Saturday, September 21, 2013

Day 12
(matt)

Today we had plans on the opposite side of the island. Over in Kona, we had our reservation set for some deep sea fishing! The drive thru the "saddle"... which is a road that cuts right thru the middle of the islands between the 2 big volcanos, is so high up, you drive thru the clouds:
also.... check out the temperature difference in less than 30 minutes from the top of the saddle to near the base:


The view of the clouds rolling off the volcano tops is both distracting and beautiful to see:



Before hitting downtown Kona, we went to Greenwell Farms coffee plantation for a tour and some coffee tasting. We tried some coffees and also bought a juice made from the "cherry" skins from the outside of the bean. They also grew bananas <--- (i can't spell that word without hear Gwen Stefani in my head),  avacados, citrus of all kinds, and of course coffee trees:

These are what coffee beans look like before they are ripe or ready to pick. When ready, they turn red like a cherry. 
 
 This is the old mill they used when the plantation first opened.


this is a working farm, and this is the station where the farmers bring their yield to be weighed

They soak the beans to get rid of the sugary-acidity. 

Then,  they spread them out to dry, which takes 7-10 days, and they get raked out every 30-60 minutes......

...... or they use the new method, and tumble and heat dry them which take 1-2 days. 

 They had a small grove of trees from the original plantation, and these few trees are over 110 years old... with a life expectancy of about 120 years. 

Bananas .... the shit is BANANAS.....  BEE ,AYE, EN, AYE, EN, AYE, ESS!!!!!

Avacados and the avacado grove. 

Some sort of "energy" natural juice that supposedly 10x more antioxidants than your mom's blueberries!   Didn't taste too bad... a bit like cherry juice, but too much like cough syrup. Coffee is officially a FRUIT. 
... AND... i officially know too much about coffee and its history and process from field to cup. All i want is my WAKEUP JUICE!!!

 We got to Kona early in the day and walked around their downtown area, and decided that this was the more "touristy" side of the island. This is where they have a huge pier and where the cruise ships port. The 3-4 mile strip is all shops and restaurants and performers every 100 feet along the sidewalk. Very busy.

We grabbed lunch and had some Mahi Mahi fish tacos and Calamari before we got on the BITE ME 4 fishing charter.

 the lonely fight chair.... only lures kept it company.

Not the greatest picture... but i had to grab the big lens and change it over and barely got this picture, but it's the single fin of a pod of pilot whales we got to see. 
This is me with all the fish we caught.... which after 4 hours of watching waves and dancing lures... was ZERO. I can't tell you how disappointing it was... this was the thing i was excited about the most.  We decided that we will NOT go fish-less, we're going to buy a pole today and fish off the seacliff from our house. 

To satisfy our need for fish after an unproductive charter tour, we smashed 6 plates of sushi and were about to burst. We walked up and down the Kona coast and had some coffees, watched the sunset, jenny bought a new sweatshirt and we saw "JENNY'S catch" at Bubba Gump's. 



The guy at the coffee shop told us that if we had time, we should drive to the Sheriton, and see the Manta Rays that come to eat the plankton near the lights the hotel installed on the ocean floor to attract them close to shore.  We didn't get the best pictures, and weren't prepare with snorkel gear, but we decided that we are making the 2 1/2 hr drive back to swim with the manta rays that come out mostly after dark. 

So after deciding that we'd come back for the rays another day... we took the long way back home around the south point of the island. And along the way, we saw a pink/red glow in the distance. We had visited the volcano park previously, but only saw steam and smoke. It looks much different at night!!!   Although there is lava currently flowing, you can still see the glow at night. I set the camera for a slow exposure and low-light and got a few good shots:




after all our side trips and adventures... we didn't get home until about 1am... super tired, but a fun day.  GOOD NIGHT!

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