Happy May Day to you!
White-flowered shrub with dark purple leaves was next to a lime
green hedge at the Marriott – very striking!
From Wikipedia: “Lei Day
is a statewide celebration in all of Hawaii.
The celebration begins in the morning of May first every year and continues
throughout the entire day and even continues onto the next day. Lei day was
established as a holiday in the year of 1929 and continues to this day. Each
Hawaiian island has a different type of lei
that is used for the celebration and for its people to wear.”
Photo credit: http://www.okclipart.com/Maile-Lei-Clip-Art30susccuzj/ |
That’s pretty accurate. I think the lei
for Kauai is maile, which is a sweet-smelling vine that grows in the forest. We
get it on special occasions, like our wedding or to honor a special teacher.
Schools typically have May Day celebrations with hula and song. The private school
I used to work for would prepare for about 3 months in advance and each grade
performed a hula or song in full costume.
On Kauai, Lei Day is put on by the
Kauai Museum and is a lei-making competition. It’s been more or less fun over
the years. Last year was kind of bogus because they put the lei on silent
auction and folks were taking them as they won, so many were missing by the
time we got there. This year the leis could not be taken until 4 p.m.
This year the museum courtyard is under
construction, so they held it over at the Marriott. WOW! So much better all
around. The Marriott has wide open spaces, great organization, a fabulous
garden, and welcoming staff. They also have an outstanding collection of
oriental art and sculpture.
We used to hold final class dinners at the Princeville Hotel in its baroque days and one of the German ladies got sniffy about how decadent and bourgeois it was. (And it definitely was! but it was pretty funny because we were all lapping it up.) The Marriott is completely decadent and bourgeois and I truly enjoy going there.
In general, the judges tend to favor these fluffy multi-flower lei.
My friend Jennifer Pomroy is the granddaughter of Irmalee Pomroy, a noted floral designer and lei maker here on Kauai (now passed). Her son Ka’ohu won an award for this distinctively different lei. He is 15 now. This hala seed lei is rarely seen or worn – usually associated with funerals, but occasionally used as an adornment for hula.
Hat lei are a special
category of their own.
Ti leaf lei – the one at the top is a
very old type – instead of narrow pieces of leaf woven or tied together, it had
larger end pieces of the leaves, bound on raffia. I was very taken with that
one.
White. The pikake
buds in the bottom lei were smaller than my little fingernail and it was a
solid round cord lei. They smelled divine.
I was really taken with this one, because it was so different from the others. Made from the calyx (calyxes?) of gardenias, very fluffy.
Many people got dressed up and were wearing flowers. These ladies and their lei were so pretty, I asked them if I could take their picture. The lei were all made by Sandy Takaezu, the lady on the left. They are blue jade flowers from her property in the Wailua Homesteads. The part that looks like a purple-blue bead is the calyx of the individual flower. These are needle sewn.
Matt always sneaks in a picture or two of me. I was neither dressed up nor wearing flowers, but at least I was clean. This is a characteristic pose of mine, with my handbag safely tucked under my arm. The oriental painting in the background is at least 10 feet tall, stunning.