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MY BIGGEST ADVENTURE EVER |
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or How I ended Up in the Middle of the Pacific |
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Story and images by Vicki Hoefling Andersen |
Anticipating a trip anywhere is exciting and can create a few butterflies, especially if you’ve not traveled there before. Or you are familiar with your destination but this time there’s a whole new dimension to your escapade. Perhaps this time you’re packing your entire life into a 45-foot shipping container and departing with a one-way ticket in hand. Butterflies? You have NO idea! About 7.5 million Americans move out of state every year; nearly half stay within the same region of the country. There are a myriad of reasons for moving: military service, schooling or job, to care for family, swapping city-for-rural or vice versa, a change of climate or just because of a desired change. When it comes to retirees, almost a million of them a year relocate. WHERE TO GO
We both kept coming back to where we always felt the most “at home:” Hawaii. It seemed a fantasy that people of our age and average means would make such a move, but this became our objective. Having made numerous trips to various islands over many decades, deciding which was “the one” was fairly easy. Considering weather (Kauai), traffic (Oahu), and number of tourists (Maui), the perfect fit for our new “forever” home was Hawaii Island. Commonly known as The Big Isle, due to being twice the size of all the other main Hawaiian islands combined, it would provide oodles of places to explore, a wealth of culture and history to uncover, and almost every type of geology and climate on one 4,000-square-mile piece of real estate.
I took a certain pride in being a third generation Oregonian on my maternal side. My dad was well known in the ski industry, particularly in Oregon, with his involvement underway before I was born. From pre-school onward my winter weekends were spent at Mt. Hood, and in my teens I started ski instructing, a passion I followed for over a quarter-century. I almost felt like a traitor to consider leaving Oregon, but a new life and new adventures beckoned. After dad and then mom passed, we had no commitments and nothing to keep us from pursuing what our hearts yearned to do. WHAT GOES
The house in which I grew up had absorbed my grandparents’ home, much of the contents from my folks' cabin on Mt. Hood and dad’s ski school office at Timberline Lodge. When dad passed years ago, we cleared out many pickup-loads of items, but things seemed to keep propagating and procreating in the closets, attic, basement, garage and garden sheds. After spending countless long days sorting through and selecting the few items I wanted to keep, an incredible estate seller came to my rescue. While we began majorly downsizing our own possessions, she and her crew spent considerable time organizing everything, held an enormous multi-weekend sale, then removed the few leftovers and left the property ready for market. We’d always endeavored to not “horde” but forty-five years in the same abode, with a multitude of motorcycles and snowmobiles and RVs passing through our lives, things… just...multiply. We continued to downsize, pack and prepare to move, but in a few cases we may have been too zealous. Selling all three hand trucks left us using my office chair to move boxes around, and yes it would have made more sense to just buy another one, but for Ron it was a matter of principle. SELLING OUT
Once our property was finally ready for market, the timing couldn’t have been worse coinciding with the fourth Fed Reserve interest rate increase in as many months. People were scared, the market went dead, 30% of potential buyers in our price range were now priced out of the market and the rest were holding off in fear of inflation. Homes just weren’t moving while prices continued to inch upward in Hawaii. Ron was ready to give up and start unpacking. I was determined to make our dream a reality and tried to take heart in continual encouragement from friends and realtors: it just takes the right person. Then she materialized. To vacate for viewings, we’d park down the street where we could still watch the house. Emily didn’t seem to spend a lot of time which was a bit disheartening, but we didn’t realize she’d already looked at over forty properties and immediately “just knew” this was the right one. We had an offer from her that night.
GOING, GOING, GONE We’d already decided to fly first class. It was only one way, aging bodies would appreciate the nicer seats, more room for Kalani’s under-seat carrier, access to VIP lounges, and two free checked bags per person which were stuffed to the allowable limit with what I hoped would get us by. Plus it would be a celebratory start to our new life. The only airline that allows a pet in first class is Alaska Air, and then only one per flight. The only way to know if another pet has already been ticketed is call the reservations folks and believe me, Brenda was worth every penny of the booking fee. She snagged the last two available seats within a 10-day window and now I could book vet appointments, submit Kalani’s paperwork, and confirm shipping dates. Getting your fur baby to Hawaii is quite a process, especially if you want to bypass quarantine by juggling a Direct Airport Release (DAR). Titer rabies test, proof of last two rabies vaccinations, flight ticketed, health certificate within ten days of departure, confirmed reservation with Hawaii vet to process arrival, fee and forms with flight and vet info submitted to Hawaii Agricultural Dept. on Oahu to process Neighbor Island Entry, and receive confirmation all within our 30-day deadline!
The Turtle House I call the “no alarm clock needed” thanks to four young children, two of pre-school age, who arose at 6:00 every day of the week and started running and stomping nearly endlessly across their home above us, with particular focus on their wooden lanai. Puukala Sunset House was blessed with intermittent internet, perfect when you’re trying to buy a home, track vehicle and container shipments, and research your new town. Trying to string together pet-friendly lodging so close to departure was a definite challenge, resulting in 2 nights @ #1, then 2 nights @ #2, then back to #1 for 6 nights, then #3 for 9 nights, then return to #1 for 9 nights followed by 25 nights at #3. I finally created a separate calendar just to track locations, check-in and check-out dates and times and confirmations. And that only covered the first six weeks!
Two days before departure, the movers emptied our house, and the next day we greeted the transport driver who was conveying our truck to the port in Tacoma. It was not reassuring to watch him spend nearly 15 minutes killing the engine, slipping and burning the clutch just trying to load it onto the car hauler. Our vehicle made the trip physically unscathed but the synchros are nearly trashed. Now houseless and departure day upon us, it was a strange emotion to feel like a visitor in the town we had always called Home. During our layover in Seattle, Kalani invited a constant stream of travelers who were missing their own furry family members, and all three of us happily obliged their desire for a snuggle or two. Jokingly, Ron said next time we should make a sign “$5 for 5 minutes of puppy love”. GOT WHEELS? It gave us a small feeling of being “whole” again when the 4Runner finally arrived in Hilo, taking five weeks rather than the three quoted by Hawaiian Shippers. We left Kona early enough to be there when the port opened, which was three days after Mauna Loa started acting up, threatening to close Saddle Road, the main route across the island. Dawn was just breaking but I did manage a few pictures of her volcanic uproar at 60 mph out the car window.
Driving proved interesting. With no such thing as a city map, Google became my BFF for the first couple of months. That is, when I could hear instructions above hubby constantly hollering “where’m I going? Where do I turn?” above her voice. A FOREVER HOME Imagine our disbelief when she called less than three weeks after our arrival to let us know the perfect unit was about to hit the market! Upon viewing it the next day, we were overwhelmed with more than we’d ever imagined. After a bit of negotiations, three weeks to the day we landed, our offer was accepted. Our dream was actually coming true!
SO WHERE’S OUR STUFF? When our shipment finally arrived from its storage time in LA and holiday sojourn on Oahu, it had suffered a minor amount of breakage. I’ve yet to get the courage to check out one plastic tote of ceramic Easter decorations and water globes with big red “Fragile” and “Handle with Care” stickers all over it, delivered with a massive amount of duct tape somewhat holding the broken sides together. Having moved into our new home with nothing more than what was in our suitcases, our angel and aloha-spirited realtor came to our rescue with a bed, some chairs and end tables, dishes and linens to get us by. Internet and cable was installed the day after move-in but with no TVs, my laptop became the entertainment center. Each time I wanted to print or scan something, it was off to the business center. There is nowhere you can rent furniture or office equipment, and TVs have a six-month minimum rental. Most disconcerting was the loss of some items, at least two boxes as best we can figure. At least I REALLY don't think I packed the big metal yard dustpan, scrub brushes, car wax and machetes with my personal care items and I-can’t-recall-what-else. Am most bummed about my Zeiss monocular going AWOL, which has traveled halfway around the world with me for the last 20 years. I was unabashedly giddy to see our TVs, printer, bed and microwave again.
SETTLING IN
Our 32-year-old, 132,000-mile 4Runner draws a lot attention, sharing Hawaii Island’s Most Desirable Vehicle title along with Tacoma trucks. Even most of the police drive white 4Rs. Customizing your rig means installing a massive lift kit and humongous tires, then we show up with one whose paint hasn’t been sun oxidized and dressed out in non-rusted chrome. The topper was our Oregon license plate – SKIING – which drew a lot of double-takes, laughs, questions, and at least one photo op I observed. A funny thought hit me before we moved that at some point someone might ask, “Did ya move that truck from Oregon?” Being a fan of the Blue Collar Comedy Tour (Jeff Foxworthy, Larry the Cable Guy, Ron White and my fav Bill Engvall), the perfect reply popped into my twisted mind: "Nope, found it washed up on the beach and decided to give it a home". Fortunately the young man with his all-black humongous-tired 4Runner who did pop that question immediately “got it”... Here's Your Sign! Did not pull that response with the lady who asked if we had flown the vehicle over, I merely replied that yes, we had shipped it. You have to consider the recipients of your snarky leg-pulling.
Head out shopping or for a nosh and you’ll find time evaporates while you “talk story” with total strangers. Locals are mostly laid-back and welcoming and always seem to have time to share news and stories. Visitors are in a jolly mood because they’re on vacation, and often interested in the when/why/how of moving to Hawaii. And just like travelers at the airport, they want to ogle and love on Kalani in lieu of their absent furry family member. We enjoy hearing where they call home, what they’ve been doing during their trip, and sharing tips we’ve learned that might help them. It’s been a long and strange journey, full of ups and downs, joys, frustrations and trade-offs, but we’re very happy we made the move and are still in awe of what we’ve accomplished. Moving is said to be one of life’s most stressful events, mentally and physically exhausting and even traumatic. It is all of that, especially after this many trips around the sun and nearly a half-century in our prior home. But we wake up every day and go to sleep every night appreciative and grateful for the opportunity to be here. One visitor looked me in the eye and asked, “Are you happy living here?” I spoke from my heart and replied, “Absolutely. No regrets.” With much Aloha, I wish the same for you.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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