The Watch Is On Order!

Nina Photographing the Chickens
Nina Photographing the Chickens
At breakfast this morning while attempting to multitask, I managed to tip my glass of milk all over my Macbook keyboard (there are some in my family that will see the irony in tipping a glass over at the table…). So, my Macbook keyboard isn’t working. Fortunately, I have a generic keyboard in the closet, purchased to work with a Raspberry Pi computer, which also works quite nicely with my Macbook. Maybe after things dry out the keyboard will start working again? I can only hope. And plan to take the computer in to have someone take it apart and clean / replace the keyboard.

This morning I had an appointment at the Apple store in Waikiki to try on the new Apple Watch. A couple of years ago when the watch was mostly rumor, but a pretty likely rumor, the watch I was wearing and kind of liked gave up the ghost. It had been a Christmas present from my daughter Heather a few years earlier. Rather than buying a new watch I decided to put some money away in a CD and wait for the Apple Watch. I know this will be the first edition and the watch is expensive enough that I can’t justify staying current every couple of years and that an updated version of the watch will be available sometime around Christmas (to give a nice boost to Apple’s earnings over the holidays). But, I want one now. The CD matured two weeks ago and the money dumped into my savings account. I was hoping that I could just go to the store and buy a watch. No such luck. They can only be purchased online.

However, one can make an appointment at the Apple store to try on the watch and pick the type and watchband style that works best. So, we left the house at 8:10 am this morning to drive the hour and fifteen minutes into Waikiki. Nina went into Macy’s to do some clothes shopping (looking for some pants or capris more suitable for this climate) and I went to the Apple store at the appointed time. It took about ten minutes to decide on the 42mm watch with the black leather loop band. The delivery date was given as “June”. I’ve read online that Apple is having difficulty with one of the two suppliers for the “taptic” sensor which is slowing down production while the other supplier ramps up their production schedule. I’m thinking the promise date is more likely “late June”. Dang! (Actually only a half of a dang. The watch should have the better taptic sensor.)

After the Apple store and Macy’s, we drove over to an electronics store that is supposed to have some ham radio stuff. I was looking for a small magnetic mount antenna for the car that I can hook to my hand-held radios when we’re driving someplace. No such luck. This will have to be something ordered online. Dang!

We stopped by Walmart on our way back home to pick up a couple of items. All of my casual shirts are long-sleeved shirts. I was able to buy a couple of casual short-sleeved shirts at a very good price and Nina was able to find a dish drainer mat that was the right size. That was a successful stop.

We decided to make the round trip rather then driving back the way we came. That meant we could stop at the Dole Plantation Visitor Center. While interesting, the prices were rather high. See Nina’s blog for today for some interesting examples. The picture was taken on the grounds at the Dole Visitor Center. Ferrel chickens abound everywhere in Hawaii (along with ferrel cats). Several chickens had taken up residence underneath a picnic table … worthy of a picture, both of Nina taking a picture and her taking a picture of the chickens.

We’re ready to close up for the night. We’re working the morning shift tomorrow through Saturday. We’ve had a nice day off and it’ll be good to be back at the Center tomorrow morning.

Life is refreshed!

Slow Days

View From the Temple to the Ocean
View From the Temple to the Ocean
It’s become pretty clear that we’re in kind of a lull now that spring break is over and school is back in session. On Monday and Tuesday we’re on the afternoon shift at the Center. We’ve had very few visitors until about 6pm when folks come over from the Polynesian Cultural Center for a short 20-minute visit. The nightly show starts at 7:30 pm and most of the PCC visitors will have dinner around 5 pm or so. That means they have a little time to kill after dinner and before the show. By that time most of the other venues at the PCC are closed (the people there are preparing for the nightly show) so a lot of people take advantage of the free tram ride that goes through the university and the city of Laie and stops at the Visitors’ Center. They’ll get of the tram at the Center and stay until the next tram comes about 20 minutes later to take them back to the PCC.

Otherwise it’s been very quiet. Fortunately it hasn’t been overly hot so being outside waiting for visitors isn’t “hard duty”. It just gets long and somewhat boring. Thankfully there’s a Kindle app on my iPhone….

We did a session at the Laie Temple this morning after the Visitors’ Center Training Meeting. This is such a beautiful temple and I enjoyed the time there this morning.

Tomorrow is our Preparation Day. We’ll be driving into Honolulu to the Apple Store where I’m going to look at the new Apple Watch. They are only for sale online, but the Apple stores have demonstration units available to “try on” to decide what combination of watch and watchbands a person wishes to purchase. My “try on” appointment is at 9:30 am and will take a half-hour or less. After that, we haven’t got anything planned. Maybe we’ll go sit on a beach somewhere! There are plenty of beautiful beaches around.

Life is “lazing” along.

When It Rains….

Taking Pictures
Taking Pictures

Today is the first day since we arrived a little more than five weeks ago that we’ve had any significant rainfall during the day. But, we’ve learned first hand that when it rains on Oahu, the rain comes down in heavy. copious amounts! We were not close to our umbrellas, either. The locals are used to it and almost always have an umbrella handy. I’ve seen in the store a device for hanging the umbrella on my belt that looked pretty useful (if I wore a belt…). Tomorrow afternoon is forecast to be rainy and that’s when we’ll be at the Visitors’ Center and I’ll be outside. I think I’ll keep my umbrella close by.

As we were going to Church today we both got quite wet between the car in the parking lot and the Chapel. The air conditioning was going full blast (as usual) and it didn’t take very long before both Nina and I were more than a little chilly. It did get better as our clothes dried out.

Church services today were excellent and we’re starting to recognize a few members of the Ward. We also decided to join the Ward choir as a means to get to know some members a bit better. It is a very small choir and they were happy to have us participate. We both enjoy singing in the choir and we’ll have a good time being part of this group. Several members of the Ward are associated with BYU-Hawaii and as a result the discussions in Sunday School, Relief Society, and Priesthood Meeting are delightful. We are going to enjoy being a part of the Laie Third Ward!

Because the Temple grounds and the Visitors’ Center are so beautiful, everyone who comes wants to take pictures and have their picture taken. That is probably my primary job when we’re working at the Center and I’ve probably seen every smart phone make and model on the planet. Most people have iPhones with Samsung being next. Any Samsung other than the recent Galaxy models have screens that are simply too dark out in the bright sunlight. iPhones and the recent Galaxy models work great. Quite a few people use their tablets also as cameras. A couple of the Samsung models work reasonably well, but most tablets are very, very poor cameras. Fortunately, I haven’t dropped any (yet). The most vulnerable time is during the exchange … when they hand me the phone or I’m handing it back. I have to be very careful because that’s a Lot of Money when one gets dropped!

This Sunday evening is coming to a close and we’re starting another week. We’re having a great time in this little corner of paradise!

Life is very comfortable.

Making Someone’s Day

A Reflection Picture
A Reflection Picture
The Laie Temple opens Tuesday through Saturday at 7:00 am and the last session of the day on Saturday is 1:00 pm. The Temple is then closed until Tuesday at 7:00 am. Today I talked to a very delightful couple who had a traffic problem and just missed getting into the 1 pm session. They’ll be going home on Monday and missed the opportunity to go to the Temple while they were here.

It looks like about half of the visitors to the Center are members of the Church. Lately we’ve had a number of groups from mainland China stop here. The tour companies like to bring people to the Visitors’ Center because we treat people very well, it’s such a beautiful place, and it’s free. The tours usually only stop for five or ten minutes before they’re on their way again. The sister missionaries and I try to meet these tour groups out by the fountains to offer to take their pictures and to invite them to come inside. The sister missionaries are excellent tour guides once people come into the Center, particularly if we have a missionary that speaks the visitor’s language. Today a group from China stopped and Sister Qiu (from Hong Kong) greeted them and they got so interested that they were in the Center for more than a half an hour while their tour guide cooled his heels….

When possible I like to meet up with members who are visiting. That was the case this afternoon with the couple that missed the session. They spent about 20 minutes with me as I gave them a brief tour of the exhibits in the Center and talked about the history of the Temple. We have a number of videos available to show in two theaters and two smaller teaching rooms. One video is an older film about the Laie area, the Temple, the university, and the Polynesian Cultural Center. This film is five minutes long and I invited them to see that video which they really enjoyed. As they left, the wife said to me, “Thanks for making this a wonderful afternoon!” Money can’t buy these kinds of feelings!

A film company is here making a new 30-minute video on Laie, the university, the Temple, and the PCC which is scheduled to be shown this coming October between sessions of General Conference. I’m really looking forward to seeing what they have put together. This place is worth more than a five-minute video!

Life is very comfortable.

A Little Beach Time Pays Great Dividends

Watching the Sunset
Watching the Sunset

When we finish a shift at the Visitors’ Center we’re both quite ready to sit down (and perhaps even take a snooze). Such was the case today. Our shift ended at 2:30 pm but there were a few wrap-up things so we didn’t leave until after 3. When we got back to the house both of us just kind of collapsed. I have a paper that needs to be notarized. There is a local office with a notary, but she wasn’t in today. They told me that the bank in a neighboring town had a notary, so I left Nina stretched out on the couch and drove over there to find that their notary’s day ends at 3 pm. I was a bit disappointed, but nothing I could do. Driving back I decided that waiting until tomorrow to get the notarization done wasn’t the end of the world. Further, it was time to do something a little more fun and invigorating.

The town of Laie is on the east side of the island of Oahu. About twenty minutes west of here is Sunset Beach which is on the west side of the island. Sunrises are beautiful in Laie. The sunsets at Sunset Beach probably are the same. So, when I got back to the house I suggested to Nina that we go watch the sunset. That meant, of course, rearranging schedules and mealtimes. Sunset was at 6:54 pm tonight and we wanted to be there well before sunset.

It worked out. We got there as a small rain shower passed through, headed west out over the water. As a result, there wasn’t much of a sunset to watch as the clouds pretty much obscured the sunset.

Nina Checking Facebook
Nina Checking Facebook

But, the beach was delightfully calm and very pleasant. There was a fallen palm tree on the beach which provided a very convenient seat (I did bring folding chairs in the trunk of the car, we just didn’t need them). We watched people, the sun go down, and the waves crash on the beach until a bit after 7 pm and came home quite refreshed.

Our day at the Center was pretty quiet for the most part. We have days where the place seems to be mobbed and other days where very few people come in. Today was pretty much in the latter category. Most of our visitors this morning were people here in Hawaii because someone in their family (a son or daughter or grandson or granddaughter) graduated last Friday from BYU-Hawaii. When people fly to Hawaii they might as well stay at least a week and most of them do that. I understand that the next few weeks will be pretty quiet until school starts letting out for the summer in the US. June and July are supposed to be very busy at the Center. I rather enjoy busy days since it’s very interesting to talk to a variety of people.

Instead of a variety of people, today we had a variety of computer problems in the interactive displays at the Center. The technology being used is rather dated and is scheduled to be completely updated this summer. While that will definitely bring a different set of issues, I won’t miss the current set when they go away.

Don’t miss Nina’s blog!

Life is very pleasant.

 

All Over the Island Shopping … Preparation Day Fun

P-Day Shopping
P-Day Shopping

Our travels started at 7:45 am this morning and ended at 4:30 pm this afternoon. In the process we drove completely around the island of Oahu … at least as roads would allow. Click on the map for a larger view.

The western tip that juts out into the Pacific Ocean doesn’t have a navigable road (the guide books say a high-profile four-wheel drive vehicle is required). There isn’t much over in that area as it is.

The first stop was at the dentist office in Kailua, a 50 minute drive south from our house in Laie. I had an issue with a bridge in my mouth (it’s across the front teeth). It felt like it was coming loose once again. The dentist discovered that a piece of cement was out of place, removed that and buffed up the edges, and I was good to go. Major tender mercies here: (1) it didn’t cost anything, (2) no root canal required, and (3) I was finished in fifteen minutes. There was a Safeway store near the dentist office, so I met up with Nina there where we did the major part of grocery shopping that should be good for the next three weeks or so.

Then it was off to Target which was about twenty minutes away from the dentist’s office. We actually didn’t go into the store! What we needed to buy were things needing to be kept cold, so that was going to be our last stop. Before that we needed to pick up a muumuu for Nina and a matching shirt for me for us to wear when we volunteer at the Polynesian Cultural Center. There were a few stores in the area that might carry what we needed … but to no avail. A very helpful clerk in Macy’s suggested that we try Hilo Hatties or Manuhaealii. Hilo Hattie was familiar to us; those stores are all over the Hawaiian Islands as well as on the west coast of the mainland. Google gave us the address, so that’s where we went. The store was about 35 minutes away from Target.

We successfully found something that will work. It isn’t very exciting … but the muumuu and shirt are definitely functional and will hold up for the next two years. Since we still needed to pick up some cold and frozen items, we then went to a nearby Walmart.

That was the strangest Walmart I’ve ever been in. It was a two-story Walmart with a people escalator and a companion shopping cart escalator. The shopping cart escalator was slightly slower than the people escalator so there was time to start the shopping cart up (or down), get onto the people escalator, and arrive before the shopping cart. It was quite ingenious! The other strangeness was the parking. The parking garage was above the Walmart. Fortunately we found a parking place close to the elevator.

But even then, we still needed a couple of other items, plus we needed to fill the car with gasoline. Costco has the best price for gasoline; it would also have the last of the frozen items we needed. So, we made the half-hour drive to Mililani. But the time we finished at Costco it was 2 pm in the afternoon. Nearby was a “Ramen Ya” shop. I haven’t had real ramen since Japan, so that was our lunch stop. I’ll eat there again. Gasoline at Costco was $2.789 per gallon for 87 octane gasoline. Here on the north shore it’s $2.999 per gallon for 87 octane gasoline.

Then we drove up the highway through Haleiawa, past Sunset Beach (the surf had attracted a lot of surfers), past Turtle Bay, and back to Laie. That was another hour of travel.

The scenery on Oahu is beautiful and quite varied from huge, steep mountains to lush valleys, densely populated high-rise cities to massive pineapple and coffee plantations, and broad expanses to beautiful beaches. I don’t think I’ll ever tire of the scenery and variety. It’s clear why people love living here and many others fervently wish they could figure out how to make a living here. That last part is very difficult. There aren’t a lot of well-paying jobs and the cost of living is high. According to the US Dept. of Commerce, it costs $130 to buy on Oahu what I can buy for $100 in Pocatello, Idaho.

And, to top it all of, our youngest son Jared got his results back today from his cardiologist. All continues to be well and stable and he’s to go back in a year. That last heart surgery at Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake back in 1993 (or thereabouts) is still holding strong. Wahoo!!

Nina also wrote about our travels today. Her version is at https://seashellsandseaglass.wordpress.com/.

Life is just plain ducky! (that is, flash flood warnings are out for our area due to strong storms forecast to come ashore in the next hour or so).

Standing Room Only … Barely

No Room!
No Room!
I’m beginning to figure out some of the ways to make the new Photos application on my Macbook behave like the older iPhoto did. The options had to be there somewhere, and slowly they’re revealing themselves. The latest was the right way to skinny down a photo so that it loads much faster. Computer screen resolutions are not very sharp compared to what we can do when we print a picture on photo paper. Consequently, most photos on the web, like Facebook or Instagram, have resolution set for the computer screen, but don’t have sufficient resolution to be printed on anything larger than a 4×6 print. I’m getting happier with the application. There’s still much more, though, that needs to be found.

Sunday evening a local, popular, and well known children’s choir performed a half-hour program at the Visitors’ Center. The program started at 6pm, but by 5:30pm all seats were taken. By 5:45pm all standing room had been taken as well, including all of the doorways. The program, what I could hear of it, sounded quite delightful. Nina was able to be in the room and said that the program was “fabulous”. Someone brought their dog and left it outside the door. No leash. And, the dog wanted inside. Wanted quite badly to be inside. We had to open the doors to get some air circulation as well as to let people stand in the doorways, so I found myself outside holding down the dog. He was an older dog and completely deaf, so he didn’t bark (that was goodness) but had to be restrained (that wasn’t goodness). After the concert was over, the owner came out, whistled, and he and the dog left. That’s kind of the life of a missionary at the Visitors’ Center!

Last Tuesday I went an hour south of here to Kailua to a dentist because a bridge in my mouth had come loose. The dentist put it back in, but said that it probably wouldn’t hold very long as there wasn’t much tooth left to hook onto. He said that when it started to get loose again, I should come back because he’d have to do a root canal and put in a post to give something for the bridge to be cemented to. Well, five days later it started to come loose again. Tomorrow morning I’ve a 9am appointment for a root canal. As I remember the count, I’ll be down to two teeth that haven’t had a root canal. But, the bridge should be stable for quite a while to come. I’ve definitely inherited my dad’s poor teeth!

Front Gates to the Visitors' Center
Front Gates to the Visitors’ Center
We’ll be volunteering a few nights each month as ticket takers for the luaus at the Polynesian Cultural Center. That requires us to be in matching Hawaiian costumes. Yesterday we visited the costume department at the PCC to see what they had available. That turned out to be futile … they didn’t have anything in our sizes that matched. So, in addition to getting teeth fixed tomorrow, we’ll be shopping for a mu’umu’u and a matching shirt. That should be interesting as we’ll want to find something sturdy, that will hold up for a couple of years, as well as match our rather finicky tastes in clothing. I’m certain that a picture will be in order when we finally find something. Our first assignment is on May 1st, twelve days from now. By then we need to be in costume! By purchasing our own clothing, we’ll be able to bring it home with us rather than turning it back in to the PCC. I’m thinking that MAY be a bonus as well.

Over the past couple of days we’ve had some wonderful family and friend visitors at the Center! A family from our ward along with her mother and step-father stopped in to the Center on Monday morning. We had been there for our 7:30am weekly training meeting. I was going out to the car while Nina took care of some business at the front desk when I saw this large group getting out of a car in the parking lot. Something prompted me that I should go over and say, “Aloha!” and greet them. As I got there, I recognized everyone, including the step-father! He was a person that went to school with me back at Soda Springs High School, some 53 years ago. He’d come over to the house and we’d work with my ham radio station. I hadn’t seen him since then other than a few posts on Facebook. The mother, his wife, was a fun and delightful widow in one of the wards in our Stake where I was assigned as a High Councilor for a couple of years. I was very happy to learn that the two of them had found each other and gotten married. Meanwhile, my old classmate was kind of dumbfounded that I had been a High Councilor! We both agreed that we’d let activities from 53 years ago remain buried….

Then, later that day my cousin Beverly Tomlinson and her husband came into the Center. Their son Jay was graduating from BYU-Hawaii and they were there for the occasion. Her mother is my dad’s only sister. It was great fun catching up on what was going on in their lives. They stopped by again for a few minutes this afternoon to introduce me to their son. He’ll be here a few more months, so we’ll see about having him come over for dinner some evening.

One delightful side benefit of being a missionary here at the Visitors’ Center in Hawaii is that we’ll see and be able to visit with lots of family and friends over the next couple of years. I’m rather liking this! It isn’t missionary work, this is missionary fun!

Life is very pleasant!

The Book Training Is Done … How Does That Match Reality?

We’ve finished the orientation training for the Polynesian Cultural Center (PCC). The training today was all about customer service and how to handle various situations. The overall theme is to “delight the guests” and I’m looking forward to volunteering over there.

Our assignments will generally be to take tickets at the various eating places at the PCC. In some cases that may also mean being at the exit to direct people to the restrooms, smoking areas, and to help people find the right entrance. It should be a good experience. Reality will be on May 1st when we are assigned to one of the restaurants to take tickets. It’s one of the more popular restaurants so we should be pretty busy for the two hours we’re there. Of course, a report on the evening will definitely follow!

Life is good!!