I wrote a blog post a bit ago about Hawaiian pidgin and the use of "blind mullet" to refer to a person who can't see what's right in front of them.
Commenter BB wrote to Bob Sigall who is a columnist for the Star Advertiser newspaper here in Hawaii and got this information on his website Rearview Mirror Insider.
"Nanako *** wrote, "A local blogger I subscribe to, Kay, mentioned Blind Mullet. As one cannot see something in plain sight. She couldn't find any reference on the internet. I've heard it too.
“Mullets are tasty, but nowhere does it mention a sight issue. Maybe in how they fished??? Can you use your journalistic super powers to find out where we got blind mullet from?"
I first heard the term “Blind Mullet” from a newspaper story about the underground steams of Moiliili.
Mike Markrich wrote, in his “From the sea” column, “The corner of University Avenue and King Street may not seem like the kind of place where someone could catch a lot of fish. But when the floor of the Moiliili Department Store dropped into a huge underground cavern in 1952, people came from all over the island to see and catch the blind mullet and black carp that lived below the ground.”
Tom *** was quoted as saying the fish in the cave were ''fine sea mullet, although the water was icy cold and fresh. And as they took no notice of our lights, we surmised that they were blind."
Sonny *** remembers seeing such mullet when his company was laying pipes below King Street. He said he knew the mullet were blind because "the eyes were completely white."
“Bishop Museum cave biologist Frank Howarth said such caverns sometimes provide safe habitats for fish. The fish do not need eyesight underground to escape predators and as a result are able to live and reproduce. Howarth said blind fish have other senses that became developed.
This photo came from the 2006 Star Bulletin archives.
“Fish collector Glenn *** observed that all of the blind or nearly blind mosquito fish that he caught from the King Street site were able to instinctively avoid any obstacles that he put in his tank. There are said to be other kinds of marine life living below ground as well, such as blind shrimp, catfish and black carp.”
Thank you, BB! Now, I'll have to think of some other weird pidgin stuff we say but don't know why or where it came from.