![]() |
|||||||||||
|
Maui Attractions Newsletter July 2007
Special Introductory Rate: 15% Discount of the Prime Season 07'. Maui Ka'anapali Villa Unit 180 is BEACHFRONT on Ka'anapali's finest stretch of white sand swimming beach. Reserve your Maui Oceanfront Villa today, enjoy a wonderful vacation, and create memories that will last a lifetime. Further Details and Photos of the Home may be seen here.
[ Top ]
Meet Tess and Bud Burrid at Mewe Creations. Tell Me The Story
Don't forget to visit the
Check out Maui Community Television brought to you by: [ Top ]
IRONWOOD The common ironwood is a native to Northern Australia, where it is called “beefwood” or “she oak.” It has been cultivated and naturalized in many tropical and subtropical regions and ranges from India and Australia to Southeastern Polynesia as well as in Hawaii.
Hawaiians call this tree paina luheluhe, “weeping pine.” In appearance, they do look like pine trees with long needles on flexible, drooping branches, but, actually, ironwood trees are not pine trees and they do not have true leaves. The “needles” are thread-shaped, jointed, greenish branchlets. At each branchlet joint or node, there are five to fifteen tiny, brownish, toothed bumps that are really degenerate leaves. The overall effect evokes thoughts of horsetails. During May and June male and female flowers are borne separately. The small male flowers form brownish cylinder-like tips at the ends of some branchlets. The small female flowers form red clusters at the base of the branchlets.
The trunk wood is dark red and very tough. The dense wood is as hard as oak and makes fine firewood. It has been used in other parts of the South Pacific in place of koa, for war clubs, spears, kapa beaters, tool handles and large fish hooks. Many mysterious powers are attributed to ironwood in that part of the world. It is said that in the shadow of the tree at full moon, the secrets of the future may be heard. When you hear the gentle sighing of the wind through the tree branches, it is easy to understand why. Some believe that ironwood trees are a symbol of faithfulness. Over much of Polynesia, the tree was a symbol for warriors, and the tree is called the “warrior tree.” In Tahiti, the trees are sacred to the war god ‘Oro whose images were carved from its wood. The plant is very tough, withstanding severe winds and salt sea spray and thriving in poor soil. Like the cactus, it is highly specialized for existence in very dry areas. Biologist Otto Degener points out that the plant thrives in areas where most plants with normal leaves would perish from drought. He says, “Its leaves have degenerated to such an extent that they are almost non-functional, the green stems functioning in their stead. By dispensing with leaves, the plant has enormously reduced the surface that it would otherwise expose to the drying rays of the sun. And to conserve the moisture that would normally escape from the inner tissues of the plant, the microscopic air-pores or stomata necessary for respiration have sunk into sheltered grooves in the slender green stems.” Although they are a most useful and interesting plant, ironwoods often grow into a thick stand that virtually chokes out the growth of almost all other plants, and they take so much nutrients from the soil that few other plants are able to grow next to them. The thick roots have been known to break up pavement. [ Top ] ALAU ISLAND The extensive area of whitewater around the islet is a warning sign that rip-currents and exposed rocks make swimming unsafe. Its 40-foot summit, crowned by two coconut palms, occasionally gets sprayed by crashing waves. Some say the two trees were planted by star-crossed lovers. Others say there used to be three trees, planted by soldiers who went to war. Two came back, one did not. Frigate birds nest on the rocky island and dance through the sky around it, floating in the breezes above the shore. Maui historian Inez Ashdown said the islet was used as a place of sacred study. One chronicle in Thomas Thrum’s “Hawaiian Annual” for 1902, recounts the story about the legendary ‘Ai’ai, who was credited with teaching fishermen how to mark fishing stations by onshore sightings as well as establishing the religious practices of island fishermen. ‘Ai’ai, after being born and growing up in the Hana district, hooked and killed the eel Koona, a famous Molokai puhi, who had emigrated to the area and was raiding ‘Ai’ai’s father’s fishpond at Lehoula. The eel lived a few miles from the shore to the southeast of the rocky islet in a sea cave that was called “Kapukaulua,” the ulua (parrotfish) hole. ‘Ai’ai’s father was Ku’ula, the king’s head fisherman, a man who was supernaturally endowed with the ability to attract and influence fish. At his father’s command, ‘Ai’ai worked out a plan to destroy the eel. He attached a magic hook to a long hau rope he made. He enlisted the help of the villagers living at Hamoa and Haneo’o, who held one end of the long rope, and the people living at Aleamai, who held the other end. When the eel grabbed the hook, ‘Ai’ai signaled and the people began pulling their ends of the rope in a great tug of war. The people at Aleamai landed the puhi at Lehoula and ‘Ai’ai killed it with three stones. The head was cut off and cooked in an imu. (The bones of its jaw with the mouth wide open, is seen to this day, still awash in the waves.) The back bone of the puhi, which is about thirty feet in length and exactly resembles the backbone of an eel, it still lies on the smooth pahoehoe lava where ‘Ai’ai killed it. Because ‘Ai’ai killed Koona, the eel’s caretaker swore vengeance on Ku’ula and his family and came to Hana from Molokai. The caretaker caused Ku’ula to fall into disfavor with the king, who ordered that Ku’ula and his family be burned alive in their house. Ku’ula and his wife died in the flames, but not before Ku’ula gave his son ‘Ai’ai all of his powerful talismans and his sacred knowledge, and helped the boy to escape death by fire. ‘Ai’ai caused the fish to leave the area until the king repented of his evil act. Then, ‘Ai’ai took pity on the people and called the fish back. The king, who was given the first of the catch of fish as usual, choked to death on a fish bone. After that, ‘Ai’ai established the first fishing ground at the sea cave where the eel from Molokai had been caught. Other fishing grounds followed and he went on to establish the practice of constructing ku’ula, small fishing shrines. ’Ai’ai traveled all over Maui and to all of the islands, establishing fishing grounds and teaching the fishermen how to make the shrines. It was believed that it was the power of the ku’ula that attracted the fish they caught. Top ] STANDARD: It makes life difficult when you act like that. * * * * * * STANDARD: I was so embarrased for him I had to look away. * * * * * * STANDARD: My mother and my aunts were very moved. * * * * * * [ Top ]
Manapua
Procedure:
[ Top ] Content of Maui Attractions Newsletter ©Copyright 2008 Meyer Computer, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Original text and images used in this newsletter are protected under the copyright laws of the United States. Reproduction of all or any part of this website by any means whatsoever constitutes copyright infringement and is prohibited absent the express written permission of the copyright owner. |
![]() ![]()
|
||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
| Web Services provided by
Meyer Computer, Inc. Web Hosting & Design, Maui Hawaii |