Lyon Arboretum of the University of Hawaii at Manoa provides a look at Honolulu quite different from the beaches.
View of Waikiki Beach, Honolulu, Hawaii |
Hills of Honolulu from Lyon Arboretum |
Ilie'e, Plumbago zeylandica |
Or this young tree of the iconic Hawaiian 'ohi'a lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha, myrtle family, Myrtaceae)
'ohi'a lehua, Metrosideros polymorpha |
'ohi'a lehua flowers |
Lyon Arboretum has a collection of "canoe plants," the species that Polynesians brought to Hawaii when they colonized it. One was taro, Colocasia esculenta, known in Hawaiian as kalo.
kalo, Colocasia esculenta |
Another canoe plant was the sweet potato, Ipomoea batatas, 'ulaa.
'ulaa |
There were also collections of non-Hawaiian plants. This stand of handsome bromeliads, for example, was part of a garden featuring all kinds of bromeliads, members of the plant family Bromeliaceae, from Hawaii and all over the world.
Comments and corrections welcome.
Note: In English, foreign words are put in italics. Scientific names of plants are considered to be in Latin, so are italicized. Hawaiian words would be italicized. But what of words from Hawaiian that are used as common names in English, such as ohia lehua? I decided those were English words and didn't italicize them.
References
About the Lyon Arboretum https://manoa.hawaii.edu/lyon/about/about-lyon-arboretum/
Canoe plants https://www.canoeplants.com/contents.html
Kathy Keeler, A Wandering Botanist
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