When I was a toddler, my traveling life began when my parents
left Minnesota for the
Pacific Northwest, and my earliest memories include crossing the
Rockies en route to a suburb of Tacoma, Washington.
In later years I became a stamp collector, imagining remote destinations I
might someday visit, and I listened to the radio—when, after dark, the signals from
remote 50,000-watt stations would boom onto my tiny transistor radio, under the
blankets.
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In 1961, Hawai'i's Frankie Reveira was starting catcher for the Pacific Coast League champion Tacoma Giants. |
Growing up on the West Coast, I heard major league baseball when
the Brooklyn
Dodgers and New
York Giants relocated to Los Angeles and San Francisco, respectively, and
the legendary Vin Scully helped
make me a lifetime Dodgers fan. Locally, though, I was a fan of the Tacoma Giants
(Pacific Coast
League), and I would lie awake until the bars closed—even though I was
nowhere near drinking age—to hear Don Hill’s
re-creations when Tacoma played the Hawai’i Islanders in
Honolulu (those games started at 11 p.m. Pacific Standard Time). In fact, the
Tacoma Giants themselves employed a Hawaiian catcher by the name of Frankie
Reveira (whom Hill, unfortunately, nicknamed “Johnny Pineapple”), and a number of Hawaiians now play in the majors.
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Hanga Roa is the only town on Rapa Nui (Easter Island) |
Oddly, despite its relative accessibility, Hawai’i was not the
first Polynesian island I ever visited—that “honor” goes to Rapa Nui (Easter Island),
which I’ve visited at least half a dozen times in the course of writing and
updating guidebooks to southernmost South America (Rapa Nui, of course, is a
Chilean possession, though it’s gained some autonomy is recent years).
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Hawai'i, especially the Big Island, has dense forests and rivers that Rapa Nui lacks. |
Hawai’i, of course, has a far greater land mass (10,931 square
miles, about 28,300 sq km) than Rapa Nui (just 63 square miles or 164 sq km),
with a much larger population (1.43 million v. 5,800 or so), but the two still
have much in common. While Hawai’i is a literally tropical archipelago (Honolulu’s
latitude is 21° N), Rapa Nui (27° S) is a bit farther from the Equator and, with the islets of Motu
Iti and Motu Nui, it barely classifies as an archipelago.
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Motu Iti and Motu Nui lie a short distance off the Rapa Nui shoreline. |
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Rapa Nui's Playa Ovahe is far less crowded than just about anywhere in Hawai'i. |
Both areas are volcanic, though Rapa Nui has no active volcanism
and its handful of beaches is far less crowded than Hawai’i’s. Both have lava
tubes, however, that are open for short hikes. Hawai’i retains much of its
native forest, while nearly barren Rapa Nui now has only non-native trees.
There have been efforts, however, to re-introduce the native toromiro tree, which
is extinct in the wild but present at botanical gardens at Kew and Gothenburg.
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Hiking through the Thurston Lava Tube, Volcanoes National Park, Big Island of Hawai'i |
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Rapa Nui's Ana Te Pahu is far smaller than the Thurston Lava Tube. |
There are also some links between the Polynesian peoples of the
two archipelagos. Educated in the United States, former
Rapa Nui governor Sergio Rapu earned an M.A. in Pacific culture and
archaeology from the University of Hawai’i, and has helped supervise the
restoration of megalithic monuments such as those at Ahu
Tongariki and other sites (the term ahu,
denoting a memorial altar or shrine, is also common in Hawai’i and other parts
of Polynesia). What Rapa Nui really lacks, though, may be its own Frankie Reveira—soccer,
sadly, is the prime participant sport here.
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Former governor Sergio Rapu, who has studied and lived in Hawai'i, helped restore Rapa Nui's Ahu Tongariki. |
4 comments:
The text in this latest post is unreadable except for the links. I tried 3 different browsers with the same results. The previous post reads just fine.
Saludos.
Try again, I've reformatted.
Yes! Thank you. Wonderful story.
A propósito, in Dec. I will visit Campo Alacaluf on the road to Bahía Exploradores, thanks to your blog some time back.
Will you go to Laguna San Rafael from Exploradores?
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