major disruption, including damaging winds, flooding, coastal inundation, power-outages and subsequently to stock up on supplies, including food and water (and food for their pets). Details of what should be in emergency kits were published, including torches, radios, duct tape and medical kits. Shops were soon reporting that they were running out of certain goods including water.

Come Friday, when the first hurricane was due to hit, there was an strange quiet on the island of Oahu was I was (in the western part of the city of Honolulu). The city was basically shut down. The bus service was taken off the roads, apart from the buses taking people to the storm shelters and tourists and other visitors were advised to stay in their accommodation. Many flights to and from the islands - currently packed with tens of thousands of tourists - were cancelled.

Dark skies over Honolulu - view from my hotel room  on Friday morning - note all the buses parked up in the left corner of view
The Hawaii Islands run in a chain roughly west to east in a line with 'Big Island' at the eastern end and TV reports showed that Iselle hit Big Island square-on in the early hours of Friday. A storm surge came in first pushing the sea high up shore, then heavy rain, some flooding and high-winds followed. A lightening strike apparently caused an emergency at the local geothermal plant causing some kind of release of noxious gas.Households nearby were told to stay in and the release was soon staunched.

But then it seems that the two huge mountains of Big Island - like some mythical guardians for the rest of the island chain - effectively blocked the hurricane. It could not pass over them and the storm lost energy and broke up. Some hours later, when the remnants of the storm system reach us in Honolulu in the late morning, the skies darkened, the palm trees fringing the streets bowed to some gusty winds and rain certainly fell; but the storm had nothing like the power it might have had. We were lucky, and by the afternoon tourists and others were venturing out on the streets again and businesses were re-opening.

Meanwhile, Hurricane Julio due to arrive on Sunday had started to move onto a track that would take it north of the islands, although people were asked to continue to be prepared for this hurricane to impact too if its course changed.

Hawaiian TV report on Hurricane Julio (the islands are to the left below the hurricane symbol)
Fortunately - as we now know -  it has stayed north and has had little reported impact.

Headline - Saturday 9-8-2014
I flew out on schedule on Saturday and arrived back in the UK on Sunday... to find the UK being buffeted by the remains of yet another hurricane - Bertha which had come across the UK from the Atlantic, causing heavy rains and strong winds here!

Sunday 10 August 2014

Oahu Calling - from under the sea

Waikiki seen from offshore
 A little underwater interlude: Bobbing around off of famous Waikiki beach waiting for a submarine.
Other tourist vessels go by.

Then - bubbling up from below comes one of the Atlantic submarines which are used to show tourists what lives below the surface.
Two tourist submarines operate off Waikiki. A catamaran takes tourist groups out to meet them and in a slick, carefully-timed operation, one appears from below the sea in a mass of bubbles; the tourists within are transferred to the catamaran and the next group let on. The other submarine then surfaces and the same thing occurs with this one. The submarines make a circuit below the waves, going down to as deep as 150 feet

Fish watching tourists

Inside the submarine: tourists watching fish (and corals and turtles)

An airplane wreck

a ship-wreck - which had two green turtles sitting on it

turtle - pale shape - head to left
amberjack

And back to the surface

Sunday 3 August 2014

Oahu Calling - Dolphins Spinning

And I have time to see some dolphins - in fact Spinner Dolphins spinning... which is why they are called Spinner Dolphins (very educational this blog) - anyway let's take in the views from the west coast of Oahu!



Here they come!

They leap and they spin

Difficult to show in a photo but they rotate around their long axix

And then they come over to the boat to bow-ride



In the end there were about 100 around the boat
 Some local whale-watching boats





And here is a view of the spectacular west side of Oahu.





Oahu Calling

Figurehead on Hawaiian racing canoe
So we are going to leave the badgers and the cygnets for a few days and head across the planet to somewhere far away - in fact to pretty-much the opposite side of the planet.

I am in Hawaii for a meeting about marine debris but lucky person that I am, first I have time for a jet-lagged look at the Main City of Oahu - Honolulu and I know I am truly here because one of the local roads is closed to allow for filming of the hardy perennial TV series Hawaii Five Oh!

Here are a few views around the district to the West of Waikiki:

White terns or Manu-o-ku - seen in Magic Park on the seafront of Honolulu - a 'threatened' species

Common Myna (introduced from India to control pests in 1865

A man who loves little doves - he had attracted this large flock in Magic Park

Here's one of them - the diminutive zebra dove


View from Magic Park looking across at Diamond head (extinct volcano) 

And what do we do in Hawaii? We surf, dude!
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