Showing posts with label Solomon Islands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Solomon Islands. Show all posts

June 8 - Temotu Province Day in the Solomon Islands

Posted June 8, 2019



There are so many nations in the world, and they range in size from enormous to tiny. Obviously, many nations need to divide up into smaller internal regions, not just so that they can better identify places on maps, but also so that they can have more localized governmental structures.

In the United States, Mexico, India, Brazil, and many other countries are divided into states. I just visited the very small nation of Iceland, and it is divided into regions. Some nations call their administrative divisions departments, territories, or districts. A popular sort of division is provinces; nations as varied as the huge nation of Canada, medium-sized nations like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and small nations such as the Solomon Islands.

The Solomon Islands are already divided, geographically, into islands. There are six major islands and more than 900 smaller islands! Still, there's no need to have a government for any of the hundreds of uninhabited islands; and a nation with a population less than the U.S. state of Vermont doesn't  need hundreds or even tens of provincial governments, so the 300 or so inhabited islands are divvied up into nine provinces:


Today is the special holiday for the Temotu Province, which has a population of roughly 21 thousand people.  I couldn't find the number of islands in this province, but there are lots of them, making up two separate chains of islands. 

Here are a few facts about the Temotu Province:

Tinakula is a volcano that erupts once an hour! Not with lava, thank goodness, but with ash and smoke.


I wondered why Tinakula was so very active, and it turns out that the region of the Pacific Ocean where the Solomon Islands - and many other island nations - are located is very complex, made up of major and minor tectonic plates all moving over and under each other, rubbing and heating the lower regions of partly molten rock.

Pacific Kauri trees grow on some of the islands. These are evergreen trees with cones rather than flowers - but they are not the kind of coniferous trees I'm used to, the pines and firs and spruces and cedars, because they have proper leaves rather than needles. 

Leaves and cones of Kauri trees


The Kauri trees are often referred to as "ancient," because they were widespread over the earth during the time of the dinosaurs, but now they are mostly found on Australia and the island nations of the South Pacific.

Rich soil, poor soil: Like other Solomon Islands, Temotu is made of islands that have mineral-rich volcanic soil - and those islands are good for agriculture - and also of coral atolls or islets - and those islands have beautiful white sand and palm trees, but not many crops or other plants can grow in what is basically limestone sand.


Five of the Solomon islands have disappeared into the ocean, as of 2016, and many others are threatened by sea-level rise from global warming. I'm not sure if any of the five islands that have already disappeared were from Temotu province, but for sure islands in this province are in danger!





Also on this date:

















Astronomer Giovanni Cassini's birthday















July 7 – Independence Day for the Solomon Islands

Posted on July 7, 2016


Today the Solomon Islands celebrate their 1978 independence from the United Kingdom.

I've already talked about the Solomon Islands here and hereand I've discussed such topics as their location, their importance in a U.S. president's life and during World War II, and the unusual blond-hair-dark-skin minority living on some of the islands.









Today I'm going to focus on a few different topics:

  • The tiny island of Anuta is just half a mile wide, but its 300-or-so people are crammed in as tightly as any population in the world. The island is so far from any other island, the Anutans have to be self-sufficient and have to act sustainably.

This sustainable way of life includes treasuring and upkeeping their canoes. Anutans know that wood is scarce, so they have had their canoes in their families for 150 years – or even more! – even though they use them daily or almost-daily!

Anutans have what is called a gift economy. They don't barter so much as give. But they know that “what goes around comes around.” (Naturally, such an economy is much easier to sustain in a tight-knit population of just a few hundred people!)


  • Some Solomon Islanders create grass bands. (They are also called panpipe bands or bamboo bands.) What that means is that pipes are created from various sorts of local grasses, and then a bunch of grass instruments are gathered together into a band! Check it out here and here!

Some of the "grass" or bamboo instruments
are made to blow into, like a sort of pipe (above),
and others are made to be hit, like a sort of drum
(below).


  • Shell money is traditional currency – and although it is only used in a few ways, these days, it is worth quite a bit in modern money. Here is a short video about shell money. 







Also on this date:









































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February 25 – Anniversary of the Creation of Choiseul Province

Posted on February 25, 2016

This little dot of land is not
large enough to be called
an island - it's just an islet.
There is an island in the Pacific called Choiseul, after a French Minister of foreign affairs.

It used to be called San Marcos, after a Catholic saint.

It is also called Lauru. Which is the name that the people who lived there in the past, and also the people that live there now, call it!

Choiseul Island is just one of the three major islands in the province called Choiseul. I assumed that Choiseul would be the largest of the province's islands, and also the capital of the province; I was only half right: 

Choiseul Island is the largest island in Choiseul Province (hence the name), but a teeny island called Taro Island serves as the capital of the province.


And I hope you are asking yourself, “Province of what country?”

The answer is Soloman Islands, an island nation that includes eight other provinces as well. 

Last year, I posted about Guadalcanal Province

The Soloman Islands are known for beautiful beaches, energetic dances, and a minority of people with blond or reddish hair and dark skin.





Also on this date:













































Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for: