Address of the hotel.
Address of the ship.
The cruise plan. The packing list.Some useful notes.
Some Hawaiian language.
Name | Function | Affiliation |
Gabi Laske | chief scientist | IGPP/SIO |
John Collins | co-PI | WHOI |
Ernie Aaron | technician | IGPP/SIO |
Cris Hollinshead | engineer RTAD | IGPP/SIO |
Ken Peal | engineer | WHOI |
Robert Handy | engineer | WHOI |
Jim Ryder | engineer | WHOI |
Jared Warner | observer | San Diego State Univ. |
Jillian Garber | observer | UCSD grad. |
Ondrej Sramek | observer | Yale |
Marine Denolle | observer | Visitor@Yale |
Jan Hautmann | observer | University of Munich |
Susanne Lehndorfer | observer | University of Munich |
Yu-Chih Huang | observer | University of Taiwan |
Ching-Ren Lin | observer | University of Taiwan |
Aston Honolulu Prince 415 Nahua St. Honolulu, HI 96815 (808) 922-1616hotel's web site
DIRECTIONS from AIRPORT: 1) Exit airport terminal and access the H-1 Freeway East. 2) Exit freeway via Nimitz Highway and follow Waikiki signs. 3) Nimitz Highway transitions to Ala Moana Boulevard midpoint on your drive as you pass the port of Honolulu on your right and the Honolulu business district on your left. 4) Ala Moana Boulevard merges with Kalakaua Avenue at the southwest entrance to Waikiki. Stay in the far left lane which becomes Kuhio Avenue. 5) Proceed on Kuhio Avenue and turn left on Nahua Street. The Aston Honolulu Prince Hotel is the second building on the right.
R/V Kilo Moana or KM Pier 45 1 Sand Island Road Snug Harbor, Sand Island DIRECTIONS from AIRPORT: directions from airport: 1. start out going north on rodgers blvd toward n nimitz hwy. (0.1 mi) 2. turn right onto n nimitz hwy/hi-92 e. (2.1 mi) 3. turn slight right (< 0.1 mi) 4. turn slight right onto sand island access rd/hi-64 s (1.0 mi) 5. end at 1 sand island access rd. there is be a gate and a sentry. Identify yourself as part of the KOK cruise. They'll check your name against the passenger list.
aloha | hello, goodbye |
hale | house |
kane | man |
kaukau | food |
mauka | towards the mountain |
mauna | mountain |
moana | sea |
keiki | child |
ono | delicious |
kokua | help |
lanai | porch |
luau | feast |
mahalo | thank you |
makai | towards the sea |
pali | cliff |
pau | finished |
pau hana | end of work |
puka | hole, door |
wahine | woman |
wikiwiki | fast, quick |
mele kalikimaka | Merry Christmas |
paku'iku'i | Achilles Tang |
'Opu Hue | Porcupine Fish |
Kihikihi | Pennantfish |
humuhumu-umau-malei | Whiteline Triggerfish |
humuhumu-nukunuku-apua'a | Picasso Triggerfish |
Lauwiliwili-nukunuku-'oi-'oi | Longnose Butterflyfish |
ahi | yellow fin tuna; we know that one |
aku | skipjack tuna |
hapuupuu | grouper |
mahimahi | dolphin fish; just the fish, not the dolphin |
onaga | red snapper |
ono | wahoo, king mackerel |
opakapaka | pink snapper |
uku | gray snapper |
poke | chunks of marinated raw fish |
limu | side dish, slightly crunchy seaweed |
lomi lomi | dish of raw salmon (tamotoes and onion) |
poi | peeled, cooked and mashed roots of the taro plant (looks like glue) |
lilikoi | passion fruit |
haupia | a dessert with coconut and pinapple |
saimin | island version of Chinese noodle soup |
Macadamia Nuts | Native of Australia, but also grown in Hawaii |
pupu | appetizer, in general |