Sunday, August 9, 2020

Hinahina Beach Heliotrope Abhors Bombs on Magnum’s Nowhere to Hide


Summary: Hinahina beach heliotrope abhors bombs on Magnum’s Nowhere to Hide Jan. 14, 2019, undercover like 1970s film on The Night Has Eyes re-aired Aug. 7, 2020.


hinahina beach heliotrope (Heliotropium anomalum var. argenteum), also known as hinahina ku kahakai, nohonohopuuone or pohinahina; habit at Honokanaia, Kahoolawe, Hawaii; Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014, 07:23: Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 3.0 United States, via Wikimedia Commons

Hinahina beach heliotrope abhors bombs on Magnum’s Nowhere to Hide crime action drama television series episode Jan. 14, 2019, undercover like 1970s film on The Night Has Eyes re-aired Aug. 7, 2020.
First-season 11th-episode director Mark Tinker and writers Joe Gazzam and Peter Lenkov and second-season 17th-episode director David Straiton and writer Ashley Charbonnet betray safety by unsafety. The series’ 37th episode overall causes Buddy Yang (Ed Dunbar) to conceal undeveloped film concerning a hit-and-run inside a silver urn containing his brother Richard’s ashes. The series’ 11th episode overall debuted that plot device 16 months before The Night Has Eyes episode debut April 24, 2020, and rerun Aug. 7, 2020.
Sergei (Ilia Volok) expects to entomb within Hawaiian island soils a human-portable nuclear weapon, the special atomic demolition munition (SADM), enclosed within an inconspicuously brown suitcase.

All the eight main Hawaiian islands feature island-specific colors and lei flowers, of which the smallest, Kahoolawe, flourishes gray and purple- and white-flowering hinahina beach heliotrope.
The Boraginaceae (from Latin borāgō, from Arabic أَبُو الْعَرَق, “borage”) borage family member grows from seeds germinated within three months or generated cuttings within three weeks. Branch tips hold gray fruits each of whose interiors harbor four brown-white or gray seeds viable for perhaps half a year when hurled from their homes. Lei-friendly purple or white flowers, slightly fragrant or strongly sweet-scented, with yellow centers inhabit the same locations before heliotrope fruits, in cluster-like rows along curved stems.
Hinahina beach heliotrope, judged taxonomically by Jackson Hooker (July 6, 1785-Aug. 12, 1865) and George Walker-Arnott (Feb. 6, 1799-June 17, 1868), journeys through 20-plus-year life cycles.

The indigenous (from Latin indigenus, “native”) evergreen, known locally as hinahina, hinahina kū kahakai, nohonohopuʻuone and pōhinahina, keeps one- to two-inch- (2.54- to 5.08-centimeter-) long leaves.
Heliotropium anomalum var. argenteum (from Greek ἥλιος, “sun”; τρέπω, “to turn”; -ιον, “little”; and Latin anōmalus, from Greek ἀνώμᾰλος, “exceptional”; and Latin argenteus, “silver-made”) looks silver-gray. Roots maintained in black cinder-mixed lowland rocky or coastal coral-mixed sandy, sunlit, well-drained soils and thick leaves more leathery than succulent and watery minimize moisture losses. Nourishment-seeking aphids, mealybugs, nematodes, scale, slugs, snails and thrips nestle into Kahoolawe year-round flowering, fruiting, seeding subspecies, noted by Asa Gray (Nov. 18, 1810-Jan. 30, 1888).
Hinahina beach heliotrope, subspecied hinahina kū kahakai (“helotrope standing [on the] beach”), once offered Kahoolawe (Kaho’olawe, from Hawaiian ka, “the” and ho’olawe, “to erode”) on-site lei-making.

All Hawaiian islands, apart Kahoolawe, where bombing practices polluted air and land, and Lanai (Lāna’i, from Hawaiian la, “day” and na’i, “[of] conquest”), possess silver-leafed subpopulations.
The Kahoolawe Island Reserve Commission qualifies, or not, whatever, whoever quickens quality Hawaiian cultural and physical environments for Kahoolawe and undoubtedly quits Sergei from approved quests. It requires whatever, whoever rallies such native soil-remediating plants as chaff flower (‘ewa hinahina, Achyranthes splendens), dwarf koa (koai’a, Acacia koaia) and goosefoot (‘āheahea, Chenopodium oahuense). Strengthening soil suggests hawthorn rose (‘ūlei, Osteomeles anthyllidifolia), hopseed (‘a’ali’i, Dodonaea viscosa), rockwort (kulu’i, Nototrichium sandwicense), sandbur (kāmanomano, Cenchrus agrimonioides) and shiny-leafed canthium (alahe’e, Psydrax odorata).
The SADM-transporting suitcase in federal government custody no longer threatens the 75 percent of Kahoolawe, where hinahina beach heliotrope perhaps one day thrives, with unexploded ordnance.

(top left to right) "Rick" Wright (Zachary Knighton), "TC" (Stephen Hill), Detective Gordon Katsumoto (Tim Kang); (bottom left to right) Juliet Higgins (Perdita Weeks), Thomas Magnum (Jay Hernandez) and Kumu (Amy Hill) in Magnum P.I.'s Nowhere to Hide (season 1 episode 11): Truus Welgraven @TruusWelgraven, via Twitter Jan. 13, 2019

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

Image credits:
Image credits: hinahina beach heliotrope (Heliotropium anomalum var. argenteum), also known as hinahina ku kahakai, nohonohopuuone or pohinahina; habit at Honokanaia, Kahoolawe, Hawaii; Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014, 07:23: Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 3.0 United States, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Starr-141217-2871-Heliotropium_anomalum_var_argenteum-habit-Honokanaia-Kahoolawe_(25156055501).jpg; Kim and Forest Starr (Starr Environmental), CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Flickr @ https://www.flickr.com/photos/starr-environmental/25156055501/; Forest & Kim Starr, CC BY 4.0 International, via Starr Environmental @ http://www.starrenvironmental.com/images/image/?q=25156055501
(top left to right) "Rick" Wright (Zachary Knighton), "TC" (Stephen Hill), Detective Gordon Katsumoto (Tim Kang); (bottom left to right) Juliet Higgins (Perdita Weeks), Thomas Magnum (Jay Hernandez) and Kumu (Amy Hill) in Magnum P.I.'s Nowhere to Hide (season 1 episode 11): Truus Welgraven @TruusWelgraven, via Twitter Jan. 13, 2019, @ https://twitter.com/TruusWelgraven/status/1084501533381795841

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Truus Welgraven @TruusWelgraven. "They are so ready for the NEW episode tomorrow! Are you, too? #MagnumPI 1x11 "Nowhere to Hide" @jay_hernandez @Tim__Kang @StephenHillActs @amyhillactor @PerditaWeeks @ZachKnighton @PLenkov @Ashley_Gable @TVMomma @WendieJoy @MagnumPICBS @TM_Tribute." Twitter. Jan. 13, 2019.
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