WasWinding 01-07-2026
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WasWinding definition: When at first it WAS windy, then when you paddle
out, it's NOT windy.
Full crew!
5 boards on top, 3 boards inside and 8 guys cramm...
Yakiniku Like – Ke’eaumoku, HI
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Yakiniku Like is a newish restaurant near Ala Moana. This is a chain
restaurant from Japan and they offer up premium meats at a good value price
– they als...
Which Time Period Would You Choose to Live In?
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I saw something in the news a while back that had me wondering what I would
choose. There's been a number of these kinds of studies.
Pew research was ask...
nanakusagayu
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Today is the 7th, which means it is the day to eat nanakusagayuI usually
prep the grasses the night before, but since I "thought" I could do it in
the morn...
Happy New Year and the Maidenhair Fern
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Shibaraku deshita, neh! (it has been a while). But now it is 2026 – which
will definitely be a better year than last. So a belated Happy New Year to
all ...
Descanso Gardens, 4/2/24
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Three out of four college roommates were able to get together. Our other
roommate, Mary, is from Mountain View and it would have been an eight hour
drive...
Delhi - Day 9
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October 2, 2019
We had another full day in Delhi before we leave for Varanasi tomorrow.
Subie met us once again to take us on a mini tour around Delhi. ...
14 comments:
Where's the water? Or is this a dry hot spring? Never heard of or saw one.
amazing I think this is the area that erupted back in the 90s
Ho! Boiling!
Izsmom
J, wow that's so cool. Did she try bathing there? N
We went there in Nov. It's kind of eerie. We stayed at a onsen hotel nearby,with our own private onsen.
Looks like an awesome thing to see!
I called it a spring, but spring means water yah? Maybe I shoulda said hot bubbling mud. LOL.
There was an eruption! I'll share some photos of a memorial of buried homes that we saw.
There was steam coming from the ground all over the place.
There was an onsen in our hotel, but we didn't try it.
We stayed right across the street at the Unzen Sky Hotel.
We were so focused on shopping that we almost missed it.
Don’t the Japanese refer to places like that as jigoku dani, or something like that?
For sure jigoku, meaning hell. They kept saying we’re going to hell today.
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