Tag Archives: 365 DAYS OF KAANAPALI

Bright Ka’anapali Sun Paints a Picture


Ka’anapali, 7 a.m. April 11–Here comes the sun, painting a picture as it shines into the Starbucks on Ka’anapali Beach and forms a shadow of a coffee drinker doing something with his fingers.  NORM BEZANE/VOICES OF MAUI TALK STORY, LLC.

Followers, Google Joys of K Bookstore to go to my new store where you can purchase the only books about  contemporary Maui people who have made the Maui you love, Maui. 

What something special did 500 people on Maui who attended Easter Service get?

Kaanapali, April 5–They got to get dressed up, they got hula, they got music, but the two special things they got were a fine message from the Kaanapali Beach Ministry and sunburn, the last two lasting. Voices of Maui Talk Story, LLc. photos

Everybody into the pool on Easter on Maui.

April 5, Ka’anapali, some 500 people came. They heard music, watched hula and were preached to on Easter Sunday. Only two however attended in the pool. The rest got sunburn on the sun-filled lawn. If you were fooled, so be it. The blog missed April fools day so this will make up for it.                                                               
VOICES OF MAUI TALK STORY LLC, PHOTO

CAN YOU READ KINDERGARTEN? “WE SE TROL”


April 1, Kaanapali, Maui– Can you tranlate this. Be the first to email norm.mauiauthor@gmail.com and win a free book. Your assignment: What does this say: “WE WETS SNOOCLING. WE SE Trtol it wus JINORMIS. WE OLSO SO NSOF FTHS.”

The spell checker on the computer was not able to figure this out so we asked Mom to translate. HINT: you can find the answer in my column in this week’s Lahaina News out tomorrow.

The quote can you read kindergarden comes straight from the lips of our precocious grandson who writes a journal along with this fellow students.

My daughter has visited here some 30 years since she was six months old. The grandson: his third time at age six. The grandson also reported that the party staged by our Rotary Club of Lahaina Sunset was “awesome.” No telling what this quotable guy is going todo when he grows up after drinking smoothies andf galavanting about for two weeks.

As you can see, my beautiful daughter got her looks not from me but my wife of 44 years.  Beauty runs in the family..at least on the wife’s side.

 

What is the most colorful place on Kaanapali Beach Today?

Kaanapali, March 30–the Westin Maui where crafters show their wares.

HOW DO YOU SPELL RELIEF ON MAUI?

Kaanapali, March 30-….With this.

HATS OFF TO….

Kaanapali Beach, March 30 at the Westin

THE ULTIMATE PALM ON PALM SUNDAY ON MAUI


LAHAINA, March 29–Top this America. This family from Maryland visiting Holy Innocents church here brought their own palm to Palm Sunday today, selected a prime branch nearby. On Kaanapali, a couple watches from the beach path services offered by the Kaanapali Beach ministry.  Easter services next Sunday at Holy Innocents Episcopal Church will be at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m., followed by a potluck on the ocean lawn.  Voices of Maui Talk Story, LLC photos

What is this man on Maui looking for when he dives 80 feet in 60 seconds and makes a living for 40 years doing it?

Flip NIcklin giving a talk on a whale watch cruise

Flip NIcklin giving a talk on a whale watch cruise


Lahaina, first day of spring—Seeking out creatures that boast the biggest muscle in the animal kingdom—the tail—Flip Nicklin, world famous national geographic photographer journeys from Alaska where he lives along with humpback whales in late fall each year for another season depicting the life of whales.For more, read my Lahaina News column appearing this week below. SCROLL DOWN

Voices of Maui Talk Story, LLC photos except the whale.

Flip Nicklin: 60 seconds, click, click, click…

Voices of Maui • Beyond the Beach

BY NORM BEZANE , Lahaina News

LAHAINA – When Flip (nicknamed after a character in the 1940s comic strip “Terry and the Pirates”) left his father’s dive shop in San Diego for Maui decades back, he sought adventure and a way to make a living.

For Charles “Flip” Nicklin – today “widely regarded as the premier whale photographer in the world,” according to National Geographic – the connection with these massive giants of the sea goes way back.

His great, great grandfather arrived on the West Coast on a whaling ship.

Mother and calf humpback whales swim together off the coast of Maui. PHOTO BY FLIP NICKLIN/MINDEN PICTURES (NMFS Permit #753).

His father, who he has always called “Chuck” because that is his name, was not only a dive shop owner but a world-class cinema-photographer who came to Maui 39 years ago for a shoot.

Flip as a young man tagged along as a deckhand on a whale research ship and was mentored by National Geographic ace underwater photographers Bate Littlehales and Jonathan Blair, who taught him about lenses and light.

flip IMG_0284Flip took photos alongside them, and as a beginning photographer, got three of his photos published in the magazine. This was a follow-up to the $10 he received from a kid’s magazine for his first published photo.

Flip may flip over when he is on one of his 60-second dives, but he has never flipped careers. He has been photographing whales and dolphins since 1976 for fun and pay.

In free dives as deep as 100 feet, Flip takes several deep breaths and has just 60 seconds under water to click off his photos. One of 500 shots is a keeper, he told some 200 people at a recent Whale Trust Maui talk story session.

By free diving with only a small air tank for emergencies, the free-diving photographer generates no bubbles “that would change the whole human to whale dynamic,” he wrote in the handsomely illustrated book “Among Giants: A Life with Whales.”

Flip often partners with research pioneer Jim Darling in a three-boat armada of sorts. Darling has “the singing boat,” because he researches whale songs.

Megan Jones-Gray, one of the Whale Trust Maui founders with Nicklin, operates out of the “female boat” for research on female behavior. Flip and videographers work out of “the video boat.”

Flip met his wife, Linda, a naturalist, when both were lecturing on a whale cruise – trips they take when not doing research.

This month, the two departed for Alaska, their permanent home, so Linda can work studying bears and other animals as part of her work. When not in Alaska or Maui, Flip has traveled the world from the Arctic to Antarctica, Florida to Maui.

Along Kaanapali this year, the 10,000 whales that travel here each year seem to be getting better. There are more frequent shows than ever.

There is so much to report on what whale researchers now know that a series of columns do not scratch the surface. Talks at the whaling museum at Whalers Village can fill the gaps.

New fascinating fact: humpback males singing can reach up to 160 decibels, equivalent to the noise made by a jet engine.

Flip straps on his long lens camera and carries one every time he is on the water – even on a whale watch for visitors.

You never know when you are going to get the breach shot of a lifetime.

Columnist’s Notework: This profile is based on interviews and presentations involving Nicklin and others, his book, and an article by Stephen Frink in “Alert Diver” magazine. Next column: saving entangled whales.

– See more at: http://www.lahainanews.com/page/content.detail/id/531366/Flip-Nicklin–60-seconds–click–click–click—.html?nav=11#sthash.Yw1kZBi5.dpuf

At this Starbucks, what in the world are these people looking that they would never see outside 10,000 other coffee shops?t


March 20, Kaanapali Maui–No. It is not NCAA basketball.  No it is not the flying walendas.  At this Starbucks, perhaps at one of the best locations in the county famous for its view, these mesmerized visitors are looking at the ocean.  And  what they are looking for are breaching Humpback Whales, are annual visitors who now number 10,000 in the channel that separates Lahaina, Maui from Lanaii and Molokai in the distance.  FOR MORE CHECK OUT MY COLUMN BY GOOGLING LAHAINA NEWS to learn more about whales.  JOYS OF KAANAPALI..now approaching 10,000 views.