Caves, Stars and Turtles
Friday, July 26, 2019
Another great day! We began the day after checking out of our
Hilo hotel, by going to the Kaumana Caves.
These are a giant network of underground lava tubes, widely connected,
which result from the flow of molten lava and the cooling which leaves these
enormous channels. The floors are
extremely uneven with irregular sharp wet slippery lava to walk over and the
tubes narrow in places so that it’s necessary to crawl. Joyce went only a short way in; Ben and
Victor did the full excursion.
The entrance is down a
steep stairway to a steeper opening in the earth:
On the walls are masses of
white and colored deposits which our cave guide said were from giant mats of
bacteria which belong to a completely unique genus.
I was skeptical of that,
and then he said that one of the bacterial examples was aspergillus. I didn’t challenge him, but aspergillus is
not a bacterium, it’s a fungus, and we’ve known about the lung disease it
causes for a very long time. It does not
belong to any new category. Oh well.
After the rather rigorous
lava cave exploration, we went to the Imiloa Astronomical Center in Hilo:
We first had lunch. The ten children on this trip have really
done well together, and often choose to sit with each other for meals:
We then had a presentation
at the Center which was extremely well done, relating the geography of Hawaii
to that of the rest of the earth and out to the stars. The astronomer used a clever demonstration of
the difference between height and tallness to show us that Mauna Kea is the
tallest mountain on earth, even though it is far from the highest:
We then went into the
planetarium and had a great presentation of the sky which will be visible in Hawaii
tonight. It all was very well done. We left for the Kona coast on the west side
of the island, driving south to the black beaches made of volcanic
sand.
This is the home of the
protected Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle, and they were there, waiting for us. Their preferred resting site is separated
from human beach access to protect their rest and their laying:
We arrived at the
Kona/Kailua hotel, checked in and went for a lovely dinner, after which the
children had a great time in the hotel pool until it closed. They do have lots of energy! Tomorrow is our last day; we start home on
Sunday.
sleepy sleepy turtles, they do their job by the manual, enjoy
ReplyDeleteGreat point, about tall vs. high! Yes, a short person becomes the highest one in the room by standing on a chair!
ReplyDeleteBlack-sand beaches, amazing! And great that the giant turtles are protected.
Ralph