TROUTS
LATEST PHOTOS
April,
2004 – Issue #35
BOB
AND CAMILLE AT HOME ON MAUI
MISS AMERICAN BEAUTY
This pretty rose, appropriately named, was a gift from
John on April 3 to show his appreciation for the work we have done with the
lawn.
SWEET SIXTEEN
What a lovely picture Emily
makes in her gorgeous prom dress with her date, Ted and her sisters, Molly
and Amy.
IS THIS BUILDING ON FIRE?
No, it’s only the smoke from a sugar cane fire behind it.
IS THIS A CLOUD?
No, it is smoke from the same cane fire.
EASTER BUNNY
On Easter Sunday morning
Camille went outside to see if the Easter Bunny had come and there he was
right outside the front door!
He sure is a happy little
fellow with his sack of treats.
HAZARDOUS DUTY
It takes a strong and brave man to mow out front.
The traffic moves fast and the slope is very steep.
THE PAY OFF
After a few days in the sun, Bob rakes up the clippings
for use in our compost pile.
MEANWHILE
Camille prepares to mow the safer part of the yard.
The before photo is above and the after photo is below.
Ahhh! This is the best
part of working outside – walking around afterwards admiring everything we
have done.
CELEBRATE EARTH DAY
Bob explains Biodiesel as a
volunteer at one of this year’s Earth day events. For more
photos, click on Earth Day.
ANOTHER EARLY BIRTHDAY PRESENT
Camille is quite excited about
receiving these loppers for her birthday in June. She couldn’t wait to
get outside and trim up the hibiscus.
STEWARDSHIP
The real work of Earth Day
happens every day. When ever he has a few moments, Bob heads for the
garden. On this day he was planting onions and pulling weeds.
THE OH-SO-INTERESTING
LANDSCAPE
On the left are taro and sweet
potatoes. On the right is the spring seed pod of the Mother-in-law’s
tongue. The leaf behind the pod belongs to a prayer plant. A
stalk of the Mother-in-law’s tongue is to the left.
FIRE WEED
The scourge of upcountry Maui,
this dainty plant is toxic to livestock and is rapidly spreading across many
of Maui’s pastures. We spotted this lone plant in our gutter.
Fire Weed seeds arrived on Maui in 1997, mixed in with the grass seed used
to landscape along a new stretch of Upcountry highway. Originally from
Africa, Fire Weed has become a huge problem in Australia and on Hawaii’s Big
Island, where it arrived in 1980.
LIBERATION
This poor Ti plant is nearly
lost in the weeds out front.
Here is how she looked after
we gave her a little bit of aloha.
KALAMITY HILL
The day we moved to Kalama
Hill on Makawao Avenue last May, our arrival was heralded by a terrible
traffic accident. We immediately began referring to our location as
Kalamity Hill. With every screech of tires, we expected to hear the
thud of impact like on that first day. On April 25, we heard both the
screech and the thud and ran outside to see a huge geyser of water.
This picture found its way into the next edition of The Maui News.
The driver had crossed the
center line and hit a fire hydrant on the other side of the street.
The car was traveling backwards by the time it hit the hydrant. The
impact caused the car to flip and amazingly, landed on it’s wheels, facing
the opposite direction in the opposite lane of traffic. Here the
paramedics and firemen load the woman into an ambulance.
TROPICAL BIRD
This escaped cockatoo often
frequents our neighborhood. We run outside to see it when we hear its
distinct call. It generally perches in this tree across the
street. Look closely in the middle of the photo to see the white bird.
OOPSY!
When Bob got into the car on
April 28 to drive over to Aloha Recycling and pick me up, it wouldn’t
start. Here he is repairing the fuel pump. The next door
neighbor at Aloha gave me a ride to the Pacific Biodiesel parking lot and I
snapped this picture of Bob playing Diesel Mechanic.
BIODIESEL BOB
Pacific Biodiesel is updating
their Website and one of the new features will be photos of their employees
with their diesel vehicles.
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MONTHLY QUOTES:
“If you have integrity, nothing
else matters. If you don’t have integrity, nothing else matters.”
– Alan Simpson
“Today I bent the truth to be
kind, and I have no regret, for I am far surer of what is kind than I am of
what is true.” – Robert Brault
“The job
of the newspaper is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the
comfortable.” – Finley Peter Dunne