Sunday, February 16, 2020

HOUSES. This old, old houses...

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HOUSES. This old, old houses.
Sat. 15 February 2o2o
Wailuku, Maui
[Picture taken from Phantom 3 Advanced]


Square houses. Yes, this old houses believes to be the first homes where the first Filipino planters [sakada] lived in Wailuku, Maui, after being brought to the island from the Philippines to work in the sugarcane plantations in Hawaii.

Most of the houses at present times are still made of wood, few of them already modernized/upgraded.

A Day in The Life: HALEAKALA, Her Majesty

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A Day in The Life: HALEAKALA, Her Majesty
When passion is not a hobby. Sat. 15 February 2o2o
Wailuku, Maui

This morning when I flew my Phantom 3 Advanced in the skies of Maui, my drone captured the highest mountain in the island, Haleakala. And some areas or parts of Wailuku and Kahului are also in the picture.

HALEAKALA was originally part of Hawaii National Park along with the volcanoes of Mauna Loa and Kilauea on the island of Hawaiʻi, created in 1916. Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park was made into a separate national park in 1961. The park area was designated an International Biosphere Reserve in 1980.

The name Haleakalā is Hawaiian for "house of the sun."

According to a local legend, the demigod Maui imprisoned the sun here in order to lengthen the day. The Hawaiian National Park Language Correction Act of 2000 was proposed to observe the Hawaiian spelling, but it did not become law.

The park features the dormant Haleakalā (East Maui) Volcano, which last erupted sometime between 1480 and 1600 AD. The park is divided into two distinct sections: the summit area and the coastal Kipahulu area.

Idi Kalman iti Bantay Iao




Idi kalman. Idi kalman iti bantay Iao iti Wailuku
a linangeb ti napuskol nga ulep. Idi kalpasan ti tudo.
Simmiripen ti lawag. Ti makasirap a lawag ti init.
Nangwaknit kadin, wenno aguray pay iti sabali a bisibis?


WAILUKU, MIERKULES, 12 Pebrero 2o2o
Maui