October 21, 2010

Our Last Evening at Ko 'Olina

Couldn't resist the sunset again. This time through the cocoanut trees, over the lagoon.

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Surprise at Tanioka's

Lest I forget, my older son spied these wonderful morsels. No, they did not have any ingredients from the sea. Just chocolate chips, Arare (rice crackers), flour and butter. A real find. Make sure you pick up a bag when you're there.

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Tanioka's Seafood

Found another good Japanese seafood/rice plate/poke local lunch place one the Ewa side of Oahu.

A bewildering number of dishes whetted our appetites. We now have a good alternative to Poke Stop (See a few posts back.). Both are on Farrington Highway, which is one of Ewa end's commercial thoroughfare.

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Ihilani Hotel

We visited the Ihilani Hotel, one of the resorts in the Ko 'Olina complex.

These ponds featured ocean water tropical fish. One of the species was baby hammerhead sharks. Not quite 30 inches, these sharks leisurely patrolled the ponds. Most other fish gave them wide berth. Tiki torches reflected on the surface ripples like magic fires.

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October 20, 2010

Right Outside on our Condo's Front Lawn

Not a bad view, is it? Actually, this is from the left side of the Condo's Lagoon 4. I

t was really this nice. Weather was 85 high (with ocean breezes) and 74 low--all week, honest....

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Our Condo

Our condo is the Hale Naia (dolphin) tower at Ko 'Olina. You'll see some sites from the outside in the next couple of posts.

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October 19, 2010

Did I Say We've Been Eating Well?

Oh yes! Here we sat in the condo, devouring manapua from Chun Wah Kam in Kapolei.

The first dish held five types of bau. Charsiu (baked), duck, spicy thai pork & two others. Each bau had coded colors placed there with the end of a chopstick dipped in various food colorings.



The second dish featured desert. Hawaii 9-layer rice cake, with eight white layers topped with a special brown sugar delight. And the gin dui, big as a man's fist. 




Yummmmmm.

October 18, 2010

A Simple Hedge

While I walked to a store in Mililani Town near Waipahu, I notice sunset clouds on the mountains. Out of the corner of my eye I spied some vibrant hibiscus bushes. Their yellows screamed fri a picture to be taken. So I obliged.

A simple scene, otherwise not noticed. A slice of life reminding us that what you find along your journey many times rewards more than what lies at the end.

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October 17, 2010

The Malolo

At the entrance lobby sits a replica outrigger canoe. Carved from a single trunk, The Malolo (Flying Fish) reminds us of the wayfaring nature of the Polynesians.

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Painting at Ko 'Olina

At various alcoves you can be surprised at the peaceful art adorning the walls. Here is a typical Hawaiian beach scene with some real anthuriums surrounding a protea.

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