Saturday, June 25, 2016

The Wearin' O' the Green

    There has been a brief interruption in the  blogosphere as your humble correspondent has been channeling his creative energies into the paper mache fish, preparing for the show at the Kona library which will open
See the Dragon Wrasse and His Buddies At the Library
next Friday.  The finishing touches are going on the last fish to be displayed, my best (and only) attempt at a dragon wrasse.  I am sure you would all agree that this is a difficult fish to render in any medium. 

   I am reminded of my trip to Sicily ten years ago, when the redoubtable SKG and I visited Caltagirone.  Not only does this small city in the mountainous center of the island boast a couple killer churches. More importantly from Sandra's perspective, Caltagirone is the home of a famous ceramics industry, which has been booming for over a thousand years. 

    Suffice it to say,  the reason we stopped in Caltagirone had little to do with the delectable cathedral and more to do with looking at colorful clay pots, plates and what have you.  The reason I bring this up ,and you would be more than justified in wondering if there was a point to any of this, is that we visited a ceramics gallery in which the artist featured a collection of tropical fish created from fired clay.  Through the miracle of digital photography, I am able to show you a
Ceramic Lionfish  Caltagirone, Sicily 2006
picture of his lionfish hanging on the gallery wall.  I doubt that Lloyd's of London would write a policy covering shipping for something like that!  My dragon wrasse is not quite that ornate.  Created from paper mache, it is certainly less fragile.  Nevertheless, I'm sure you will recognize the connection (And congratulate me on bringing this tale full circle...in hopes that I will move on.)

    But before I do,  I am sharing one more picture from the medieval district of Caltagirone.  Its a great shot and comes with a moral.

     Despite a fall off in our literary output, we didn't lose sight of the primary mission: To search and seek out Hawaiian fishes, to boldly go...  Well, I'm not
Don't mess with Miss Piggy.  Or Sandra!
James Kirk or Link Hogthrob.  And I would never, ever, compare Sandra to Miss Piggy, even in Piggy's reprise of the Lt. Uhura role.  Just to show you that the mission lives, here are a few of the tidbits we have discovered in the past week.

     One week ago, sweetie and I went down to Kahalu'u.  We made the circuit without seeing much until we were just about ready to head for the barn.  In a patch of pretty good coral just this side of Surfer's Rock, I spotted a little green fish.   This was the  keiki of the Blacktail or Old Lady Wrasse, T. balieui.  I hadn't seen this juvenile in several years.  I last saw the female back in 2014.  This is a pretty tough fish here in Kona.  Supposedly it is easier in the northwest chain, so I guess if I want to see the adult male, I need to go to Midway.  This individual made my life difficult by hiding in a fenestrated piece of coral.  While I was trying to get a picture, Sandra spotted one of her favorite associations, the Ember (Red lip) Parrot and the Christmas Wrasse  The little green fish had disappeared, so I worked on the big guys.  Luckily they were more cooperative and you see the result here.  Its hard to know what these two unlikely partners accomplish by working together, but there is no doubt that this is a genuine association.  I will leave it up to the fish ecologists to tell us what a large parrotfish gets from hanging around with the ordinarily fast moving and much smaller
Ember Parrotfish and Christmas Wrasse
Christmas wrasse.  Both are elusive, either individually or when working together, so I'm just glad that they cooperated for this picture.

    A few days later,  I went back to K Bay for an afternoon swim.  This outing started with a pretty good look at a male pearl wrasse.  He was lurking in the extreme shallows just inside the breakwater.  I snuck in and got an acceptable picture along with a few coral bumps.  I wasn't bleeding, so nobody had to go to the penalty box.  On the way in, I saw a shrimp in piece of cauliflower coral.  Never one to pass up an opportunity, I hung on the bottom and snapped away until this tiny guy finally retreated into his refuge.  And look at this!  I'm pretty sure that this is my best shot of a one spot shrimp, maybe my best picture of any shrimp.  It just goes to show that in this age of digital photography with voluminous memory cards, you have very little ot lose by taking your time and taking lots of pictures

Eye Spot Shrimp  Saron neglectus.  Kahalu'u 2016
  















   



   Which brings us to yesterday.  I felt like I had been avoiding my good friends down at the pier, so that's where I went for my afternoon swim.  On my way out, what should I see but another little green fish.  This was my first juvenile blacktail wrasse for the pier.  Curiously, of the few adult blacktails I have seen, all but one 
Blacktail Wrasse and Belted Wrasse Juv.  Kailua Kona 2016
has been in this area.  The other was at Black Sand Beach 49 at the Mauna Lani.  It is a testimony to how uncommon the Old Lady Wrasse is, at least here on the big Island, that that sighting wins the award for  the best fish we have seen at Black Sand Beach.

    This fish was far more cooperative than his brother at Kahalu'u.  I had left the camera on close up mode, that amazing feature in which the camera  measures the distance and adjusts the flash.  I don't think I did this on purpose, but it resulted in the extremely  lucky picture you see.  The little green fish allowed us several more pictures, but none were as good as the first shot.

    Way out in front of the palace, I had several quick looks at a bigeye.  He was deep and every time I would dive in hopes of a picture, he would disappear.

     On the way in, just as I reached the third swim buoy, I saw a juvenile Hawaiian hogfish.  This handsome
Hawaiian Hogfish  Bodianus albotaeniatus  juv.   Kailua Kona 2016
fish with the golden dorsum is one of our favorites.  Although we somehow manage to see a female most years, we hadn't seen one of these handsome juveniles since 2013.  That fish was also on the Ironman side of the pier, but closer in.  He was by the second swim buoy in five feet of water.  This small beauty was twice as deep.  I dove him several times, finally getting a chance as I held onto a coral about six feet down.  He crept out over the edge of the coral and I took several pictures with him only a few feet away.  

   When I was finished taking pictures I looked around and saw two ladies snorkeling near by.  I called them over and explained what I had, a very small fish, fairly deep with a golden head.  Luckily I was  able to find the fish again, dove down and pointed. On closer look, this appeared to be a mother and daughter.  They both got a good look at this pretty little fish.  They were interested enough to ask me to repeat the name, so maybe they went home and added this jewel to their list.  And maybe Link Hogthrob will fly down my chimney.  As if I have one.  After all, this is Hawaii.

    Things were going so well that  I took a  chance and crossed the floating swim line for a look by the 
Leaf Scorpionfish    Kahalu'u   June 2016  The nose is at the lower right.
pier.  The water was clear.  I saw a tiny linkia starfish and  yet again the cushion star.  I was working my way
further out, noticing that there was a really large number of collector urchins.  I was thinking what a desirable turn of events more urchins represented, when I suddenly heard a roar.  Surfacing, I saw the Kona Agressor just thirty yards further down the pier.  He had ghosted in and was now revving his engines in reverse to stop his way, which, by the by, was straight towards me!  This isn't a huge vessel, but its probably the biggest thing that ties up to the pier on a given day.  From my perspective, it looked pretty big!

 
    It was my intention that this would be the end of the blog.  But I went early down to Kahalu'u this morning.   

  Having had some pretty good luck in the mornings, I hit the water about 9 AM.  I found the coral head where I found the leaf scorpiofish six weeks ago and he was there again.  The combination of a morning high tide and an approach before lots of swimmers are in the area may be what it takes.  Certainly I have looked at that patch of coral every time in, probably eight to ten times over the six weeks, with no results.  Like before he was positioned on the bottom in the middle of the coral.   As this fish was black and white, odds are it is the same fish we saw previously.  I was by myself so I took my time, enjoying the fish and trying different techniques to get a good picture.  As you can see, on a single attempt I got a picture that makes sense.  

The impossible shot!  Fourline Wrasse, Pseudocheilinus tetrtaenia   Kahalu'u June 2016
   Everything else is a difficult puzzle in black and white.  If one is very patient, you can just make out the fish, but no messing with light and contrast (the underwater photographer's two best friends) animate this fish.  The one exception is the first picture I took.  On that shot, I held on to a bit of dead coral, thrust the camera into the coral and shot with the close up lens and flash.  The result is a pretty good picture of the dorsal fin.  Or is it the tail?  Whatever it is, its in good focus.

   After I had done all the damage I could, I looked around and saw another mother / daughter combo about five yards away.  They came over and had a look.  Suffice it to say, getting down and looking into the coral
The Leaf Scorpionfish waves goodbye.  Or is he wagging his tail?
was a tricky proposition and I'm pretty sure that the daughter did not manage.  Mom was up to speed though, and seemed to get a good  look.    Hopefully she has gone home and checked it off her list. 

      Incidentally, it was only after I got home that I discovered that it was Bring Your Daughter to the reef Week.

   As the conditions seemed identical to six weeks before, I meandered over to the breakwater and found the coral that had been the home to the fourline wrasse.  In the blog, I believe I fermented some sour grapes, saying that getting a picture of that little brown fish in the middle of the cauliflower coral was  impossible.  Well, today the fish was just a bit more cooperative and you are looking at a picture that I took.  Not too shabby for an impossible fish.

jeff

Star Eye Fins

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

The Surf Is Up and So Is the Pizza Dough!

    Over the last couple weeks things have been quite acceptable here in Kona.  The weather has remained cool (a dramatic change from last year) and it is raining a bit on most nights.  The plants in the garden at Casa Ono are loving it.  And for most of that time, we enjoyed some acceptably mild surf conditions and some good snorkeling.
The Stealth Octopus  Kahalu'u 2016
During the mild surf conditions, I had a nice outing to Kahalu'u where I spent fifteen intimate minutes  with a
small octopus.  So brave was this young cephalopod, that he allowed me to approach within a couple feet without swimming away.  From the photographic point of view, however, this encounter was a bust.  Though I held the camera right up next to the octopus, I did not get a single really good picture.  My current position is that vis a vis my camera, the day octopus employs stealth technology.  Assuming that one's goal in life is to take a brilliant picture of a day octopus, this may constitute the ultimate bummer. 

  A few minutes before I saw my brave little octopus, I had another exciting encounter, this time with a furtive fourline wrasse, Ps. tetrataenia.  He was hiding in a pocilipora coral.  By being persistent I was able to see his striped flank, his iridescent chin stripe and his red eye.  Not all three field marks at any single moment, mind you, but there was no doubt about who was hiding in the interstices of that cauliflower coral.  From a (failed) photographic standpoint, the closest I came was a picture of the coral itself.  This was not for trying, however.  I spent several minutes clinging to rocks and chunks of dead coral hoping this fish would pop out for a quick pic. To my credit, I was able to bring Sandra back the following day, find the same coral and show her the fish.  She seems to have got a better look than I did, as she observed the entire small fish as it took a quick excursion into open water.

The Furtive Fourline Wrasse (sadly not my picture)
     As you may recall, this follows hard upon my sighting of the eightstripe wrasse, the other member of the genus Pseudocheilinus that occurs at snorkeling depth in Hawaii.  Like the eightstripe, I had not seen this species for several years, although there was a time when it was pretty dependable at Kahalu'u.  The coral patch on the far side of Surfer's Rock, where we had this species staked out, is now reduced to dead rubble. Suffice it to say, I'm really pleased to have both these small wrasses on my 2016 list.

    One more Pseudocheilinus is found in the Hawaii field guides, but Jack Randall tells us that it is found below 40 feet. The Disappearing Wrasse is only 3 inches in length, a bland brick red and the name suggests that it is easily overlooked in the best of circumstances.

   By the following day the surf was picking up.  Sandra dropped me off at the pier, which in these conditions is the last refuge of a snorkeling scoundrel. (With apologies to Samuel Johnson, who claimed that it was
politics...and you didn't even know that Samuel Johnson was a snorkeler) While she went shopping I
 pretended to snorkel in the milky water. Over by the pier I found yet another cushion starfish.  That's four cushion starfish in only a couple months.  What had been a rare find is now heading rapidly toward the mundane.  On the other hand, I finally had something to photograph.  And one can say this for a starfish:  he really knows how to hold still to have his picture taken. 

   As I was standing by the cubbies, after my shower, I was passed by a mother, her teenage daughter who was brandishing a bright pink inner tube, and boy of about four or five who was trussed up in a life vest.  On second look, I noticed that mom was holding a snorkel mask!  Here, at last, was a true photo op.

    The three of them got in the water and mom and sis took turns fixing the mask on the boys face and sending him off for short snorkeling excursions.  The only thing I could think of was that this must have been his birthday wish, to become the next Jack Randall.

Never mind the sour looks.  You're not getting one of my orchids.
    As the day wore on, it became apparent that relatively high surf was here to stay for the foreseeable future.  I had just about talked Sandra into a trip to Mahukona, that little bay just south of Hawi, where the sea rushes by the entry ladder.  Now, however, we were looking for a land based activity.  That morning I had received an email from a couple who raise Cymbidium orchids outside Waimea.  They were hosting a sale and workshop.  It sounded like just  the thing.

    On Saturday morning we hopped in the car and made the drive to Waimea, arriving about 9:30.  Around 11 we made the short drive out to the orchid farm.  Bob and Jennifer are about the same age as your humble correspondent and have enjoyed some of the same life experiences, like finding a way to avoid serving in the Vietnam War.

    Bob gave us a lesson in repotting  Cymbidium orchids.  At the risk of overstating the obvious, they need to be repotted when they outgrow their container. I was surprised to find that these orchids, perhaps all
What a lovely cup of tea.
orchids, have bulbs which when handled properly grow roots and shoots.  Hence, they have a certain similarity to the dahlias that we raised back in northern Washington.  As Bob pointed out, however, the orchid bulb lives above ground surrounded by a bit of bark, while the dahlia bulb resides three inches deep in the dirt.  That is where the similarity breaks down.  But they are both bulbs and when separated and placed in a bag, they send out roots and shoots.

    Bob took apart a raggedy looking orchid, cleaned off the bulb and but it in a ziplock plastic bag with some bark.  For him, plastic works better than paper.  This reminds me of the question posed by a young Dustin Hoffman to Mrs. Robinson at about the same time that Bob and I were finding ways to avoid an expense paid vacation to the very spot where one might find Cymbidium orchids.  Wood / wire, paper / plastic, iceberg / Goldberg and nasty little men in black pajamas carrying Kalashnikovs.

   Both of our hosts held forth at length on the native range of  Cymbidiums and for a very good reasonThey are found in the wild from the foothills of the Himalayas to the lowlands of Indochina.  This is important because here in Hawaii, as  elsewhere, one needs to select an orchid that thrives in the temperature provided
Formidable!
by his home or garden.  Obviously, if you live at the beach, you want one native to Bangkok.  If you live in Waimea, you have a larger selection from which to choose.  I was surprised to hear that it gets down into the 40s in Waimea.  Bob suggested that it may dip into the 50s at Casa Ono.  Not only that, but one can purchase (for a reasonable price) a thermometer from Amazon.com that will retain the low and high temperatures for a given period, like week, which can be pretty important information for an orchid fancier.  Especially if he wants to keep orchiectomies to a minimum.  (If that isn't enough to make you cross your legs, you can look up orchiectomy when you get home.)

    After watching Bob dismantle the ratty looking orchid, I asked his lovely wife if she would sell me one of the bulbs that had started to sprout and that they had carefully placed in a pot.  We went around a couple times on this one.  No matter how I rephrased the question, the answer was the same: by the time that sprouting orchid bulb had been placed in the three inch pot with just the right amount of bark and love, the work had been done and the risk of a failed bulb (only 20% in Bob's skilled hands) had been overcome.  Despite the fact that she had a large table full of these three inch pots, she was not going to sell one of those growing bulbs.  They were her babies.

Waimea Town Market.  Fun for Everybody
    What she did offer was the opportunity to return at a later date and select a ratty looking orchid in a gallon container from the $10 display out back.  In a moment of weakness, she said that she would permit us to use the building where Bob had conducted his seminar, yell at us when necessary, and bid us adieu clutching one or two plastic bags of orchid bulbs with a bit of bark.  Now I ask you, where else on this tourist infested isle can you have that much fun for $10?   Jennifer may live to regret this offer.  Or maybe, in the spirit of Captain Renault and Mr.Rick, it will be the beginning of a beautiful friendship.  Possibly somewhere in between.

     As we leave the Orchidpeople Farm, I am obligated to impart this last critical piece of knowledge.  There are many genera of orchids and Cymbidia mostly come in yellows and whites.  So if you are purchasing a purple orchid on Husky game day, it ain't no Cymbidium.  

    As you may recall (if you are not already asleep) we left the narrative trail somewhere before 10 AM as Sandra and I entered Waimea.  Before heading to the orchid workshop, we had left time to visit the Waimea Town Farmers Market.  There are several farmers markets on Saturday in Waimea.  This one, on the campus of the Parker School, is reputed to have the best food.

European Bison.  I think I'll just sneak in and get a little milk.  Or not.
   We stayed for a little more than an hour, enjoying the relatively small number of booths selling merchandise and an equal number of eateries. Among the food offerings was a tempting Mexican stand.  We had just about decided to split a breakfast burrito when Sandra discovered the crepe lady.  This magician chefs the Magic Pan Restaurant in Hilo, but comes to Waimea on Saturday morning to make the most toothsome crepes al fresco this side of Honolulu. We had the Alaska, which in addition to mozzarella and creme fraiche contains large chunks of yummy salmon.  Oooh la la.  As we were watching the chef de crepe prepare our snack, a girl came up and ordered the chocolate crepe.  Huge scoops of chocolate and berry filling, topped with whipped creme and powder sugar.  Gotta go back.  Soon.

    While we ate, a couple strolled by carrying their bulldog in a baby pack.  for a minute there I thought I was at the Country Fair outside Eugene, Oregon.  All we needed was some naked people and a little pot.  Its sobering to think that marijuana is now completely legal in Eugene.  Do you think this has taken some of the  thrill out of living there?

River Buffalo On the farm in India
    We saw the Japanese lady selling orchids that grow in cunning little wire baskets.  There is no bark involved and their roots wave gaily in the breeze.  And we met the pretty girl with her glass teapots  who actually grows tea somewhere near Hilo.  But the show stopper was the nice couple who raise goats on the slopes of Mauna Kea and sell a variety of home made goat cheese at the farmers market.  

    The cheese was very good, we especially loved the crottin, firm, nutty and full of goat.  But the conversation was even better.  Somehow it turned to Mozzarella and the genus Bos.   I had studied Bos a few years back when I became interested in the derivation of rodeo bulls.  The cattle in India are are a distinct sub-species,  Bos taurus indicus.  They are interbred with our European cattle to make Santa Gertrudis and other rodeo stock.  This is possible because they are conspecific, both descended from the aurochs, which though wide spread thousands of years ago, is long extinct.

   Being involved in the manufacture of cheese, Erin knew quite a bit more about mozzeralla than I did.  Although she didn't want to present a full blown lecture, she let slip that mozzarella was produced from the milk of river buffalo.  What follows here is a light hearted (at times) review, mostly from that ultimate resource of the 21st Century, Wikipedia.  The very nature of this source is that depending on how you search, it is possible to find references with differing facts.  Hmmm.  With that disclaimer, here we go.  

The Italian Water Buffalo
    As you probably know, a great deal of what now passes for mozzarella is now made from cows milk.  For hundreds of years, though,  mozzarella was made only from buffalo milk.  I had foolishly  assumed that this was the European buffalo, which is actually a bison. These are wild animals, very similar to the American bison, and both belong to the genus Bison.  Shocking! If you know anything about Buffalo Bill and the Wild West, you won't be surprised to find out that the European bison was never truly domesticated or milked.  And like the American bison it was hunted to near extinction.  The last truly wild herd was killed off by the Nazis as they retreated across Poland. Following the war, only a few specimens remained in private collections.  These animals were brought together to breed and their offspring have been released into parks throughout Eastern Europe and Germany.  There they live in forests, as opposed to the prairies favored by their American cousins.  These large herds are descended from only a couple dozen animals.  This species came as close to extinction as the California condor!

   You will recall that the phrase that Erin uttered, if you will pardon the pun, was "river buffalo".  This is a species that originated in India. Curiously, the river buffalo, Babalus babalus, was domesticated about the same time that Hinduism came into being.  Indians have been coexisting with their domestic cattle for over 4,000 years.  How the river buffalo came to Europe is a bit hazy, but it was probably introduced into Italy around 600 AD in trade with nomadic tribes from central Asia who had migrated west and were living near the Danube.  River buffalo have thus been exposed to animal husbandry as practiced by the Italians for 1400
Mama Mia!  That's a tasty pie!
years. From the Ostragoths to Bertolli.  As a result, the animal that produces milk for mozzarella is somewhat different than the domestic water buffalo of India; it is commonly called the Italian water buffalo.  But make no mistake, they are conspecific and are able to interbreed.

   The first mozzarella was probably produced around 1200.  As Marco Polo returned to Venice with pasta in 1293,  it is just possible that the later crusaders had a chance to sample a slice of  lasagne on their way back from to the Holy Lands. Perhaps they traded those bronze horses that grace the facade of St Mark's (which they pilfered from the Byzantium)  for a plate of spaghetti con formaggio.

    The bottom line is that these sacred cows are of the genus Bubalus, not the genus Bos.  More people consume food products associated with this species than any other mammal.  While about 200,000 tons of milk is harvested annually in Italy, 56 million tons of river buffalo milk is harvested each year in India.  Holy cow, indeed.  Just think, if the Indians turned all that milk into mozzarella they could have 7 million tons of tasty cheese.  And that, my friends, is a lot of pizza.

jeff

Many thanks to Orchidpeople of Hawaii  Jennifer Snyder and Bob Harris and Dick and Erin Threlfall of the Hawaii Island Goat Dairy.

 
Greetings from the Hawaii Island Goat Dairy


  

                        

  

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Lucky Linda

   Over the last couple of weeks we have had visitors from the mainland.  This means we have been enjoying elaborate communal meals and going out to restaurants.  The downside of this is that your humble reporter
Linda and Sandra on Paul Allen's Reef
may have to skip a few meals to get back into snorkeling trim.  Alternatively, I can buy a bigger swimsuit, a purchase I would prefer to avoid if at all possible.

   In addition to dining with our guests, we have had them accompany us on our snorkeling trips.  Most recently, this involved our friend Linda, who arrived with her husband Larry from Portland.  Linda and Larry have been Sandra's friends like forever and mine, therefore , for the last 19 years.  My, my, how time passes by.   Being both adventuresome and inquisitive, Linda was eager to go out with us and look at the fish.   We were a little wary as she is far from a regular snorkeler and it is a big, unpredictable ocean.

    Our first outing was to Paul Allen's Reef.  As you may recall, the Inner Harbour in front of the King Kam Hotel is our first choice for introducing uncertain snorkelers to the deep blue sea.  It is very protected with
 virtually no shoreline waves and there is a soft, sandy entry where anyone can stand and bond with the salt water.  Best of all, at this time of year, the water is not especially cold.  Linda had practiced  with her equipment in the pool and seemed to do fine, so off we went.

    As we rounded the little jetty by the  Heiau, it was obvious to me that she was putting more effort into swimming than was necessary.  Its difficult for those of us that do it every day to remember that ocean swimming is different from swimming in a pool.  There are the physical differences, like current.  And psychic differences like changing depths.  Why should hitting a golf ball 50 yards over a pond be any different than hitting it over a patch of grass.  In the words of John Lennon, "Its all in your mind, you know."   And so it is that many people when they need time to adapt before they are truly comfortable swimming to the ocean. 
Reticulated Butterflyfish  Paul Allen's Reef 2016

   The ocean was calm and Sandra and I were able to coax Linda across the bay, past the entrance to Paul
Allen's Lagoon and out onto the reef.  In the short time allowed, we saw a nice smattering of the usual stuff.  By the time Sandra spotted a handsome pair of reticulated butterflyfish, our guest had already made the club house turn and was headed for the barn.  I let Sandra swim back with Linda while I took a couple pictures of the irresistible retics.

    I figured that I would catch up with them, but as I started my swim I was stopped short.  On the inner edge of the reef, quite near Paul Allen's Canal, I spotted an aspricaudus about eight feet below me.  The yellowtail filefish is uncommon, but I now see at least one a year.  The trick to keeping aspricaudus on the list is to recognize that they are local;  the bar at the Dog Beach is a pretty good spot for this uncommon fish and the small bay at Mahukona is virtually a sure thing if you are persistent.  Having said that, I have never before seen this species in the vicinity of the pier.   From that standpoint, it was  a really big deal.  Time to repair to the 2016 Kona Fishlist and put a 1b (my designation for the Paul Allen's Reef) next to Pervagor aspricaudus.

    Part of the problem with this fish, like many fish that one doesn't see very often, is that they are secretive,  spending a lot of time inside the coral.  For this reason, we are probably swimming over a variety of stone
Yellowtail Filefish  Pervagor aspricaudus  PAR  2016
fish every time we snorkel.  In addition, the yellowtail filefish is skittish; when you see it, it seems to be aware of your attention and is immediately swimming for a hideaway in the rocks or coral.  This guy permitted me a few looks over about five minutes until he disappeared for good into the reef only four feet down.

    In Bali, the yellowtail filefish is more common and it tends to swim up in the water, as opposed to darting in and out of crevices.  But it is every bit as skittish, so we see it but we rarely get a picture
    Pervagor aspricaudus is indeed present on Paul Allen's Reef.

I apologize for the picture and present it primarily for documentation.

    On the way in,  I passed Sandra and Linda enjoying the fish of the Inner Harbour, which although  its a bit cooler than the outside, is home to about twenty species of reef fish.

                                       >))));>        >))));>        >))));>         >)))));>

    Two days ago, we scooped up our visitors bright and early and headed down to Ho'okena.  We drove through a fine mist as we traversed the highlands of Honaunau, but by the time we descended the 1500 feet
And So Does Linda!
to Ho'okena it was warm and dry, if a bit overcast.  We got Larry situated with a spectacular view of the bay and then the threesome headed down the beach.

    The wave predictor had suggested that Ho'okena should be completely flat, ideal for our novice.  This was not entirely true, as there were occasional sets breaking with one foot faces, the tail outs racing fifteen feet up the beach.

   Linda is very game, but she is also three years status post total hip replacement.  Like a 70 something Bo Jackson, who I saw hit a major league home run on a total hip prosthesis, she continues to be very active.  However, in these conditions, we were concerned that everyone make a good quick entry beyond the surf
Ambon Toby  Ho'okena 2012  Beautiful but Easily Overlooked
line.  I just don't know what one would do on this medically deficient isle if he or she suffered a dislocated total hip.  Flying to Honolulu seems the most likely.

    Suffice it to say, that with a little coaching we got our guest into the water and beyond the surf line without anything bad happening.  Soon we were all  swimming happily in the Kona crystal.  It is always fun to look at the fish in clear water as they swim around healthy coral.  Although the coral at Ho'okena is dying just like everywhere else, it is in much better shape than the PAR, which is perhaps the most damaged of anywhere on the Kona Coast.

   Sandra found Linda a nice pair of red labrid wrasses and an ambon toby, which Linda was able to enjoy as we had studied it the night before.  I was able to contribute a stunning zebra moray poking his head out of a coral, which like so many around here, was half healthy and half dead.

   After the eel, it was time for Linda and Sandra to return to the beach.  I swam in to make sure that Sandra

Zebra Moray Ho'okena 2016
and Linda cleared the surf zone with appropriate dispatch and then I headed back out for another look.

   About forty meters from shore, in about fifteen feet of water, I saw a small pinkish fish.  diving down, I got a superb look at an eightline wrasse. He was swimming above and through a coral head with some smaller juveniles, bird and saddle wrasses, koles and parrotfish.  Boy was I happy!  According to my lists, the last time I saw one of these was in November of 2011 at Kahalu'u.  There has been a fair amount of coral death at K Bay and I wonder if that is the reason that I have not seen eightstripe and four stripe wrasses there for so many years.  It seems like we would get one or both on most two week vacations twenty years ago.  The eightstripe was more difficult even then.

    I dove this fish five times.  Being a wuss, these twelve foot dives were as deep as I go. Three times I was lucky to get a picture and here you see the results.  John Hoover has an excellent picture in his book and one
Eightstripe Wrasse    Ho'okena 2016
has to suppose that if I had been diving,  I would have captured a better image.  Of course I don't dive,  so this will have to suffice.  Additionally, it is very possible that knowledgeable fish finding divers see this fish frequently. Global warming doesn't seem to have harmed the deeper coral to the same extent we see in the shallows and better habitat may mean the preservation of less common species.

    At the end of the day, for me, this was quite a triumph.

     The overcast had persisted, so it was a nice cool afternoon.  We had a wonderful lunch under the shelter.  Linda had made egg salad, which is my favorite.  A family of locals with about ten children occupied the tables around us, so we were continuously entertained as the kids raced back and forth. 
Sandra, Larry and Linda.   Three Amigos at Ho'okena


                                               >))));>        >))));>         >))));>         >)))));>

    Which brings us to yesterday.  I wanted to go back to Paul Allen's Canal to see if I could find the aspricaudus.  Or maybe I just wanted to sing Paul my new song.  (Sung to the tune of The Erie Canal.)

Paul Allen Flies his Helicopter over Kealakekua Bay
I've got a helicopter and her name is Sal
Fifteen yards on Paul Allen's Canal. 
I fly her like a bat and the natives quail!
Fifteen yards on Paul Allen's Canal.

We see some fish most every day
For the struggling coral we have to pray
And we zip right down at a terrible rate
From Keahole Airport to the Thurston Estate. 

    Well, I guess that's enough Hawaiian folk songs for this blog.

    The tide was really high, the beach full of tourists form the cruise ship.  The parasail boats were at full occupancy, and the water was full of board paddlers and kayaks.  Through the circus I swam until I reached the spot by the canal of which you have just been serenaded.  Out by the canal I saw three large eels, a yellowmargin and two whitemouths, all in a small

Eagle Ray  Paul Allen's Reef 2016
area, protruding from the coral and waving their heads back and forth.  I didn't know what that was about, but I took their pictures and began my patrol.  

    Ten minutes of looking here and there did not reveal an aspricaudus, but I did have a moderately close encounter with the glass bottom boat.  The yellowtail filefish tend to stay in one area, so I really thought I had a chance.  While searching for the filefish, I was enjoying the large number of black sea urchins, E. calamaris.  So many had crawled into prominent positions that I thought perhaps they were getting ready to spawn.  Or perhaps the rapture was imminent.   That, by the way, is our new family position. We are available to help, but in the event of the rapture we will have to beg out.
   
     Luckily for all of us, something even better than the rapture occurred.  Right below me an eagle ray
swooped in and began foraging on the shallow reef.  He was only a couple feet below me, so even on this dark afternoon I was able to get some killer pictures.  I took a few stills and then a movie in which he pivots, showing himself from all angles.  I swam with him for several more minutes as he slowly headed back into the
the Ornate Lining of the Eagle Ray's Fin
depths, which were also the waterway used by the parasailing boats.  This was only my third eagle ray of all time.   


    I can't say with any degree of certainty how many eagle rays Paul Allen has seen.  Nor do I know his position on the list for the rapture.  I suppose it is possible that he doesn't even want to be called to heaven.  For the rest of us, snorkeling in Kona might be close enough.

jeff





One more look at the eightstripe wrasse