Home / Travel / Hawaii 2019 76
- Hawaiian Owl
This #SuperbOwl flew past us on the Pihea Trail, Kauai. We only saw it for a couple of seconds, and it's not a great picture, but we felt very fortunate to see this subspecies at all. - Hawaiian Stilts
Kawai’ele Waterbird Sanctuary, Kauai - Black-crowned Night-Heron
Kawai’ele Waterbird Sanctuary, Kauai - Hawaiian Gallinule
Kawai’ele Waterbird Sanctuary, Kauai - Red-footed Booby
Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge, Kauai - ʻApapane on ʻōhiʻa lehua
Pihea Trail, Kauai - Saffron Finch
Ocean View Estates, Hawaii - Magnificent Frigatebird
Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge, Kauai - Wandering Tattler
Kauai, Hawaii - Laysan Albatross
Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge, Kauai - ʻApapane
Volcano National Park, Hawaii - Japanese White-Eye
Ocean View Estates, Hawaii - Zebra Dove
Ocean View Estates, Hawaii - Kalij pheasant
Ocean View Estates, Hawaii - Lavender Waxbill
Ocean View Estates, Hawaii - Eclipse setup
Camera position for photographing the lunar eclipse over Kawelikoa Point, Kauai. Planning for the eclipse was done using The Photographer's Ephemeris on my iPad, with on-site confirmation using the augmented reality mode of PhotoPills. The eclipse was on the first full day of my first visit to Kauai, so I wasn't sure how it would work out, nor was I sure how to get to the location I selected. My wife and I did some advance scouting the afternoon before, but only had time to go partway. The full hike from the end of the dirt road where I parked ended up being a little over a mile, over a combination of beach and trails. I benefitted tremendously from OpenStreetMaps maps that I downloaded to my GPS app, MotionX-GPS. The maps had excellent coverage of the trails, and allowed very efficient route-finding. I recorded my track to the shooting location so I could retrace my steps back to the car in the darkness of the total eclipse. - Yellow-fronted Canary
Volcano National Park, Hawaii - Total lunar eclipse over Kawelikoa Point, Kauai
- Cottage Cat
This young boy with a kinked tail let himself in to our cottage in Kauai. He let himself back out when some chickens got uncomfortably close to the lanai. - Nēnē
The endangered Hawaiian goose. Volcano National Park, Hawaii