Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Southeast Asia Underwater by: Mikayla Flanz


      Global warming. A gradual increase in the overall temperature of the Earth's atmosphere. It's a term kids from the past few generations have grown up with, but has now evolved into "climate change". The same meaning as global warming, only including the monumental consequences that come with it.

Up until the past few years, as a global community we have yet to reap the effects of climate change, but now that we have; hurricanes, temperatures, sea levels, and many other events have sent us spiraling. But up until now, there has never been a real threat to our ways of life.

Image result for earth

     According to science correspondent, Josh Gabbatiss's article from British newspaper, The Independent, as opposed to the inhabitants of Southeast Asian and Pacific Islands getting the next century to keep their native lands, new research published in the journal, Science Advances proclaims that the once promised one hundred years are now diminished to a few more decades. 

Since the Industrial Revolution, more and more of the green house gases such as, carbon dioxide and methane have been released, overall warming our planet. Although this "warming" has only come to about a two degree global increase, that change melted enough of the ice caps for there to already be devastating floods throughout these islands. The constant rising sea levels exert more water onto the low lying land, here the sea water is able to leach into the soil, spill into freshwater supplies, and decimate infrastructure and farm land. 

    Narrowing in on the Marshall Islands of the South Pacific, Science Advances illustrates the 70,000 natives of these chains of islands, where due to climate change and rising sea levels they will lose access to freshwater supplies, causing their farming industry to collapse, leaving a good portion of these inhabitants with little to no income or food. Along with the fact that, the rushing flood waters will sit in the dry walls of these houses for days at a time before clearing out and drying, therefore leaving mold in it's place. However, the authors also find that these issues will soon extend to neighboring islands such as the Maldives, Hawaii, and Seychelles, driving hundreds of thousands of people from their ancestral homes.

Image result for water flooding island asia

This is definitely the most selfish and least important reason to want the islands to stay right where they are, BUT... I have always wanted to travel to these places. These destinations are stunning, the landscape, the sites, the culture, to experience it all would be extraordinary. Stepping away from my traveling fantasies, there are more important matters...

Anyway, as someone who has always dreamed of traveling the globe all their life, to now see the world being picked apart and slowly demolished is devastating, but to the people living this out and losing the only home they have ever known must be like walking through their own never ending nightmare. 70,000 people. And that is just one chain of islands, what about the more densely populated Maldives or state of Hawaii. Where are all these people going to go? What are they going to do? Some of these people know nothing outside of their island chains, are they supposed to simply adapt from thousands of years of tradition overnight? 

Not to point fingers, but those who think climate change "doesn't exist" or is a "natural occurrence" are going to be very sorry some day, and that day may be coming soon. Even though this is happening thousands of miles away, across oceans, on a different continent, who is to say this can never happen to our coasts. Already, climate change is mauling our southern coasts, nothing permanent yet, but nothing is impossible, these people native to these Pacific islands probably thought that they would die in their home, as would their children, as had their parents, and relatives before them, all before their world was torn apart.


As a global superpower, we can not stand idly by while this is happening, sure it has not directly effected us yet, but eventually it will. So what if we have to give up certain things like oil and coal, and invest for a future in eco-friendly power systems, hundred of thousands of people will have to give up their land by the middle of the century. Maybe it might be too late to save some of the islands, but do we really want to see this underwater and abandoned? Gone?

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Who really wants to see this gone?








Citations:Josh Gabbatiss Science Correspondent “Rising Sea Levels Will Leave Islands From the Maldives to Hawaii Uninhabitable.” The Independent, Independent Digital News and Media, 25 Apr. 2018

Monday, September 17, 2018

Kauwela By: Kristen Bradish

The majority of people reading this indubitably aren't from Hawaii. So when you see the title you think, "does she not know how to use spellcheck? What does that even mean?" Kauwela is
Hawaiian for Summer because this August granted me with the experience of a lifetime.
August 1st, we crammed our luggage into the Sparta Limo Services car and readied ourselves for the adventure ahead. Getting a direct flight from NJ all the way to Maui isn’t always accessible, so we had to pitstop along the way. Six hours on a plane lead us to Los Angeles for the longest layover of my life. We got to the LAX airport thinking maybe we could hang out in a store for a few hours but to our luck, none of the stores were open. Why wouldn’t the airports’ restaurants and boutiques be open?
Well, you see, it was four in the morning. The only souls in sight were my family members and the cleaning crew crawling around this deserted location. Things got better after a few hours as
people were pouring in for an early six am flight, I was getting a second wind, and our plane would be boarding in three short hours.
tee minus 4 hours till Maui

The hotel lobby



The "Blowhole" formed when the bottom of the rock formation eroded over time from water always running over it. Now, when water pressure builds up, it shoots out and reminds people of a whales blowhole. 





We also rented a car for a day and they gave us a Mustang because apparently, that's just a
casual car over there? I was freaking out a little.
Our car rental with the fabulous Maui license plate

We went on a helicopter ride around the island

The hotel penguins
hi
Our Submarine excursion




One of our first nights was spent at the best-ranked luau in all of Maui. Right before the show, a rainbow sprouted high above us in the rainforests.

Many people don't realize that they are more types of Penguins are from near the Equator rather than the Arctic. We were fortunate enough to stay at a hotel that had their own penguins. One of my favorite parts of our hotel was the location. The average Penguin lifespan is approximately 25 years which is why I was so shocked to learn that one of their Penguins there was 32 years old. Every morning we roamed out to the lobby to see them get fed. It was as if their internal clock knew it was time for breakfast because they would all line up in front of where the feeder would stand before the person even arrived.

There was a little beachside walkway lead you from the Hyatt Regency hotel down a 15-minute walk to Whalers village. This village was more or less a tourist attraction that shouted, “Western civilization with a Hawaiian twist.” You had all the classic American stores like Pandora and Kate Spade but there were also Hawaiian dance lessons in the green space and Hawaii stationed businesses like Hawaiian
Shortbread Cookies and little boutiques with authentic souvenirs. The restaurants there served traditional Hawaiian food with marvelous beachfront views of the sun setting.

If I wasn’t already obsessed with how gorgeous these islands were, I was certainly convinced after the helicopter ride. We flew over Maui and a smaller island right next to us that had tremendous waterfalls cascading down the lush green mountains.

Mahalo no ka heluhelu. Aloha!
(Thank you for reading. Goodbye!)

My Earliest Memory by Emma Cerra

When thinking back to my earliest memory, I wonder why I remembered it. It’s a really odd memory, hazy to the point where I feel like it cou...