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Maui Attractions Newsletter May 2010
Two widely-grown tree varieties that are popular in gardens from their native India to Florida (as well as Hawaii) are B. variegata, with its exquisite pure white or lavender flowers and B. purpurea, which run to deeper shades of purple. The trees look very much alike except that the petals of B. variegata tend to overlap while those of B. purpurea are narrower and separated. The pink bauhinia, or St. Thomas tree (B. monarda) has long been planted as specimen trees in Hawaii, especially in coastal leeward areas. Its main pink petal is dotted with crimson. One hybrid, Bauhinia x blakeana, produces brilliant rose-magenta flowers that are the emblem of Hong Kong. This hybrid was discovered in Hong Kong in 1908 and can only be reproduced by grafting since it never sets seed pods. The five-petaled flowers, which bloom profusely during the winter months and peak in the spring, are arranged like an orchid, with four petals of similar size and a fifth that is larger and broader. The fifth petal is broadly stained with a deeper purplish rose than the others. Four white stamens grow from the center. A projecting green pistil develops into a pod after the flowers fade on most orchid trees. These pods hang on the tree for a long time. The tree grows to a height of about twenty feet. Its leaves are a distinctive feature. They have curious double, rounded lobes and suggest a green moth or butterfly. Prominent veins radiate from the point where the stem joins the blade. Insects apparently find the leaves very succulent so they are often full of holes.
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Located at the 6,200 feet elevation on the southwestern slopes of Haleakala in the Kula Forest Reserve, a special state park is a celebration of the vision of Hawaii's first territorial forester, Ralph Sheldon Hosmer. The 10-acre park, called Hosmer's Grove, is within the Kula and Kahikinui Forest Reserves and is reached by driving over a steep dirt road with many switchbacks and poor visibility at the end of the pavement of the Waipoli Road access that wends its way up from the Kekaulike Highway. When conditions are cloudy, visibility is measured in inches. By the turn of the century, the native forests had declined greatly. It was recognized that the watersheds, and therefore, the forests of the island needed to be protected. Denuded forests, like the one at the Polipoli spring, were the focus of replanting efforts by both the government and by private businesses and individuals. The original forest at Polipoli fell victim to the depredations of imported cows and goats that were allowed to roam free through the area. They were set loose in the early 1800s, and by the early 1900s, they had eaten the area bare. When Hosmer was the territory's head forester, between 1904 to 1914, he planned many of the present forest-reserve boundaries in the islands. It was his contention that the primary importance of the forests was as a watershed, so his efforts were not particularly pointed towards preserving the integrity of the native forests. Native trees took so long to grow and often succumbed to the tough competitiveness of other, faster-growing imported trees, and Hosmer and his supporters felt it was better to introduce as many species as possible into the badly affected native forests. He encouraged the importation of hundreds of species of trees to Hawaii from all over the world. Some of these species had no commercial value; others were valuable for ornamentation, wood, windbreaks, fruit or erosion control. Many of these trees were planted in the area around Polipoli spring. Among the trees used were redwood, Monterey cypress, sugi, ash, tropical ash, Mexican pine, red alder, Port Oxford cedar, eucalyptus, swamp mahogany, and blackwood. (The park is known for delicious Methley plums that ripen in early June.) The result of Hosmer's reforestation experiments at Polipoli is a mysterious, very quiet forest that is composed entirely of trees from someplace else. As the mists from the mountain creep through the stands of trees, the understory of delicate ferns and mosses add to the enchantment. Trails lead through massive groves of redwoods, cedar, ash and other trees, each grove with its own personality. Hikers, cyclists and hunters venture through these areas, but, mostly, the miles-long network of trails that crisscross the park and lead up to the summit are not commonly used. It is very peaceful. After his stint as the territorial forester for Hawaii, Hosmer left in 1914 to become professor of forestry at Cornell University. Meanwhile, reforestation efforts like the ones he began continued until the 1940s. The campground at the park, a grassy clearing surrounded by trees, is pretty basic. It has a covered pavilion with two picnic tables and two grills, and restrooms, and running water but no showers. It can be a damp, cold, and desolate place to pitch a tent and fellow campers are likely to be pig hunters. An easy, half-mile loop nature trail begins at one end of the parking lot.
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STANDARD: He is such a wimp! * * * * * * * * STANDARD: I don't understand why she's acting that way. * * * * * * * * STANDARD: What a delusion!
Somen Salad and Crab Won Ton
Ingredients:
Procedure:
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