The Boots 2010:
Orchid, Fairmont Kea Lani, Polo Beach
The Boots 2010:
Traditional Hawaiian Sunset Ceremony, Fairmont Kea Lani
The Boots 2010:
Sunset #1 on Polo Beach
The Boots 2010:
Sunset #2 on Polo Beach
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - Sunset at Kalepolepo Park, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
Pacific Whale Foundation fan
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - Wailea Beach & Hotel Grand Wailea, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - Lovely 'scenery' on Wailea Beach, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
The 'Maui Wave', Four Seasons Resort
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - Sunset at Kama'ole Beach III, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
Day 6, Mar 31st: Rainbow Eucalyptus Trees on the Road to Hana Town
The Boots 2010:
Ocean Splendor #4, Ke'anae
The Boots 2010:
Day 7, April 1st: near Kaihalulu Beach in Hana Town
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - Fish'n near Sea Arch & Haneoo Road, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
Wind-Swept Tree, Hamoa Beach, south of Hana Town
The Boots 2010:
South side of Lyons Hill, Hana Town
The Boots 2010:
'Ohe'o Gulch #3, AKA 7 Sacred Pools
The Boots 2010:
Bird-of-Paradise with visiting bee
The Boots 2010:
Manawainui Valley region on the southern slopes of Haleakala, #3
The Boots 2010:
Sea arch #2
The Boots 2010:
Father & Son at Kama'ole III Beach Park
The Boots 2010:
Sunset #1, Kama'ole III Beach Park
The Boots 2010:
Sunset #3, Kama'ole III Beach
The Boots 2010:
Luxury home at north end of Po'olenalena Beach
The Boots 2010:
Haleakala: House of the Sun. Erosion, with stratified sedimentation, carved the Summit depression, not volcanic activity.
The Boots 2010:
Weathering produced soil layers on the surface of some flows, before succeeding flows buried them.
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - The long view of the Sliding Sands Trail, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - The newer rock groups, the Kula Volcanics, consist largely of alkali-rich basalt, with some picrite-basalt rich in big crystals of olivine & augite, Maui, Spring 2012
The Boots 2010:
Picrite basalt, containing large black crystals of augite, forms the surface here in the vicinity of the Haleakala Visitor Center.
The Boots 2010:
#Flickr12Days - The Haleakala Crater is a central erosional trough 7 miles long, 1.5 miles wide, & 2,000 feet deep, Maui, Spring 2012