Jeff, I appreciate seeing your videos, and chuckle at some of your offhanded humor. It's enjoyable. The new microphone helps a lot with the wind, and your camera obviously has a good quality lens. Very sharp.
If I may, a little constructive criticism on your videos: Slow down the panning from side to side, and avoid sudden movement, especially when zoomed in on something. When you quickly swing the camera around from one place to another, it can make the viewer nauseous. When you have a scene in frame, especially a pretty landscape view, pause long enough for the viewer to absorb what it is they're seeing - like a postcard view. Consider that they may never have seen what you're viewing, so you have to let them follow along. Keep in mind that you can see what is outside the camera's view, but your video viewer cannot - the camera's eye is all they have. There's a real reason you see movie directors making a rectangle with four fingers, as if viewing what the camera would see.
If you pan from one scene to another, do it slowly enough for your viewer to follow along easily, or zoom out wide and then pan over. When you're zoomed in on something close and then swing the camera around, it's like a train wreck. Moving too fast between scenes, or not pausing long enough once you're there, makes it seem like you're gesturing as you're talking, with the camera in your hand. It makes the image choppy, and hard to appreciate. (Your video where you're comparing the distant view of Maui to Kahoolawe to Lanai is an example of what I'm talking about.
It's a practiced skill, but I think it'll help considerably. Your videos are interesting, but some are a bit hard to appreciate. (Full disclosure: I took four years of video communications in school, and my Director was a taskmaster. LOL!
@dioxide45 has excellent travel videos on his website, but he works hard at them. Yours needn't be as fancy as his, but it shows what i'm talking about.)
Enjoy your wonderful condo. I'm finding your Molokai to be a very interesting place.
Dave