One of the mantas seen on the night manta dive.
Mantas do collide, but only rarely when they come to feed during the manta night dive.
Notice the reflection of the manta on the bubble rising. The tiny white flercks are the plankton drawn by the light and are the food that draws the mantas to this site.
These mantas are about the size of your basic single garage door.
Cheryl and Frank - Cheryl never knew she had a friend until she saw this photo after the manta dive. Frank is an Undulated Moray eel. he visited 3 of us that night that I know of.
Stocky Hawkfish
Pebbled butterfly fish. Like most butterfly fish, the stay in pairs.
Threadfin Butterfly fish
Ornate Butterfly fish - normally more shy than this.
Teardrop Butterfly
Whiteline triggerfish
Yelloweye Filefish - These seem to spend most of their time above the reef.They eat the hard, living coral.
Epaulette Soldierfish -
Divided Flatworm - this is maybe an inch long
Undulated Moray Eel
Tigersnake Moray - unusual to see one out and about during the day.
Surprisingly, this is a White Mouth moray
Scorpion fish - I have no idea as to which species.
St. Benedict's - The Painted Church. Erected in 1899, the interior paintings were used as teaching tools for the locals.
Interior - Painted Church.
Ceiling and altar - Painted Church
Hell - Painted Church - just a little encouragement for the locals to convert.
Place of Refuge - King and Queen totems?
Place of Refuge - King's compound
Place of Refuge - statue
Fish pond - Place of Refuge
According to Mark Twain, this is the view the king had when he sat looking out over his domain.
Fern leaf from Volcanoes National Park
Fern growing in the caldera - a tough pioneer.
Cinder cones on route to the observatories on Mauna Kea
these are four of the dozen observatories on the summit. The large dome is the 8 meter Gemini North Telescope.
Sunset with the 8 meter Subaru telescope and the twin Keck 10 meter telescopes.
Sunset with crescent moon on Mauna Kea