Friday, November 19, 2010

Hawaii Shave Ice Images and Take-Outs on Hawaii Five-0 2010 Ho'apono


Summary: Do non-native grapes and lemons suit Hawaii and Hawaiian shave ice images and take-outs in Hawaii Five-0 2010 Season One's seventh episode Nov. 1, 2010?


'akala Hawaiian raspberry (Rubus hawaiensis); Pu'u Kole, Mauna Kea, Hawaii; July 23, 2004: Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons

Hawaiian shave ice images and take-outs attract appreciative audiences in the Hawaii Five-0 2010 active police procedural series episode Ho'apono: Accept Nov. 1, 2010, even if perhaps all syrups are non-Hawaiian additions.
Director James Whitmore Jr. and writers Jim Galasso, Alex Kurtzman, Peter M. Lenkov and Roberto Orci blend backsliding, broken lives into the first season's seventh episode. The Hawaii Five-0 task force, continued from the 1968-1980 series created by Leonard Freeman (Oct. 31, 1920-Jan. 20, 1974), considers crimes against a wife and mother. Task force commander Steve McGarrett (Alex O'Loughlin) decides to discuss the death with Graham Wilson (Adam Beach), whom the Honolulu Police Department deems a deranged wife-killer.
Officer Kono Kalakaua (Grace Park) eats Kamekona Tupuola's (Taylor Wily) shave ice with Lily Wilson (Mackenzie Foy) to encourage expression of eyewitness evidence and trauma-suppressed emotions.

Purple-tongued follow-ups to filling up on grape Hawaiian shave ice fascinate Kono even as Lily finishes the red-syruped half furnished with her father's favorite lemon-yellow half.
Sweet-tart 'ākala on 6- to 10-foot (1.83- to 3.05-meter) shrubs with 50- to 100-inch (1,270- to 2,540-millimeter) annual rainfall and 'ōhelo Hawaiian blueberries generate native-fruited ice. 'Ākala Hawaiian raspberries have 0.11- to 0.13-inch- (2.68- to 3.24-millimeter-) long, 0.07- to 0.08-inch- (1.71- to 2.17-millimeter-) wide, 0.04- to 0.05-inch- (1.12- to 1.36-millimeter-) high seeds. Propagating 'ākala, identified in 1854 by Asa Gray (Nov. 18, 1810-Jan. 30, 1888), involves wildlife ingesting and issuing elsewhere 0.00009- to 0.00014-ounce (2.54- to 3.94-milligram) seeds.
Native-fruited Hawaiian shave ice images and take-outs juggle purple-syruped 'ākalakala Hawaiian blackberries; purple-, red-, yellow-syruped 'ākala Hawaiian raspberries and 'ōhelo Hawaiian blueberries; red-syruped 'ūlei Hawaiian strawberries.

Such Hawaiian endemics as nēnē Hawaiian geese, 'ōma'ō Hawaiian thrush and 'ō'ū Hawaiian honeycreepers know as favorite foods 'ākala Hawaiian raspberry gold-brown seeds and multi-colored fruits.
Hawaiian islands-only 'i'iwi scarlet honeycreepers locate April through July flower nectars before 1.58-inch- (4-centimeter-) long, 0.98-inch- (2.5-centimeter-) wide fruits on gold-brown, non-rambling canes June through August. 'Ākala Hawaiian raspberries manage namesake pink, sometimes rose or white, one- to three-clustered, 1- to 1.5-inch- (25.4- to 38.1-millimeter-) diameter flowers on inch- (25.4-millimeter-) long stalks. 'Ākala Hawaiian raspberries, named Rubus hawaiensis (Hawaiian blackberry, bramble, raspberry), net flat, oval-lobed, six- to eight-lined calyxes with petal-length, sharp-tapered tips and semi-bristly, semi-prickly short tubes.
Hawaiian shave ice images and take-outs offer sweet, tart syrups from 'ākala Hawaiian raspberry habitats at 2,000- to 10,000-plus-foot (609.6- to 3,048-meter) altitudes above sea level.

'Ākala Hawaiian raspberries possess fruit-forming, hairy receptacles; many pistils and stamens; oval, purple to red, showy petals; smooth carpels with gland-tipped ovary bristles and slender styles.
Five-plus-year 'ākala life cycles queue up fuzzy, oval or pointed, three-clustered, tooth-edged, veined compound leaves with leaf-like stipules (from Latin stipula, "hay stalk, straw") stalked basally. Side and 0.5- to 0.66-inch- (12.7- to 17.02-millimeter-) stalked middle leaflets reach 1.5- to 2-inch (38.1- to 50.8-millimeter) and 2.5- to 3-inch (63.5- to 76.2-millimeter) lengths. The Rosaceae family member survives with hornworts, liverworts and mosses under koa acacia-dominated, 'ōhi'a myrtle-filled 32.81- to 82.02-foot (10- to 25-meter) forest, shrubland and woodland canopies.
Hawaiian shave ice images and take-outs turn Kono purple-tongued and tender Graham's yellow syrup with purple-blackberried ākalakala and purple- and yellow-raspberried and blueberried 'ākala and 'ōhelo.

(left to right) Alex O'Loughlin (Lieutenant Commander Steve McGarrett), Scott Caan (Detective Danny "Danno" Williams) and Daniel Dae Kim (Detective Lieutenant Chin Ho Kelly) at food truck entrepreneur Kamakona Tupuola's (Taylor Wily) Wailoa Shave Ice cart during CBS TV's first season of Hawaii Five-0: Daniel Dae Kim @ Daniel Dae Kim, via Facebook Oct. 30, 2010

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
'akala Hawaiian raspberry (Rubus hawaiensis); Pu'u Kole, Mauna Kea, Hawaii; July 23, 2004: Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Starr_040723-0303_Rubus_hawaiensis.jpg; Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 4.0 International, via Starr Environmental @ http://www.starrenvironmental.com/images/image/?q=24621403051; Forest and Kim Starr (Starr Environmental) CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Flickr @ https://www.flickr.com/photos/starr-environmental/24621403051/
(left to right) Alex O'Loughlin (Lieutenant Commander Steve McGarrett), Scott Caan (Detective Danny "Danno" Williams) and Daniel Dae Kim (Detective Lieutenant Chin Ho Kelly) at food truck entrepreneur Kamakona Tupuola's (Taylor Wily) Wailoa Shave Ice cart during CBS TV's first season of Hawaii Five-0: Daniel Dae Kim @ Daniel Dae Kim, via Facebook Oct. 30, 2010, @ https://www.facebook.com/136577846385452/photos/a.141030425940194/152229161486987/

For further information:
Baldwin, Paul H. May-June 1947. "Foods of the Hawaiian Goose." The Condor 49(3): 108-120.
Available via SORA (Searchable Ornithological Research Archive) @ https://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/condor/v049n03/p0108-p0120.pdf
Daniel Dae Kim @ Facebook. 4 October 2010. "Added a new photo." Facebook.
Available @ https://www.facebook.com/136577846385452/photos/a.141030425940194/146501178726452/
Daniel Dae Kim @ Facebook. 30 October 2010. "Added a new photo." Facebook.
Available @ https://www.facebook.com/136577846385452/photos/a.141030425940194/152229141486989/
Daniel Dae Kim @ Facebook. 30 October 2010. "Added a new photo." Facebook.
Available @ https://www.facebook.com/136577846385452/photos/a.141030425940194/152229161486987/
Gray, Asa. 1854. "12. Rubus Hawaiensis, Sp. Nov. (Tab. 56)." United States Exploring Expedition. During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842. Under the Command of Charles Wilkes, U.S.N. Volume XV. Botany. Phanerogamia, Part 1: 504-505. Philadelphia PA: C. Sherman.
Available via Biodiversity Heritage Library @ https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/40382252
Available via Internet Archive @ https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_6cuA_2Zcbb4C/page/n515
"Haleakala Plants (continued)." National Park Service > Park History > Hawai'i Volcanoes & Haleakala National Parks > Hawaii Nature Notes: The Publication of the Naturalist Division, Hawaii National Park and the Hawaii Natural History Association > June 1959.
Available @ https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/hawaii-notes/vol6-59l.htm
"Ho'apono: Accept." Hawaii Five-0 2010: The First Season. Los Angeles CA: Paramount, Nov. 1, 2010.
Marriner, Derdriu. 14 November 2010. “Hawaiian Wild Boars Around Hawaii Five-0 2010's North Shore of O'ahu.” Earth and Space News. Sunday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/hawaiian-wild-boars-around-hawaii-five.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 13 November 2010. “Limu Lipoa Hawaiian Seaweed on Hawaii Five-0 2010 Episode Nalowale.” Earth and Space News. Saturday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/limu-lipoa-hawaiian-seaweed-on-hawaii.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 12 November 2010. “Hawaiian Blueberry Botanical Illustrations for Hawaii Five-0 Pancakes.” Earth and Space News. Friday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/hawaiian-blueberry-botanical.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 7 November 2010. “Hawaii Five-0 2010: Respect the Land and the Pizza Without Pineapples?” Earth and Space News. Sunday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/hawaii-five-0-2010-respect-land-and.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 6 November 2010. “Pygmy Hippopotamuses for Grace of the Hawaii Five-0 2010 Family?” Earth and Space News. Saturday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/pygmy-hippopotamuses-for-grace-of.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 5 November 2010. “Pineappley Hala Tree Botanical Illustrations for Hawaii Five-0 Pilot.” Earth and Space News. Friday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2010/11/pineappley-hala-tree-botanical.html
"Rubus hawaiensis." Native Plants Hawaii.
Available @ http://nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Rubus_hawaiensis
Wianecki, Shannon. May-June 2008. "We Give You the Raspberry." Maui Nō Ka 'Oi' Magazine > Archive.
Available @ https://mauimagazine.net/we-give-you-the-raspberry/



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