Some thoughts:
I'm getting cold here in the evenings. Don't go thinking it's going to be all sunshine in Hawaii. You need to bring a long sleeve t-shirt for when the sun goes down, or those 70 degree nights will chill you to the bone.
Cellana must make employees meet a quota of social events every month... it kind of feels like I'm a freshman in college again, with all these familiar, but unknown faces everywhere I go. We're going to a "yankee swap" aka white elephant gift exchange tonight. I'm going to take attendance. Unfortunately, I could not find a single christmas sweater or even a T-shirt at the thrift stores here! What ever shall I wear?
Ok, today's feature: The Noisy Parrots of the Lot Next Door.
Not a great picture, I know. This one was checking me out from the moment it landed. It had enough after three photos similar to this one, then shrieked to it's buddies, and they all flew away. I guess they don't like people. From what I can gather, they are Red Masked, or Cherry Headed Conures. Native to Equador and Peru. Apparently, they make bad pets, and got released. I guess they bite, and I can testify they they are noisy. When we first moved in here, they came over every morning to hang out and eat Kiawe seeds in the trees next door (which is from the same part of South America!). Sources say they are wary of people in the wild; that explains still loads of Kiawe seeds next door and no parrots. Habitat invasion!
I don't think there are many Conures in Hawaii, but it looks like they are in stable populations. However, they are endangered in Equador and Peru. Another example of an exotic species successfully naturalizing in Hawaii!
In the picture above, you can (kind of) see the yellow flower spikes of the Kiawe (say: Key-ah-vey) trees. At first, I struggled to tell them apart from the Koa Haole (say: how-lee), which also lives in the lot next door. But, lucky for you, dear reader, I have cracked their code.
Specifically:
Kiawe leaves are once-compounded
Kiawe has nasty thorns (but these are vairable in size and often hard to see)
Koa Haole has many, dark, clusterd seed pods. Sometimes, you can find its white spherical flowers.
OK, here is the best way to tell the two apart:
Koa Haole has lots of brown bean pods in clusters all over the trees. They are not more than about 15' tall.
Kiawe is about 30' tall, fuller, and has single yellow bean pods, much less conspicuous than Koa Haole's.
Here is a picture of a Kiawe in the middle of a field of Koa Haole. case closed.
Koa Haole is named after the Koa tree, a majestic endemic more common in the wetter and higher forests. It was an important tree to the native hawaiians, prized for its wood which was used for canoes and surfboards. The flowers are similar, but yellow. "Haole" means forgiener, generally, but nowadays is commonly a racial slur for whities. So "Koa Haole" literaly means "forgien Koa," but could now be construed to mean "white/white-man Koa," which has meaning on two levels instead of one. Now that's what you pay me for.
One time, Beth tried to make friends with the parrots. It worked!
Selected sources: Parrots sure are charismatic!
"Tracking O'ahu's wild Parrots" http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=10372980
"Red Masked Conures" http://www.avianweb.com/redmaskedconure.html
"The Wild Parrots of Kailua Kona" http://www.westhawaiitoday.com/articles/2008/09/10/features/features01.txt
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