After our visit to the coffee plantation we continued up the side of the mountain range until we got up into what Hawaiians would call the wao akua. This is the range really high up, usually shrouded in mist, where only the gods dwell. This is what it felt like at the lookout for Poás
There was a short trail up to the lookout, and as we walked along it I felt alive! I love being up in the high mountains! The air is thinner, but for some reason, it invigorates me! I loved every single minute of being up there!
The volcano, unfortunately, was complete obscured by clouds. We could not see it at all. But I really didn't care. I just loved that I was there.
I walked off on another path and although the vegetation looked dead, it reminded me a lot of walking through Koke'e. It had the same feel to it.
The smell of sulphur was strong in the air, and althought the flora looked like Hawai'i, the fauna was very different. I saw squirrels and hummingbirds, and all kinds of other birds that I can't possibly name.
It had been raining when we first arrived, but as our time there progressed the rain retreated, so birds started coming out in an attempt to dry themselves off. I managed to get this hummingbird as he sat there, posing for me:
I had to zoom in a lot, so the picture really doesn't do it justice. In person, the colors were so irridescent and vibrant... He (or she?) let me take 4 pictures of him before he suddenly disappeared.
By the time I got back to the buslet (busito), my whole body was buzzing and my eyes were wide with excitement. I love being in the wao akua, and especially in a place that looked so much like home but was still so vastly different.
One thing that is different is the way people treat places such as this. We in Hawai'i really are unique. Because we don't have any natural predators in our islands, our people developed a reverence for the forest that allowed us to be quiet and reflective while in such places as the wao akua. When we walk in our mountains or even our rainforests, we have the luxury of being silent.
Other places are not like that. Places like Costa Rica has large predators, like jaguars. So when humans walk through the forest, they have to make some noise to let the predators know that they are coming.
See, most predators really don't want to meet up with humans if they can avoid it. Unlike other prey, humans fight back, and we're pretty wily about it too.
So, when you walk through the forests in the continents, you have to make noise so that they leave you alone.
But in this modern age, this character trait leads to what seems like, to me anyway, a kind of disrespect for the place. I was up in this beautiful, peaceful wonderland, and all the people around me were talking loudly, making all kinds of noise, and not even really looking at what was around them. It looked like they did not have an appreciation for the majesty of the nature that they were being given the priviledge to see.
I am, of course, making assumptions about what I saw, and I know this. So the point really is this: cultural differences give us different perceptions. And I am very glad of the way that people of my culture view places such as the wao akua.
So that's my two cents, and my round up of my visit to Poás Volcano. Next up is La Paz...
Aloha!












