We're a team of two. See what we've been up to. Great to see you here.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
It's been a long time...
We'll be in town, soon to see you all. Hang up my neoprene in the closet please.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Ever surf at Marineland at Ala Moana BP? This movie is the same thing except this guy is going right. Hey, surfing is fun. Even for newbie attorneys, med school students, single Late Thirty-ish unarried haole ladies, and those who park at Kewalos and think they are actually surfing Kewalos. Aloha@!##$!
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Saturday, November 08, 2008
Your Results May Vary!

http://5tolife.honozooloo.com/2008/
A neat little photodocumentary of Honolulu and it's day and nightlife.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Pre or Post Surf Cup of Joe
Trung Nguyen
Paradoxurus Hermaphroditus - 'Doris Maurice' to his chums
Trung Nguyen Coffee:Inspired Creativity
Dragon Coffee Menu
...or indeed involved at all!
French colonists, realising that conditions were ideal for coffee cultivation, first planted coffee in the South Central Highlands region of Vietnam. The coffee also proved popular with a local resident: the common palm civet (Paradoxurus Hermaphoditus), a weasel-like animal, which quickly developed a taste for the sweet, fleshy outer layers of the coffee 'cherries' - the fruit of the coffee bush.
It was found that the fruit seeds, what we know as coffee 'beans', passed though the civet largely undigested and the resulting beans, when washed and sun-dried, had undergone a remarkable change to produce a uniquely smooth and delicious flavour. Perhaps this was because the civet would choose only the best and ripest beans to eat, but also because the beans had been modified by enzyme reactions on their journey.
Civet The legendary 'Café Chôn' (also known as Kopi Luwak in Indonesia) is rare, very expensive (approximately US$350 per kilo) and is sometimes of dubious authenticity. Indeed, many people who claim to have tried weasel coffee in Vietnam have probably actually been drinking Trung Nguyên's 'Legendee' coffee.
Legendee is produced by an enzyme treatment process developed exclusively by Trung Nguyên that mimics the changes produced in the coffee beans by the civet and produces a coffee every bit as distinctive and good as the genuine article but at about a tenth of the price (and, fortunately, without any involvement from the weasels!).
The special process used in making Legendee seems to release a whole spectrum of flavours that normally lie dormant. Rich and complex, Legendee is superb when served hot, sensational when served iced, and is certainly one of the finest coffees in the world.
http://www.trung-nguyen-online.co.uk/legendee.html
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Friday, March 14, 2008
Monday, February 25, 2008
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
California Counterpart
Monday, February 18, 2008
End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones (2004)
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