• Erin O'Brien
May – Jun 2022

Hawaii

BIO-111 Study Abroad Read more
  • Trip start
    May 26, 2022

    Honolulu/Waikiki

    May 26, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    First stop of the trip/where we are staying for the time being.
    Had really great food at the Highway Inn. The potato mac salad was amazing. I had the pork luau combo plate and pog. It was a really good meal and it was fun to learn about Loretta and the group.Read more

  • Free Day

    May 27, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 81 °F

    First full day in Hawaii. I went a walk around the canal in the morning, it was a nice walk. We went to the beach and hung out for a couple hours. We also checked out a bunch of local shops. We also went to the Ala Moana Mall, which was outdoor and very confusing to navigate. We went to one store and the food court.

    I spent too much money on food but it was good. I tried pho for the first time and I enjoyed it a lot.

    Throughout the day, I began to notice the homeless population in Honolulu. It was way more than I was expecting, but the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. Hawaii is a very expensive place to live and many people cannot not afford the price of living. And many of the homeless are native to Hawaii and do not want to leave their home.
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  • Diamond Head Trail/KCC Farmers Market

    May 28, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 75 °F

    The Diamond Head Trail was a fun hike that had really great views. The only part I didn’t like was going through the tunnel the first time. I felt a little claustrophobic because it was narrow and I had to duck the whole way.

    Diamond Head Crater is part of the Ko'olau volcano range and the youngest landmark at about 200,000 years old. It got its name from 19th century sailors who approached the islands and saw what they thought was diamonds in the crater. It was actually calcite crystals but the name stuck ever since.

    The KCC Farmers market was one of my favorite parts of the trip and the least documented (of course). I wished I took more pictures of all the options but I loved all of the local vendors and fresh food. I tried so many things here and wished I could’ve tried more.
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  • Pearl Harbor

    May 29, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F

    I am glad I went to the Pearl Harbor Memorial. It was a very surreal and somber visit. I am also glad I got to go out to the USS Arizona Memorial. You could see the oil that is leaking from the ship on the water.

    When the ship sank, it became an environmental disaster. It is believed that between 14,000 and 64,000 gallons of oil has leaked so far, and they estimate that it could continue to leak for 500 years

    This has a huge impact on the sea life who live in the harbor. Even though sea life is growing in the harbor doesn't mean they are thriving. The article I looked at said that a National Park Ranger and a Ship wreck expert has never seen any long term environmental impact studies on the oil.

    One of the main reasons that the oil hasn't been cleaned/removed is because the USS Arizona is a mass burial site. Removal could harm the artifacts or bodies on board the ship. This is pretty much the only obstacle because they have the technology and equipment to remove the oil that is trapped.

    Resources:
    https://www.civilbeat.org/2020/02/oil-constantl….
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  • Nu’uanu Pali Lookout

    May 30, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 72 °F

    On the South side of Oahu,

    The lookout was very beautiful and enjoyed reading about the battle of Nu'uanu. Having big Tony as a tour guide was amazing as well because he could give us more background knowledge than the plaques.

    Vegetation is very different than by Waikiki. This side gets more rain than the north side.
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  • Waimea Valley

    May 30, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 81 °F

    Unique flowers and plants, a waterfall, and a beautiful beach with cliff jumping.

    I really enjoyed Waimea Valley. The plants, flowers, and trees were beautiful and unique to Hawaii. I don't see plant life like that back home. I wanted to get to the waterfall right away. That was an amazing experience. The water was cool and felt great after the hike up there.

    Then we went to Waimea beach. That was very different than Waikiki beach. The waves were much stronger and bigger. The cliff jumping was really fun; I did it three times and had a blast.
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  • Paepae o He’eia

    May 31, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    Fish pond that the locals are trying to restore
    Went to taro fields about 2 miles away and helped harvest.

    Pond is a mixture of fresh and salt water (brackish).
    Photo plankton blooms.
    They have less access to fresh water than they did years ago
    Different plants, fish, crabs, taro on the freshwater side
    AHaupua- land divisions that would sustain the land and people. If the land division does not have it you don’t get it
    Used rocks in the land divisions to create the wall of the fish ponds
    Taro patches were crucial to Hawaii, used to control water. Grow in small ponds, and gather nutrients.
    Very sensitive to the fact that the resources that they need to restore will deplete others
    15 years into the restoration of the pond about 10 years to go
    Goal: 4,000 fish per acre. Harvest regularly while staying sustainable.
    Traditional ecological knowledges - look towards the indigenous knowledge of agriculture/nature
    Try to build a community as well as a pond
    Give to others to build a community that gives to you as well
    Have guardians of the pond, they still talk about them. They protect the fish pond
    If they do not pay attention the guardians will send them messages, taking the fish, to fix it.
    They work according to the moon calendar and catalog fish activity
    Makaha- gate
    Trying to recreate a sustainable relationship with the fish so they are not so afraid of the people
    Named each makaha once completely restored

    This was one of my favorite parts of the trip. I was expecting a fish pond that was about 20 by 20 feet, not an 88 acre pond. It was a great learning experience and I wish we would've been able to stay longer and do some service learning. The way Mamo talked about the fish pond and their goal to feed people was very spiritual and interconnected. This was the first time I realized that Hawaii religion and culture is still practiced and cherished. It also showed me how the definition of sustainability is not just the textbook version. For the people who live by the fish pond, it is restoring something that supported their community and can continue to support them as long as they continue to teach others and protect the practice.

    The restoration process is long and still has about 10 years left until the pond is fully restored. They have to undo damage that colonizers did by introducing invasive species. They partner with the local school to help educate students about the practice and upkeep of the fish pond. They use ancestorial knowledge and modern knowledge to help achieve their goals.

    I think this is a great way for a whole community to be sustainable and help keep alive Hawaiian traditions and knowledge.
    References:
    https://paepaeoheeia.org/about-us/
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  • Kona

    June 1, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

    This day we traveled to Kona and checked into our hostel. The hostel was my favorite place to stay. The people were so nice and the beds were very comfortable.
    Kona was my favorite town that we visited. It was so cute and felt more authentic than Honolulu. I also loved the free trolly.
    I am glad I got to visit the Kona Brewery as well. Talking with Elliot was also very interesting. I enjoyed listening about his former job and this is just my opinion but I think he is way better than Kara.
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  • Pu’u Wa’awa’a

    June 2, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 72 °F

    The worst hike I have ever been on.

    Actually wasn't that bad, I was just not prepared so that sucks.
    I found the reserve very nice and the views were good.
    I wish we could've done some service learning but its okay.Read more

  • Kona Free Day

    June 3, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F

    Today was a free day. All of us were fairly tired and it was hot. We went into town to the shops and a small farmers market.
    We also watched the sunset at a good spot that Elizabeth found.
    We did have a potluck style dinner with help from Loretta. It was a really fun dinner and a great idea.Read more

  • Greenwell Coffee Farm

    June 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F

    When coffee is ready to harvest the fruit is a red color.

    I enjoyed the tour, it was fun to see several different plants not just coffee. The process of coffee making was interesting as well. The process really depended on the weather, they need the sun to help dry out the coffee beans.Read more

  • BreakfastBreakfast

    Trip to Hilo

    June 4, 2022 in the United States ⋅ 🌧 72 °F

    Rainbow falls
    Cacao farm
    Hawaii volcanoes national park

    Each place was very beautiful.

    I loved the Cacao farm and the chocolate was amazing. Wish I would've got more.

    Hawaii Volcanoes National Park was a cool experience. I was glad that the man with the telescope let me look and take a video. I now can say I have seen lava, which is cool.Read more

  • Hilo Astronomy Center and Free Time

    June 5, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 72 °F

    I love the astronomy center, especially since everything was also translated in the Hawaiian language. I think that is important that they included the Hawaiian language. I loved the screenings about the galaxy and black holes. I have always been fascinated by stars so I enjoyed that part of the center.

    The Gardens outside of the Astronomy Center were very beautiful even though it was pouring. I was glad our tour guide was able to explain the uses of each plant and how they were used by native Hawaiians and other Polynesian cultures.

    Exploring Hilo was fun as well. I saw lots of beautiful murals but my favorite was the one of the turtle. I had a very good pulled pork sandwich for lunch .
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  • Office of climate change, sustainability

    June 7, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 81 °F

    Office of climate change, sustainability and resiliency
    City and County of Honolulu

    A young office, charter mandated, created by voters
    Voters pushed for climate change prevention and sustainability.
    Government needs to lead by example
    When office was created the climate change commission the created as well

    Climate change is human made and we know where it comes from
    It is a threat multiplier - air temperature can have electrical impacts, risk to human health, etc.
    Continued growth in hazardous areas may also contribute to the disasters

    They have measured significant climate changes over a century
    -northeast trade winds are not as strong in Hawaii has climate impacts
    Sea levels can be curved and but is more time

    Climate is a now issue and can’t be put off

    Climate ready Oahu - make sure people have a shared understanding of climate risk
    1. Sea level rise and coastal erosion
    2. Increasing temperatures
    3. Rain Bomb - air is warmer can hold more moisture, comes down in buckets
    4. Decreasing precipitation
    5. Hurricane - high winds, heavy rains, storm surge

    The change that is coming must be met with change
    Created strategies, documents, and policies

    The electricity on the islands must be 100% local no later than 2035
    - need to transition off of coal and fuel
    - Closing the only coal plant next year
    - Have a regulatory structure to help keep progress/speed it up

    Building codes help build the foundation of sustainability and efficiency

    New bill that obligates large buildings to take data on their energy, agriculture, water, and make it public

    Restoration helps with climate change

    Used non profits to help out reach to indigenous peoples to help go back to traditional values and systems

    Communication is important
    - 4 county sustainability council that spans the Hawaiian Islands
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  • RRR Recycling

    June 8, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    Picks up recycling from residents
    Dump into the tipping floor
    Have a belt in the ground called the in feed
    Where it goes up to people who pick out the trash
    Separates cardboard, newspaper, and then the rest is hand picked out and separated manually
    Use to all be handpicked until 7 years ago
    Doubling their size soon

    Successfully sorts 98% the first run through - I find this impressive

    People use plastic bags and tie them which makes it difficult

    Shipped their refuge/recycling to the mainland/other countries to get recycled material

    Can hold up to 800-1000 tons of recycled material in their warehouse
    Do about 250 tons a day
    8-10 shipping containers a day

    Separated plastic containers by natural and unnatural

    13 redemption centers

    The money they get from the recyclables they share with the city
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  • Tipping Floor

    H-Power

    June 8, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 72 °F

    Most successful public works project
    Saved Hawaii from creating more landfills
    Get trucks from city and commercial business
    Burn trash to create energy by heating up water to steam
    Charges $91 per ton of garbage
    Most profitable city operation on the island
    Three power plants in a row, h-power is considered renewable energy
    It can contribute 70 megawatts of energy
    Coal power plants have the highest emissions of carbon
    The old part of the plant is less efficient
    The new part doesn’t haven’t to process the trash before burning it.
    - the difference in technology allows them to be more efficient
    - The new plant can hand more waste and different types
    300-400 trucks come in with trash and 20-25 trucks leave with ash per day
    - 90% decrease
    Landfill will only take things unrecyclable or noncombustible

    - crane has to move trash back to leave space on the tipping floor
    - Put trash on the hopper to keep fuel
    - Can hold 5,000 tons, 2 total so 10,000 ponds total at the plant

    One of the only plants that takes trash and sewer sludge and deal with them separately
    If it went to the landfill it would be 80 worse releasing greenhouse gases

    When the economy goes down, trash goes down

    Each town had their own dump site in the 1940s so their are about 60 abandoned dump sites

    They only use non-drinking water for their plant
    - good because of the drinking water shortage
    Read more

  • Landfill

    June 8, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 82 °F

    Canyon fill -similar to a bath tub
    Liners and water absorbers
    Have environmental controls to make sure everything is contained
    Mainly takes the ash from H-Power and anything that can’t get burnt
    Has a storm water control system
    Been here since 1989 and about 20 years left until capacity but is being recommended to shut down in 2028

    Very few sights left for landfills

    Old landfills can be created into a park, golf course, etc.
    - still need to be monitored after closing for around 30 years
    Trash and ash are kept separated

    I was surprised at how different the landfill was different to the ones I have seen back on the mainland. It makes me wonder why we don't burn trash for energy. I understand that it is probably more expensive at first, but I know it would help with energy production and reducing carbon emissions.
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  • Hawaiian Earth

    June 8, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 81 °F

    Mostly green products to compost
    Get people to stop putting the compostables in plastics so we don’t have micro plastics in the compost

    Shreds compost into mulch like material

    Will sit there for 90-100 days

    Encourages first layer of growth
    Partners with the city
    Largest composter in Hawaii

    Started creating sod

    More about long term solutions than short term
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  • Aloha Wrap Up/Surfing!

    June 9, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

    We started the day off with our aloha wrap up. I enjoyed getting to speak with the EI people again. I found there travels on the canoe fascinating and also slightly terrifying.

    Today is also the day I got to surf. Got a great deal on Groupon so I was pumped. I didn’t get any photos or videos but I got up almost every time. I had so much fun and would love to do it again.

    Also I got some shaved ice, because I had to.
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  • East Oahu

    June 10, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    Really pretty side of Oahu, I wish we would've got to sight see here a little more. I enjoyed being able to spot sea turtles and not be overwhelmed with tourists. I also LOVED that roadside food we got. I would've ate there every day.Read more

  • Polynesian Cultural Center

    June 10, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 81 °F

    I got to experience so many different things that made me appreciate the Polynesian culture even more. Each "island" was different in their own way. The buffet was really good and the show was amazing. I was captivated by all the performers in the show.

    I was glad I knew that the Mormon Church ran the center because it allowed me to look at the experience in a different light. I still enjoyed the experience and thought it was a great place to learn about Polynesian culture, but the paradox of the people who disrupted/almost eradicated this culture funding it was frustrating in the least.
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  • Last Day/Going Home

    June 11, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 77 °F

    Today was the last day. We got to see the floral parade for King Kamehameha day. It was fun to watch, especially the Polynesian cultural center again. After the parade I hung out at the beach one last time. I love Waikiki beach, it is a great beach even if a little crowded.

    For our last meal in Hawaii we went back to the waffle place that I went with Julie the first time we were in Oahu

    We also had to say goodbye to Loretta which was really hard, because I don’t know when I will see her again. She was the best person I met on this trip and I hope I get to visit her at least one more time.
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    Trip end
    June 12, 2022