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February 24, 2008

Britiki Cheerio

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Aloha, I have returned from England. My body is 5 pounds heavier, and my wallet is a couple-hundred pounds lighter.

I had several fun and interesting meetups with various blogger-friends during the 2 weeks I was there. First off, I enjoyed a traditional Sunday roast in South London near the Borough Market with The Cartoonist and Konstantin. We eschewed recording a podcast this time due to the extreme noise levels in the pub.

The following Tuesday, I joined a whole host of London Tiki-lebrities at Sugar Cane in Clapham Junction: Tiki Chris, Tiki Racer, Trader Jim, Cheekytiki, Sian the Exotic Tramp, and Will Kane. The drinks were great, and Sugar Cane's manager, Justin, comped us several platefuls of excellent puu-puus. Trader Jim lavished both issues of his Tiki fanzine, Pocketiki, upon me, and Tikiracer gave me a print of his original artwork. Cheers, fellas! Tiki Chris also filmed us individually introducing ourselves and our websites, which you can view at his 'blog [Link]

Honolulu_Cheerio.jpgOver the weekend, I went flea-marketing at the Portobello Road and Greenwich Markets. I didn't find anything in Greenwich, but I was thrilled to discover this lovely retro-hula girl souvenir glass in a dusty box. It only cost 50p (~$1.00), and it's inscribed "Honolulu Cheerio", so I'm guessing it's a souvenir some British tourist picked up in Hawaii back in the 50s or 60s. Finding Tiki-related items in the UK is an extremely rare event, even for the locals, so I was pretty excited to stumble across this. Click on the image to view it full-size. P.S. taking photos of glassware is a real bitch!

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Finally, I met up with Tiki Chris and Trader Jim again at the London Trader Vic's last Thursday for a few Navy Grogs and Mai Tais. Chris had a wee hangover from the previous evening, so he nursed it quietly while Jim and I did most of the talking. James is an old punk like me, so we had a lot in common. It's funny how most punks seemed to migrate to Exotica over the years. We called it quits around 9:30pm and managed to escape with a bill just slightly over £100; it would've been less, but I just couldn't bear to part with this cool Vic's free Mai Tai coupon! I'm going to frame it and hang it over the bar.

That's all the news that's fit to print about this trip. I'm off to the basement now to start running off my extra poundage on the treadmill.

Aloha,

Mr. BH

February 2, 2008

Vintage Oceania IV: A Day at the War Canoe Races

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It's been quite a while since I've found anything worthy of adding to my Vintage Oceania collection, but today I stumbled upon this lovely illustration from the April 29, 1871 issue of Harper's Weekly, that depicts a Maori war canoe race in New Zealand. I really like the feathered, big-nosed figurehead on the prow. I wonder who the artist was? Unfortunately, I can't find any signature.

UPDATE: one of my sharp-eyed readers located the artist's signature at the bottom lefthand side of the illustration. After looking at it under high magnification, I've determined that it's "G. Durand", a 19th-century engraver who did indeed work for Harper's.

[Link: Vintage Oceania gallery]

February 1, 2008

Day 7: More Pork

Mike Nesmith's Television Parts Home Companion shares the remarkable account of one man's heroic attempt to prove that the ancient Hawaiians could've crossed the Pacific in a Polynesian restaurant and sailed to America's western shores.

More video ex-Monkeeshines here [Link].

[Link: Voyage of the Kona Tiki][via TC]