The Girlas: A Hawaiian Treasure

There is no shortage of music in Hawaii. you can find it everywhere.

From a back yard luau to neighborhood bars, right into Waikiki, you will discover wonderful music. There is no doubt about that.

Most musicians are covering music that was created by someone else. There is no shortage of cover bands or cover tunes.. Many musicians are just interpreting someone elses material. Not that there is anything wrong with that. But that is all they are doing, sining somebody’s songs.

When musicians play their own music, magic happens.

So it is with The Girlas. These ladies rock.

Listen in to just a small sampling of their music. Heart-felt music. Music form the soul:

You can visit The Girlas website right here.

Enjoy. Thank you, Girlas. You rock.

aloha,
albert grande
Make Pizza, Be Happy
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A Hawaii Pizza Tale: from Hawaii to Italy and Back


As you may know, I’m a pizzaman. I love making pizza, I love eating pizza and I love talking about pizza… (Here is my website: Pizza Therapy).

This is one of my favorite pizza tales I have ever experienced. Best of all, this extraordinary pizza conversation, had a Hawaii twist.

I happened to be at a Workshop recently and during lunch my favorite topic, pizza, just happened to come up.

Janet, who grew up in Hawaii, in a Japanese-American household, shared the following:

“One night, many years ago, my Dad and Mom decided to take us kids out for pizza. As soon as my Dad tasted the pizza, he said: “This is not real pizza…Now when I was in Italy during the Second World War, that was real pizza…”

(Albert’s side bar; So here goes: a pizza tale, with-in a pizza tale…)

Her father, who had never been out of Hawaii, was stationed in a small Italian town during World War II. They were camped on a farmer’s fields for several weeks. He decided to go for a walk to explore the farm.

The farmer became alarmed, when he noticed this stranger walking around his fields.

“Why” he thought, “was this strange Japanese man, walking around my fields?”

He immediately went to get a rifle. He then confronted this man pointing his rifle at him. The farmer soon realized, this Japanese man, was an American. He was a liberator and not a threat to him or his family.

After a while, the Italian farmer and this Japanese man from Hawaii, became friends.

One day the Serviceman was relieving himself near a stream and he noticed something in the water. He went to ask the farmer what he had seen.

The farmer told him, they were eels. Janet’s father was elated. He and his buddies were sick of K-Rations! Now they could feast on fresh eels! The other soldiers from Hawaii rigged some nets together and that night, they had an incredible meal of fresh eels, cooked right in their helmets!

The farmer then shared another secret with him. He said there were wild mushrooms growing right on the farm. The farmer taught him which mushrooms were safe to pick. Soon, their “eel and mushroom dinners” were the talk of the camp.

A short while later, his company had to leave. There was after all, a War going on. Before he left, the farmer invited him to his house for a meal. There, he tasted fresh, home-made pizza, for the first time. The memory of that pizza would never leave him.”

I thanked Janet immensely. I asked her if I could meet her dad, but she explained, he had passed away years before.

The tale made me think of my own father, who although born in the U.S., had loved to eat eels. He would regularly take us out to his secret spots to search for wild mushrooms. The love of this food had been passed on to him by his own father, who had been raised on a farm in Italy. And so it goes…

pizza on earth and Hawaii,

albert grande
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The Amazing Surfing Pig from Poipu, Kauai

Sure, seeing a dog surf is unusual. You don’t see it every day, but it is possible.

Witness now the impossible: Ilio the amazing surfing pig. whose owner, Mike, taught him how to surf.

Mike is a surf instructor living on Kauai. His motto is: “if I can teach a pig to surf, I can teach you to surf.”

He explains that this video launched his career. You can find his contact information at the end of the video.

You gotta see it to believe it:

Simply amazing!

Ilio, sadly passed away of natural causes… He is in Pig heaven. He’s probably hanging out with Porky, the real star of Lost, who was murdered.

Surf on old friends, surf on

albert

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$10,000 Violin Ripped Off from Rental Car on Kauai

Smashed Winsheild on Kauai

It happened again. A clueless tourist drove their rental car to the beach with valuables inside and the results were a disaster.

Except this time, it was a little different. This time, the victim was a world-renowned violinist who had just given a charity concert in Kauai.

So much for the Aloha Spirit.

According to the Honolulu-Star Bulletin (12/4/08), Karen Briggs of California had taken her rental car to Mahaulepu Beach for a little fun in the sun and a swim.

At about 2:00 PM her car was broken into. A large lava rock was used to smash the car window. Not only did the theif take the $10,000 Meisner and Son violin, but three French bows valued at $5,000 were also taken.

Chalk one up for the bad guys. I do think Ms. Briggs, should have known better. Don’t take a $10,000 violin to the beach.

Had she asked me, I would have told her: Don’t ever leave anything of value in your rental car. Never, ever, never.

I wish she read my blog post about Hawaii’s Dirty Little Secret. Your rental car is a target. A huge target.

The theives in Hawaii scope out rental cars. These are their favorite types of vehicles. They know the cars tourists drive.

If you drive a rental car in Hawaii, you might as well paint a sign on the side that says: “Steal from this car: valuables inside”.

But again, nobody thought to let this visitor know, Don’t leave anything of value in your rental car! She came over to play a benefit concert and she leaves behind her most valued possession.

Sad, this is very sad. If you know of anyone coming to Hawaii, please pass on this advice. Be careful out there and don’t leave anything of value in your rental car.

You may save your friend some heartache. Obviously, the rental car companies in Hawaii are not saying anything. Spread the word.

If you have any information about this theft, call Crime Stoppers at 241-1887 or police dispatch 241-1711.

Mahalo,

Albbert Grande
http://pizzatherapy.com
Visit Hawaii Secret Dot Info


Hawaii Secret Dot Com: Learn the Inside Tips About Hawaii
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