Monday, November 19, 2007

Pearl Harbor

Now that I'm back in the saddle, and sitting out the Democrat v. Democrat-lite special election in Virginia's first district, I can finally finish blogging about Hawai'i.

My second effort to visit Pearl Harbor ended better than the first, though it too got off to a rocky start. Since we had to board TheBus at 6 a.m. and the Hilton's breakfast didn't start till 5:30, my travel companion and I decided to go for an early meal at the nearby Wailana Coffee House, a homey 24/7 diner/bar where I had sipped my first mai tai.



24/7, that is, except in the wee small hours of the morning of our second shot at Pearl Harbor.



We high-tailed it back to the HHV, soared up the elevator to my room to pick up the breakfast passes, rushed back to the Tapa Cafe, wolfed down the delicious continental breakfast, and raced to TheBus stop. And--we made it! Eighty minutes and one transfer later, we arrived at Pearl Harbor, where about 200 people were already in line ahead of us.



Once the ticket booth opened, the line moved fairly quickly, and we picked up our tickets for the morning's third ferry ride out to the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial.

The Memorial is a white marble bridge,



spanning the ship's sunken hull.



The seven windows along each length-wise side and in the ceiling represent a 21-gun salute, or 21 Marines at eternal parade rest.



At the far end of the Memorial is the Shrine Room, whose wall displays the names of the 1,177 sailors and Marines killed on board the ship in the early morning hours of December 7, 1941.



Survivors of the attack may be laid to rest with their shipmates when they slip the surly bonds of earth.



If the option were available to me, I'd be buried there too. Pearl Harbor lives up to the loveliness of its name; it's hard to imagine a more beautiful place to rest.




The body of the ship is rusting away.



But it has become an active reef, with living coral growing on the ship's remains.




Tropical fish swim amidst the ruins.



Above them float flowers tossed by visitors, like the orchid blooms that my travel companion cut from one of the leis that we received at the Royal Luau.



The Arizona is still leaking oil. When a drop reaches the water's surface, it bursts into a thin sheet that catches the sunlight and shimmers with the colors of the spectrum, like a floating rainbow.



To rest there is to slumber in an open aquarium. Nestled between the mountains and the deep blue ocean. In Hawai'i. Visited daily by thousands paying their respects.



After more than an hour on the Memorial, we took the ferry back to its museum, which features artifacts from the ship, including its bell



and its 2,000-ton anchor.



The museum helps teach the lessons of Pearl Harbor. Aviation was new back then, and the fleet was unprepared for an air attack. Mooring quays still mark the places where the ships floated, anchored two by two.



The narrow neck into the Harbor made it an advantageous den from which to defend against an attack by sea, but a death trap in the event of an attack by air.



Enlisted radar operators picked up the signal of the incoming Japanese attack planes, but the officer to whom they reported it mistakenly thought it was simply some U.S. planes scheduled to arrive soon.

Even as the war planes soared overhead, some witnesses on the ground saw the red sun emblem on each wing--and dismissed the sight, reasoning that planes couldn't fly all the way from Japan to Hawai'i. War from the air was so alien that the simple tactic of a refueling stop didn't occur to some.

If there's an enduring lesson from Pearl Harbor, it's the importance of questioning assumptions, of looking imaginatively ahead, of preparing for the next threat, not the last one.

We spent so much time on the Memorial and in the museum that we couldn't visit all the other sites at Pearl Harbor--the Pacific Aviation Musuem; the U.S.S. Bowfin, a WWII-era submarine, and the U.S.S. Missouri, the great battleship on which Japan would ultimately surrender. We barely had time for one of these, and we chose the Mighty Mo ...

4 comments:

Carl Kilo said...

Absolutely beautiful! the scenery and the lady. Thanks for sharing.

Bobbie said...

Hi - I'm visiting via the Carnival of Aloha. Thanks for this great article about the Arizona Memorial. Sometimes those of us who live in Hawaii need to "see" sights like this through the eyes of a visitor. Well done!

Evelyn said...

Bobbie's right, we do tend to take things for granted.

I'm very glad that you had a better experience with this excursion than with the first! :) Thanks, Leslie, for sharing that with us!

Anonymous said...

tibia money tibia gold tibia item runescape money runescape gold runescape power leveling tibia gold runescape money runescape gold runescape accounts runescape gp runescape power leveling dofus kamas buy runescape gold buy runescape money runescape items tibia item runescape accounts runescape gp wow power leveling wow powerleveling Warcraft PowerLeveling tibia money tibia gold runescape powerleveling buy dofus kamas Warcraft Power Leveling World of Warcraft PowerLeveling World of Warcraft Power Leveling Hellgate money Hellgate gold Guild Wars Gold buy Guild Wars Gold lotro gold buy lotro gold Hellgate Palladium Hellgate London Palladium Hellgate London gold runescape money runescape gold eve isk eve online isk Fiesta Silver Fiesta Gold SilkRoad Gold buy SilkRoad Gold Scions of Fate Gold SOF Gold Age Of Conan Gold AOC Gold lotro gold buy lotro gold buy runescape gold buy runescape money runescape items ArchLord gold buy ArchLord gold DDO Plat tibia money tibia gold tibia item Dungeons and Dragons Online Plat