Welcome to the Tiki Central 2.0 Beta. Read the announcement
Tiki Central logo
Celebrating classic and modern Polynesian Pop

Tiki Central / General Tiki / 6/05 Sunset Magazine

Post #158905 by DawnTiki on Sat, May 14, 2005 3:55 PM

You are viewing a single post. Click here to view the post in context.
D

Pick it up...

Steven Gunther
A tin-roofed tropical shack sits at the edge of a dark-bottomed pool. The uneven stone rim and creeping vegetation enhance the lazy lagoon mood.

Hawaiian at heart
Beside a backyard pool, an L.A. homeowner re-creates the islands she loves
by Sharon Cohoon


When you're floating in Ruth Hunter's dark blue pool surrounded by palms and orchids, it's easy to forget you're in Los Angeles. "You feel like you're drifting through a Hawaiian lagoon," she says. And that was the whole idea. Though Hunter, her husband, Sean Daniel, and their son, Quincy, visit Hawaii several times a year, she never gets enough of the island paradise. Part of her heart is always in the tropics. When the family returned from one of those trips, Hunter said to herself: "Why not re-create the tropics in my backyard?" So what if the house was more English Tudor than grass shack? "I decided my traditional garden bored me. I wanted something more lyrical and fantastic."

Hunter imagined a pool that would remind her of the fishponds encircled with lava rocks she saw as she drove through the Islands. She also wanted a tin-roofed surf shack like the one depicted in her favorite Hawaiian watercolor. "I've always loved shacks," says Hunter. "Their simplicity makes me feel safe and secure."

Steven Gunther
Ruth Hunter enjoys her garden in, appropriately, Hawaiian attire.
To make her fantasy real, Hunter turned to landscape designer Mary Effron and her husband, Javier Valdivia, an artist and a mason. The couple gave Hunter a pool with a pond feel; it's 11 to 12 feet deep and uses a dark gray plaster to enhance its depth. To mimic the lava rock edging that Hunter wanted, they put in chunky individual stones rather than smooth flagstone around the pool, choosing rocks in the dark reddish tones seen in Hawaii. For the shack, they engaged Erik White, a designer and carpenter with movie-set experience, who built a casual-looking but rock-steady entertainment deck and the shelter. The floor is redwood, the supporting poles are of galvanized steel covered with split bamboo, and the back wall is covered with reed matting.

Hunter's son and his pals love jumping into the pool from the platform. (When they were younger, they pretended to fish there.) The shack has a practical side too: Pool equipment is hidden behind it.

Palms, ornamental bananas, cannas, and other tropicals planted close to the pool and in pots right at its edge deepen the lagoon illusion. Tropical-print fabric on the garden furniture, a few tiki torches, some large shells, and a surfboard complete the mood.

Hunter and her family love their movie-set backyard. "Reinventing yourself is practically an L.A. tradition," she says. "Why not extend it to your garden?"

DESIGN: Mary Effron Landscape Design, Santa Monica (310/452-7152); Erik White Designs, Los Angeles (323/662-4167)

Create your own instant Hawaii

You don't need a lagoonlike pool to get in a luau mood. Set-decorating alone can go a long way toward creating your own Hawaiian style. Roll out some jute rugs. Replace cushion covers with fabric in a Hawaiian floral motif — Hawaiian Fabric (www.hawaiianfabric.com) has about 1,000 prints to choose from. Display flowering orchids or exotic cut flowers like bird of paradise or heliconia. Bring in a few tiki gods to reign over the garden; if you can't find a local source, order them online from Tiki Master (www.tikimaster.com).

A great article on Surf Therapy for autistic kids...
Surf therapyBringing the Paciflc to autistic kids
by Ben Marks


Israel "Izzy" Paskowitz was born in Honolulu, spent a formative portion of his childhood living on a Tel Aviv beach, and, in 1972, was one of his father's first instructors at the Paskowitz Family Surf Camp in San Diego. So when Izzy and his wife, Danielle, had children of their own, it seemed perfectly natural to get their kids into the ocean early and often.

One of their three children, Isaiah, now 14, developed signs of autism around age 2. The Paskowitzes spent years seeking treatment for him, but the best therapy proved to be the ocean itself — when Isaiah was in the water riding on a longboard with his surfing-champion dad, the boy's overloaded senses seemed at peace. From Isaiah's experience, Surfers Healing was born.

Autistic children, says Izzy, "get into these routines of obsessive-compulsive behavior that are really hard to break." Wading into the ocean and then balancing on a surfboard, it turns out, are effective ways to break such routines. "I've seen kids go out kicking and screaming," says Izzy, "but come back elated when they are riding in."

Surfers Healing instructors include staffers from the Paskowitz Family Surf Camp, Izzy himself, and guest volunteers. Donations from organizations like Variety — The Children's Charity and sponsors like Spy Optic help defray expenses, and Izzy is adamant that the gifts surfing has given him be passed along without charge. "It just seems wrong to do it for profit," he says.

Go to camp

Surfers Healing (camps Jun 25 in Malibu; Jun 29 and Aug 3 in San Onofre; Jul 15 and 27 and Aug 12 in San Diego; free; http://www.surfershealing.org or 866/647-4325).

http://www.sunset.com/sunset/travel/hawaii

[ Edited by: DawnTiki on 2005-05-14 16:01 ]