geckos in hawaii

Why Shooting Photos of Geckos in Hawaii Presents Challenges

Geckos in Hawaii

Ever since we bought our vacation home in Hawaii, I’ve been on a mission to shoot photos of geckos in Hawaii. Primarily the Gold Dust Day geckos because those constitute the biggest population in my yard. These are the cute lizards, similar to the lizards that make TV commercials. They grin and look so innocent and happy. Then you notice their tail is a different color and you realize they lost it somewhere at one time.

Yes, these geckos in Hawaii can regenerate a tail. So if they are cornered in a tight situation, they can detach their tail. Just leave it behind in the clutches of whatever was hindering its movement. They can grow a new one. Skinks can do that, too. In fact, when I was a kid, I would pull off the tails of skinks we caught. Then slip the tails in my brother’s bed, under the covers, at the foot of his bed. My siblings found that hilarious. Seems really gross to me today. And cruel to the skinks.

But I digress. This trip to the house to work — hey, I can work from Sacramento in the spring or I can work from Hawaii — I brought a different camera. My Canon Sureshot. This allows me to shoot long distances. You simply cannot get great photos of the geckos in Hawaii from an iPhone, or even a Nikon without a good zoom. They also run away from you when you get too close to them. Even if you say sweet things in a soft voice, they’ll split in a heartbeat. Sucker!

I am really proud of myself that I got the shot above. That gecko has a great personality that shines through. You can almost touch the lizardy skin. He thoroughly enjoyed sunning himself but you can sense a bit of apprehension in his eyes, even though I stood a good 10 feet away. I think his name is Norton.

geckos in hawaii

This is a photo of a myna bird about a 1/2 mile away from our house. You can see the ocean behind the roof line, which is about a mile from our house. I shot this from my lanai. Not everybody loves myna birds because they are noisy and they fight a lot. They are also a bit like mockingbirds as they pick up sounds and repeat them.

geckos in hawaii

Check this out! Do you know what these are? They are mangoes. We haven’t had any for two years because they were not fertilized and mulched. Now that the problem is rectified, we are getting tons of mangoes. This is a favorite place for the geckos in Hawaii to hang out. Some are brown lizards with smooth backs, and others resemble a toad, all bumpy and darker brown. Or maybe I grilled one by mistake.

geckos in Hawaii

Some of you may remember my blog about visiting Tutu’s Nursery in Kailua-Kona last winter to meet Barbara Bolton and buy a red ginger plant. I carted this one home and planted it in my front yard. A few days later, all the leaves were turning white as though bleached by the sun and drooping in its soggy environment.

That was the wrong place to plant red ginger. So, I dug it up and moved it to the back yard, near the mango tree. Trimmed off the bleached leaves, piled volcanic chips around it and let nature provide its water. Now I have blooms of ginger. The flower is ornamental, and some people use the tubers for medicinal purposes.

I plan over the next couple of weeks to shoot more photographs of geckos in Hawaii. They generally run in pairs, so if I find one in the garage, there is another nearby. We don’t get too many of them inside the house. But when one sneaks in, I sweep it out with a broom, using the broom like a hockey stick.

Back to work today, though. I have only four open houses today, but that’s enough. Hopefully a couple of my sellers will receive a few more offers by tonight.

That’s a nice benefit of working from Hawaii. Due to daylight saving, not practiced here, Hawaii is three hours behind Sacramento in the spring. So when an open house ends at 4 PM in Sacramento, it’s only 1:00 PM here. I have the entire afternoon to negotiate offers. There is no better place to do this than among the geckos in Hawaii.

Elizabeth Weintraub

The Fastest Draw Often Wins the Sacramento Listing

sacramento listing

This is a gecko in Kailua-Kona, and nobody seems to like the critters except the teeny ones.

Apart from yours truly who likes to win the Sacramento listing, you know who is really fast? Geckos. I opened my door in the rain too fast and caught a gecko about to slip into the house. I slammed the front door so quickly I almost sliced it in two. Geckos are not my favorite thing. In fact, in my list of favorite things, geckos are not on it. They don’t rank down by the bottom. Except for that cute gecko selling insurance. But that is not a real gecko. That’s a cartoon gecko, I hate to point out.

So now when I open my front door, I run my nails over the security screen to warn geckos to get the hell outta the way. They are more afraid of me than anything. I’m not telling them how terrified they make me. And don’t you go telling them, either. Keep your lips zipped.

I think of geckos now because they are all around me at my house in Hawaii. They spend lazy afternoons lounging on MY leaves in the yard. I’m not sure what or how to send them elsewhere. The previous owners said the little ones are OK but they kill the big ones because the big geckos eat the brown geckos or maybe it’s the other way around.

In any case, I am still working while I am in Hawaii, this is my wor-cation. My Sacramento listing inventory has tripled over the past few days. Just yesterday I received a referral lead from a popular website. I immediately called the seller. She was pretty much taken a back. Wow, she said, 20 seconds and you were on the phone. Well, I ‘ve learned a thing or two during my 40+ years in real estate and that thing or two is RESPOND NOW, people! I can’t impress it on my own Elizabeth Weintraub team members enough, and they’re probably tired of hearing me say it.

When I shared with the seller I am in Hawaii, she wondered how I could sell her home. I explained it to her. I don’t live in Hawaii all the time. She wanted to see my face. No problem, you can see my face, I offered, have you an Apple product? Voila, in like Flint. Well, a team member is also going by in a few days to take me on a FaceTime tour. All of this technology lying at our fingertips and yet the most important thing is to respond. Right away.

That’s how you get a Sacramento listing. And I’m like those geckos. Too fast for many other agents. Further, I don’t stop there. You won’t get terrific service upfront only to be disappointed later by a lack of enthusiasm, oh, no, no, no, no. I continue the thread, my communication skills continue to exceed expectations. Call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759. You’ll be so thrilled!!

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