That took longer than expected, particularly as most of 2008 was already pre-sorted and uploaded. I wrote many blog posts about the wedding year, realized that I had never finished the daily recaps of the honeymoon, and fixed some confusing organization for some of the extra photos.
Let’s start with the regular photos of the year…visits to Ottawa, baby showers, births, trips for work, and weddings were the big themes for the year. I have 16 separate albums, with 13 before the big wedding push and 3 afterwards. Of the 599 photos, I uploaded 165 of them, which equates to 28%, just under a third.
Then all hell broke loose for photos. Rather than trying to deal with ONE BIG album for the wedding and honeymoon, I have them broken into smaller groupings. 41 albums in fact. A little anal? Sure. But I feel like I kind of had to be a bit anal to deal with the volume.
Overall? There are 5629 photos between the wedding and honeymoon. Of those, I uploaded 1375 as keepers (about 24%).
For the year:
57 albums
1540 active photos uploaded (25% of the total)
4688 extra photos archived
6228 photos in total for the year
And some 28 blog posts with more details and excerpts from the year! Whew. Glad to be done. Except 2009 won’t be a lot easier … it’s the year Jacob was born and we became paparazzi parents!
Day 14 was our last day, which, for most vacationers, means a sad day. But not for us. We had saved a visit to the Napali Coast, aka the West Coast of the island, on a zodiac. I mentioned previously that the fourth side of the island was uninhabited, unspoiled. If you’ve seen any movie set on an island that is supposed to be lush and green and wild, it was likely set in the opening scenes by a visit towards the Napali Coast. Isla Nublar from Jurassic Park used the Napoli Coast for many of its scenes. As did many “monster” films like King Kong. Why? Well, look for yourself.
Here’s what it looks like when you’re in a Zodiac on a bright sunny day.
And a scene from a helicopter.
For OUR establishing shot, here we are on the Zodiac.
As you go along the coast, there are lots of views like the first one above. But if you go in closer, you see that there are some caves or overhangs where you can go “inside”. There are scenes from James Bond movies shot inside these caves, and they are pretty cool to see in person.
And then you come out, back into the sunshine, and forget what you’re seeing because your brain doesn’t want to comprehend the scale.
Way down at the left side of the picture below is the trail we were hiking. See how low it is compared to the REAL mountains closer to the middle? Mind-boggling.
There’s a small beach area which might look familiar from the Jurassic World movies, even if none of the compies are attacking little girls. But we did get to stop and go swimming/snorkelling off the zodiac. I would have preferred a shallower entry rather than just over you go, but snorkelers can’t be choosers! 🙂
While we were snorkelling, I was expecting to see lots of fish. Instead, I mainly followed a turtle around.
We only had a few hours for the tour, and that was probably a good thing. While we got to see wonderful things like the waterfall below and some dolphins around the Zodiac as we were driving around, we were a bit unprepared for sun care. We did have water proof sunblock, strong stuff, all good, right? We put it on as soon as we got on the boat. Every ounce of skin was covered, and we had hats, all good. Except we were wearing our shorts over our bathing suits. When we went swimming and then got back on the boat, we just stayed in our bathing gear. So the few inches between the hem of our shorts and the hem of our bathing suits were left exposed. Without sunblock. We both got sunburnt, with Andrea’s legs screaming for Aloe Vera later in the day. Still worth it. In the main gallery, I added a bunch of scanned postcards of the coast from our trip.
Now that alone would be enough for our last day on the island. Amazing, mind-blowing, incredible. Yet, every day that we were near the Canyon, we felt we had to go visit. We couldn’t resist, it just drew us up the road into the area…we wanted to go hiking again.
We got a little closer to the waterfalls and pond today.
And then it was time to return to Lihue and start packing to leave the next day.
It had been an amazing honeymoon, trip and vacation. We had seen incredible sites; knocked numerous “adventures” off my bucket list for submarines, volcanoes, helicopters, sea turtles, hiking up mountains; and enjoyed sunsets, food and each other’s company without the stress of planning for a wedding. It felt perfect.
We didn’t know yet that there was another surprise waiting for us. What started as a trip for 2 was ending as a trip for 3. Jacob was with us too, even if we hadn’t met or named him yet.
For Day 13, whatever plans we had originally had now been reduced to the call of the canyon. In yesterday’s photos, there was one showing a long waterfall.
You can’t see it to the left, but there’s a box canyon that runs that way. At the edge, there is enough of a pull-off area to park your car and go hiking about 2 kilometres to get to the top of the falls. We like waterfalls, we were looking to hike…why not go for it?
We hiked across the side of the box canyon, picking out some goats on the opposite side of the wall, hard to see and the photos didn’t pick them up well enough. But you could see them with binoculars, just barely. We made our way to the edge of the waterfall area. What had looked like mostly just a small waterfall in the pic to a river that continued off the next cliff was actually a small pond area.
It was pretty well protected, and the hike wasn’t difficult, so it isn’t like we were off the beaten path. You can see metal railings at the bottom of the next photo which was mostly to stop idiots like us from getting too close to the edge of hills prone to erosion and landslides. If you missed the pond, it was a LONG way down.
We thought at first that we’d be able to work our way down and go for a swim. Or perhaps to get across the water area and climb up the next hill, which would have let us see a long vista down the valley/canyon.
But it was not to be. It was a great hike, far less strenuous than the one on the Northwest shore, and with great views. It was all we wanted to do for the day, visit the Canyon.
Later in the day, we stopped by a local artisan shop and looked at a lot of products made with local wood. I seem to recall buying a bowl, and a couple of carvings.
And then we went for a really nice dinner at a rooftop hotel restaurant across from our inn. We chatted with the serving staff, and as with earlier conversations, we were curious how people made it there if they weren’t local. The server for the night had followed his mom to the island, she was some sort of manager of some local franchised store (like Walmart or something, I forget now), and he was stopping out from school at the University of Oregon to hang out in Kauai. It seemed like a sweet gig.
This, of course, got us thinking about the age-old question — what would we do if we wanted to live here full-time? The canyon had totally captured our hearts and our imagination. And we hadn’t even made it to the West Coast of the island yet. We were still wondering if the next day might turn out to be the excursion of the trip.