Arrival in Waikiki; Pearl Harbor
Waikiki, July 22, 2019
We had a long but
uneventful flight to Honolulu, leaving Sunday morning at 9 AM from Rochester
and arriving the same day (plus 6 hours time change) at 4:00 PM. We took a Lyft to the hotel on Waikiki, where
the group leader was at a table in the lobby.
We all got orchid leis:
We checked in, washed up,
and went to an early dinner with the group.
We are 24 grandparents and grandchildren, and there are two other
13-year old boys which should make things nice for Ben. We went to bed at 8:00 and slept until 6:00 AM
on Monday!
Monday morning we had an
orientation after breakfast, with expanded introductions. The day was devoted to learning about Pearl
Harbor, the entry of the USA into WW II, and the end of the war with Japan with
the signing of a surrender.
We drove to the Pearl
Harbor National Memorial:
We spent the morning at
two small museums on the site, one relating the events leading up to the Pearl
Harbor attacks, and the other showing the results of the attacks in
considerable detail. We then saw a
45-minute movie about the attack on Pearl Harbor, with considerable original
footage. We then took a boat ride in the
harbor and went past the USS Arizona memorial, placed over the sunken ship, and
currently closed for repairs:
Although Ben had been
aware of WW II, and vaguely aware of the role of the Pearl Harbor attack, this
presentation really made the war real to him and led to some questions. We had lunch at a nearby restaurant, following
which we spend a couple of hours at the USS Missouri which is docked nearby.
The nine largest guns are
enormous; note the people at the base of the left and middle guns here for
perspective:
We had a guided tour of
the ship, including some time at the very location where the Japanese surrender
occurred. There are lots of photographs
and documents there, including this one of the Japanese delegation:
Ben enjoyed some of the open locations on the bridge:
Back at the hotel in the
late afternoon and Ben and Joyce took a nap.
We’re on our own for diner tonight, and Ben would like Korean. Tomorrow, surfing, outrigger canoes and a
taro farm.
Great that the trip involves an increased awareness of history--I always think of a trip to Hawaii as pure relaxation, but you're doing a good mix.
ReplyDeleteRalph