View allAll Photos Tagged HAWAII
Woke up one morning while staying at the Four Seasons Lanai and there was a pod of well over 100 Hawaiian Spinner Dolphins playing in Hulopoe Bay right in front of the hotel. I grabbed my snorkel gear and my camera and spent the next 3 hours in the water surrounded by leaping and playing dolphins. Also saw sea turtles and a Hawaiian monk seal! People pay a lot of money for dolphin encounters but this was free and absolutely wild. Spectacular experience that apparently happens about once a week with the resident dolphin pod at the Four Seasons Lanai.
Location: Hulopoe Bay, Lanai, HI
Equipment: Sea & Sea DX-2G
These photos show the large disparity between the "haves" and "have nots" in Hawaii.
After the blown Kite Aerial Photography (KAP) session at the Ala Wai canal I cruised around on my bike looking for a place with less turbulent air. I ended up at the marina and put the flowform kite back in the air. It did some swirlie 360 degree loops and did a canonball in the ocean. After I fished it out of the water and hung it up on a railing to dry in the sun I noticed I had found a scrappy looking abandoned part of the marina. I decided to poke around and bring out my inner Scott Haefner (scotthaefner.com/photos/) only with the pole camera mount. These photos have inspired me to search for more abandoned/forgotten/neglected parts of Honolulu. Instead of Forgotten Detroit (www.forgottendetroit.com/), why not Forgotten Honolulu?
Taken from a camera mounted to a pole.
*All Rights Reserved
The Hawaiian Super Ferry has arrived. They are practicing docking and ingress and egress. This is an wonderful boat ship with lots of power. This will change the state of Hawaii for ever.
“Hawaiian Crushed or Grated pineapple; serve it like apple sauce. For serving just as it comes from the container, or for making pies and puddings, for salads and desserts, Hawaiian crushed or grated pineapple is the most convenient pineapple to use.
“Hawaiian Crushed or Grated pineapple is genuine, sun-ripened fruit, packed before sundown on the day that it is picked; thus is all its native flavor and lusciousness preserved.
“Buy it at your grocer’s in half dozen or dozen lots. It will keep perfectly until you are ready for its use, and it will always come in handy for the emergency.”
Hawaiian Pineapple Crushed
The evening world., June 21, 1921, Baseball Final, Page 8, Image 8
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030193/1921-06-21/ed-...
In 1908, Hawaii's pineapple industry started an aggressive national advertising campaign, making pineapples synonymous with Hawaii.
After the 1907 Bankers' Panic reduced the demand for canned pineapples, pineapple companies in Hawaii invested $50,000, or three percent of their products' value. Previously, many Americans have never tried pineapple, and those who did ate it only on special occasions. For the first campaign in 1908, the industry worked with New York advertising company Joseph A. Richards & Staff to advertise in thirteen most widely circulated magazines in the United States, reaching 25 million readers. The ads emphasized quality and the cans’ cleanliness. This campaign made the pineapple mainstream and a staple ingredient in many housewives' recipes (most famously, the upside-down cake).
In later campaigns in the 1910s and 1920s, the pineapple companies advertised their products individually. Some ads contained recipes using pineapples and offers for free recipe booklets.
The ads emphasized their product's uniformity, high quality, moderate price, freshness ("Picked and canned the day they ripen"), and growing conditions ("grown in the rich lava soil fields of Hawaii"). Companies included Del Monte, Hawaiian Pineapple Company (later known as "Dole's Pineapples"), Big Horn, Chef, Libby's, and First Pick.
Hawaii Digital Newspaper Project
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Belatedly uploading photos from a year ago when Jen and I went to Maui, Hawaii for the second time. We're headed to Kauai in February and this reminded me that I never got around to posting these for posterity.
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Maui, Hawaii
01.16.2012-01.22.2012
I don't remember what beach this was taken at; but I love this picture!
Maui, Hawaii: January/February 2007
Hawaii photographer Mark Holladay Lee of Holladay Photo is based on the North Shore of Oahu Hawaii. Specializing in water photography, wedding photography, trash the dress, family photography, and Hawaii commercial photography. to see more work by Holladay Photo got to www.holladayphoto.com.
Hawaii Tropic Sunset - Image 1731
For museum-quality prints in different styles and frames,
d-davila.pixels.com/featured/hawaii-tropics-sunset-d-davi...
Hawaiian Airlines
A330-243, c/n nbr 1212
named " Hanaiakamalama "
delivered April 2011
parked at the gate at Honolulu
Another shoot for the action packed Hawaii 5-0 TV series. This time at Honolulu International Airport (HNL)
Edited ISS043 image of Hawaii seen at night. The brightest island by far is Oahu. Pearl Harbor is visible as the dark spot in the lights of Oahu.
This was shot after the sun went down.
I used two exposures for this image. I really like the natural light and the hdr image.
Do you like Classical music? What about Hawaiian music?
In Tacoma, Washington in 1916, people preferred Hawaiian music to Classical music “ten to one.” The popular songs included “She Sang Aloha to Me,” “Pretty Baby,” and “I Left Her on the Beach at Honolulu.”
In 1898, the American music recording industry was developing, and Hawaiian music became popular in the U.S. and throughout the world. Ads about Hawaiian music records appeared in American newspapers in the first quarter of the 1900s.
- Alice Kim
Hawaiian Music
Rock Island Argus, April 11, 1917, P. 8
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92053934/1917-04-11/ed-...
Hawaii Digital Newspaper Project
SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, HI - The Rev. Dr. Kaleo Patterson of the Pacific Justice and Reconciliation Center conducts the Hawaiian site blessing prior to the official ground breaking for the new 228 personnel UEPH on Montague Street. Army personnel participating in the official groundbreaking were: Lt. Col. David Hurley, 25th ID Division Engineer (left), Lt. Col. Douglas Guttormsen, commander U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Honolulu District (second from left), and Col. Douglas Mulbury, commander, USAG-HI (fifth from left). (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Dino W. Buchanan )
Big Island, Hawaii. Surprisingly field full of Hawaiian petroglyphs in the Waikoloa area -- amidst hotels and resorts. Mostly ignored by tourists and dozens and dozens of joggers, who are so busy listening to their iPods they don't bother to look down at their feet. Relatively new, in historical terms, as the Hawaiian islands were only recently populated by humans (between 200 AD and 500 AD). The symbol on the left is a sea turtle (Honu) - representing good luck, the circle next to it potentially representing the first born son of whoever carved this petroglyph.
Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge
Island of Hawaii
Federally listed as Endangered due to habitat loss, non-native predators, and disease.