For Kauai June, 2015 Issue
Transcription
For Kauai June, 2015 Issue
for ‘ KAUAI FREE FREE FREE www.ForKauaiOnline.com The General Store Community art center in the heart of Hanalei Town • page 3 The Feral Pig A ‘pork-centric’ watering hole where everyone knows you • page 20 WINNER Hawai‘i and the Rising Sun No other ethnic group in Hawai‘i’s melting pot had so much impact in the state’s modern socio-politico-economic landscape than early Japanese immigrants. Story page 6 CULTURE · PEOPLE · ISLAND LIFE · HEALTH · FOOD IN FOCUS KPCC’s Fun Fundraiser By Léo Azambuja Kaua‘i’s Filipino community knows how to plan an event like nobody else. About 500 people attended the Kaua‘i Philippine Cultural Center fundraising at the Grand Ballroom of the Kaua‘i Marriott Resort and Beach Club May 16. A lavish dinner buffet and top-notch entertainment by the Youth String Ensemble, dancers, and Waianae singer Kristian Lei, along with musician Pierre Grill and entertainer Shawn Thomsen, contributed to the evening’s success. The KPCC, “a place for all,” was first envisioned in 2010 by Lesther Calipjo. Soon after, careful and consistent planning and hard work has brought the center closer to become reality. Groundbreaking is expected for later this year. KPCC will be built next to the YMCA swimming pool in Puhi. It is intended as a place for community events and cultural activities. It will offer community programs and services, exhibits, festivals and educational events. Visit kauaiphilippineculturalcenter.org for more information. Jan Kimura Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. and wife Regina Carvalho Sue Kanoho and Charlie Iona Kristian Lei sings while several Filipino celebrities take the stage. Kristian Lei and Pierre Grill From left to right, Celeste Rivera, Faith Soto, Wayne Takayama and Darla Domingo got ads Want to advertise? For more information call Jill at: KIUC Board Chairman Jan TenBruggencate and wife Carolyn Larson Page 2 634-8062 Former Mayor Maryanne Kusaka and Miss Kaua‘i Filipino 2014 Kiana Pigao KIUC Board Director Pat Gegen with wife Marghee Maupin and daughter Olivia Gegen or jill@forkauaionline.com Art for the Masses, by the Masses By Léo Azambuja Creativity takes courage, the late French painter Henri Matisse once said. For Karlos and Kathy DeTreaux, this sounds just about right. With 15 minutes to decide whether to embark on a 12-year lease for an all-inclusive art center in the heart of Hanalei Town, Kathy took the leap of courage. Karlos followed suit, and brought along a few partners — Chris Serve, Linda Lee-Brake, Dean Rogers, Amy Sue, Frank Hagen and Stuart Martin. This is somewhat how The General Store of Hanalei, housed in a historic building constructed in 1906, came to life earlier this year. And the art world says thank you very much. “It’s really crazy but it’s really exciting,” Karlos said. On Feb. 2, the Chinese New Year, the gallery had a soft opening, and had to make “an honest sale” as required by one of the landlords, who is of Chinese descent, Karlos said. In March, they opened for good, representing a wide variety of artists. In May, the gallery hosted Why Be Board?, a skateboard art show with 120 artists. There were no rules, and the result was art made with all kinds of media; metal sculptures, musical instruments, lamps, mosaics, stained glass, watercolor, paper, color pencils and etc. There were artists as young as 4 years old. “We realized there’s a need for art that is not in the high-end level, that’s community art,” Karlos said. Biz of the Month The next exhibit, Art is Medicine, will be late July, and will be open to 100 artists. In August, they plan to distribute 100 ukuleles for an event similar to the skateboard show. Meanwhile, the gallery has art for every taste and budget. Their artists range from children to a 79-year-old line artist, and the prices can be as little as $20 or as high as $10,000. From left to right, theater director Donovan Cabebe and business partners Chris Serve and Manager Jennifer Hawkins said when Karlos DeTraux. people walk in, the gallery’s energy just moves them. printmaking and jewelry, and will be equipped with six iMac comput “We have so many different levels of artists, and different levels ers for an Internet café. of talent that there’s something here for everyone, something that There’s also a room for dance classes, a lanai for plein-air artists, a everyone can relate to, and it just feels good,” she said. “It’s a place room for resident artists and another for art classes. where everyone feels like they belong.” Outside, in the back parking lot of Ching Young Village, a 20-foot But art exhibits and sales are just two aspects of this ambitious container will house gardening classes and pottery making. project. The General Store is taking the art center seriously. Karlos said because there are so many partners in the project, and In the back of the gallery there is a stage setup with professional they all have jobs, no one has to live off the project at least for the first lighting, sound system and projector screens. The space will be used couple years. So they can take the time to do it right, he said. for music, community meetings and anything else imaginable. The late Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, a lifelong friend of Matisse, “I grew up playing music, I love music and art,” said Chris, adding once said, “Everything you can imagine is real.” he likes the aspect of a gathering place for artists and the community, The crew at The General Store of Hanalei is proving just that. something Hanalei lacks. They are at 5-5150 Kuhio Hwy., at Ching Young Village, and can be The side entrance will have an espresso and kava bar. reached at 825-6441. Upstairs, a small room will have chairs and a collection of some Visit www.facebook.com/thegeneralstoreofhanalei for more 1,500 art books donated by the community. The next room will be for information. Free Kasasa checking includes: • Cash back on debit card purchases* • No minimum balance to earn cash back • Plus, get refunds on ATM fees, nationwide!* Learn more at Kasasa.com/kcfcu Opened over 2,000 Kasasa accounts in 10 months! *Account approval, qualifications, limits and other requirements apply. See Kauai Community Federal Credit Union for details. Kasasa and Kasasa Cash Back are trademarks of BancVue, Ltd., registered in the U.S.A. for KAUAI‘ All Because of You magazine June 2015 www.forkauaionline.com On the cover: From left to right, Maile Taniguchi, Steven Domingo, Fay Tateishi and Aiko Nakaya are seen here at the Kaua‘i Soto Zen Temple in Hanapepe. CONTENTS Biz: Art for the Masses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Akeakamai: Fukushima . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Cover Story: Rising Sun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Community: Invitation to Ride . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Malamalama: Summer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 FIT: Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Hawai‘i Wisdom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Island Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Kau Kau: The Feral Pig . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Mind & Motorcycle: Ride . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Kumu Haumana: Fossils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Directory/Coupons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 FREE SUBSCRIPTIONS see coupon on page 30 or www.forkauaionline.com/subscribe/ PUBLISHER Barbara Bennett office 808-338-0111 cell 808-652-2802 barbara@forkauaionline.com EDITOR IN CHIEF Léo Azambuja editor@forkauaionline.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jan TenBruggencate, Ruby Pap Tommy Noyes, Larry Feinstein Samantha Fox Olson Virginia Beck, Chandley G. Jackson ADVERTISING Sales & Marketing Jill Caisey, Director of Sales 808-634-8062 jill@forkauaionline.com Published by Kaua‘i Management Group For Kaua‘i Magazine, PO Box 956, Waimea, HI 96796 Page 4 By Léo Azambuja Mahalo nui loa to all our readers and supporters! It was because of you For Kaua‘i received a prestigious state journalism award last month. We were the only publication from Kaua‘i to snatch a prize during the Hawai‘i Publishers Association’s 30th Annual Pa‘i Awards, held at the Plaza Club in Honolulu May 15. For Kaua‘i won Second Best Editorial Opinion for “The Dream of Lasting Peace,” an editorial against racism published last August. And we won it simply because I listened to you. Besides double- and triple-checking facts for accuracy, good reporters really listen to people. Facts are essential to tell the story, but it is the human experience that connects us to each other. So over the years, I’ve listened to people a lot. I gave them an outlet for their suffering as well as their joy. I’ve listened to those who’ve lost homes to fires and who’ve lost spouses and children to accidents and murders. But I’ve also listened to people who’ve accomplished extraordinary things, and there is no shortage of those on Kaua‘i. Each time, I became more human. So thank you for that. Last year, while getting ready to write my monthly editorial column for August, I came across international news that a man running Editor’s Notes to become the head of Italy’s soccer federation referred to African players as “banana eaters” in a public statement. Disgusted by such news, I wrote a passionate editorial opinion against racism. When the paper came out, I uploaded the editorial to our website and then shared it on Facebook. To my surprise, the editorial immediately caught the attention of dozens who shared it on their Facebook pages. Earlier this year, while deciding on a handful of entries to submit to HPA for the Pa‘i Awards, one of the main reasons I chose “The Dream of Lasting Peace” was how popular it was among our readers. I’m well aware no one is a better critic than our readers, and the award we won this year just validates this. This was not my first rodeo at the Pa‘i Awards. Before taking the editor job at For Kaua‘i, I was a county government reporter at Kaua‘i’s only daily newspaper. Over the years, I won several Pa‘i Awards in many categories, including photography, enterprise reporting, investigative reporting, online news, a couple editorial series and a special section on the 20th anniversary of Hurricane ‘Iniki. But this one has a special feeling. This is the first time For Kaua‘i has won an award. It is the first award I have won as an editor rather than as a reporter. We are the only publication on Kaua‘i that has won anything at this year’s Pa‘i Awards. But best of all, we only have 12 editions a year, and the Editorial Opinion category is a coveted prize. We competed against several daily and non-daily publications throughout Hawai‘i, and yet we snatched one of the two top prizes. It was truly an honor to represent our island at the Pa‘i Awards this year, and I’m already looking forward to next year’s event. Mahalo nui loa for all your support. It is because of you that we are in business and continue to grow each year. Advertising Opportunities in for Kaua‘i magazine MeN July in BusiNess Tell Kaua‘i residents & visitors about you & your company in for Kaua‘i space is limited, call or email now! Jill Caisey jill@forkauaionline.com 808-634-8062 Fukushima Four Years Later: Are We Safe? By Ruby Pap This may go without saying, but don’t believe everything you read on the Internet. It is disheartening to see so much misinformation bleeding online. Four years ago, after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster in Japan, there was a bright red “radioactivity map” all over the Internet claiming to depict the radioactive plume on its march of death across the Pacific Ocean. Some sleuthing revealed the blatant lie it was – a model of the Tohuku tsunami waves rather than radiation. What did really happen, and what is happening now? When the tsunami severely damaged the Fukushima plant, four reactors released significant amounts of radiation into the atmosphere and the ocean. The radioactive isotopes released include iodine-131, cesium-137 and cesium-134. Large doses of these isotopes cause serious long-term health impacts. People closest to the site, particularly workers at the plant, are most at risk. The accident compounded the tragedy of thousands lost and displaced after the tsunami. For Hawai‘i it is a much different story – one that requires continued monitoring to fully understand. After the accident, Dr. Ken Buesseler from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute organized the first of many international expeditions to study the spread of radionuclides from Fukushima to the Pacific. I spoke with Dr. Henrieta Dulaiova, from the UH School of Ocean Science and Technology, who took part in the effort. Akeakamai Dulaiova said cesium-137 and cesium-134 also come from the nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific in the 1950s and 1960s. Since cesium-137 has a 30-year half-life, if it’s detected in Hawaiian waters, it’s impossible to tell if it’s from weapons testing or Fukushima. Therefore, cesium-134, with a two-year half-life, is used as a Fukushima fingerprint. Today, the data shows no detectible Fukushima-derived cesium isotopes in water samples around Hawai‘i. The levels of cesium-137 that are detected (less than 1.5 Bequerels per cubic meter Bq/m3) are well below the Environmental Protection Agency’s limits for human health concerns, and are likely from historical weapons tests. Dulaiova continues to monitor Hawaiian waters, but so far the coast is clear. Anything arriving in Hawai‘i is expected to be significantly diluted. Dulaiova’s students are also monitoring mushrooms and fish, both of which can act as indicator organisms to detect radiation because it bioaccumulates in their tissues. While the fisheries off Fukushima remain closed, the fish should be safe to eat here. This is based on the assumption that most of the fish we eat do not migrate far from their home waters. One exception to this is Pacific bluefin tuna. To be clear, the ahi readily available here in Hawai‘i is yellowfin. There is still much to be learned about the radiation traveling from Fukushima. Also, there is increasing concern about strontium-90, which is leaking from the groundwater to the ocean at Fukushima. Strontium-90 mimics calcium and can concentrate in bones where Former UH Manoa Department of Geology and Geophysics postdoctoral researcher Jan Kamenik is seen here collecting samples at Sans Souci Beach on O‘ahu. it remains for long periods. According to WHOI, so far, strontium-90 levels in fish are far lower than cesium-137, but if the leaks continue, it will become a greater concern. Unfortunately, government funding for a coordinated multinational monitoring effort is not available. WHOI recently launched www.ourradioactiveocean.org where you can fund a monitoring site. Also, www.whoi.edu is a treasure trove of reliable scientific information. Chapter of the Surfrider Foundation is tracking the issue as well: kauai.surfrider.org/ • Ruby Pap is a Coastal portfolio-item/ Land Use Extension fukushima-radiationAgent at University of monitored/. Perhaps Hawai‘i Sea Grant Colyou could post these lege Program. She can links to your Facebook be reached at rpap@ page? hawaii.edu. PS&D TIRES (808)245-9502 Tire Sale Thru July 15 YOU CAN GET $ 70 BY MAIL ON A FIRESTONE VISA® PREPAID CARD** AND DOUBLE YOUR REWARD TO WHEN YOU BUY FOUR ELIGIBLE TIRES.▲ OFFER VALID MAY 15–JULY 15, 2015 Prepaid card is issued by MetaBank®, Member FDIC, pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. The prepaid card is given to you as a reward and no money has been paid by you for the card. No cash access or recurring payments. Card valid for up to 6 months, unused funds forfeit at midnight EST the last day of the month of the valid thru date. Card terms and conditions apply; see MyPrepaidCenter.com/site/visa-promo. ▲ Offer good in the U.S. Claim form required. Certain restrictions and limitations apply. For complete details, see youwr participating Firestone retailer or FirestoneTire.com. 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When large sugar plantations began to lead the Hawaiian Kingdom’s economy in the second half of the 19th century, immigrants from all over the world started pouring into the islands. “At that time in Hawai‘i, the sugar industry was taking place, and there was a need for cheap labor for the sugar plantations,” said Gerald Hirata, president of the Kaua‘i Soto Zen Temple in Hanapepe. It was mainly the sugar plantations, and later pineapple, that provided the fuel for the fire under Hawai‘i’s melting pot. Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, Puerto Ricans, Koreans, Filipinos, Spanish, Germans, Russians, North Americans and others, all came to Hawai‘i to take part in the then-boiling agricultural businesses. But those from the Land of Rising Sun would outnumber everyone by large digits. Between 1868, when the first Japanese arrived to work in the plantations, and 1924, when the Federal Immigration Act limited the annual number of immigrants to the United States, 200,000 Japanese came to Hawai‘i. About 40 percent of them returned home, and the rest merged into local society. By comparison, 120,000 Filipinos came here between 1906 and 1946. About 50,000 Chinese came between 1852 and 1887, when their immigration fizzled following the 1882 U.S. Chinese Exclusion Act. Other groups came in much smaller numbers. Hole Hole Bushi The issei women, the first generation of Japanese immigrants, worked long hours in the sugar fields and sang songs called hole hole bushi. Their work was to strip hole hole, or dry leaves, from sugar cane stalks so that it produces more juice while providing fertilizer for the growing plant. It was a job assigned mostly to women. The hole hole bushi songs used old Japanese folk tunes, and mixed Hawaiian and Japanese words for dramatic lyrics. When I left Japan I left all alone But now I have children And grandchildren too Nihon deru tok’ya yo Hitori de deta ga Ima ja ko mo aru Mago mo aru A real look at the Man I am to marry The picture bride system is Despicable Are ga tsureso Hito to ka mireba Shashin kekkon Urameshii Hawai‘i, Hawai‘i I came, chasing a dream Now my tears flow In the canefield Hawai‘i, Hawai‘i, to yo Yume mite kita ga Nagasu namida wa Kibi no naka Why settle for 35 cents a day Doing holehole work When I can sleep with a Chinaman And make a dollar! Sanjugosen de yo Horehore suru yori Pake-san to moi-moi sur’ya Akahi kara Page 6 “Because the Japanese came in great numbers and represented a large percentage of the island population, many of the native Japanese culture and traditions could flourish in the islands,” said Hirata, who is a third- and fourth-generation Japanese in Hawai‘i. By the time Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, prompting the U.S. to enter World War II, there were 160,000 Japanese living in the Territory of Hawai‘i. They represented roughly 40 percent of the islands’ population. About three-quarters of Brian Howell them were Americans by birth. The bon dance at Kaua‘i Soto Zen Temple in Hanapepe is the largest on Kaua‘i. On the Mainland, 120,000 Japanese – three-quarters of Hirata said he had a rich cultural upbringing because there was them American citizens – were sent to 10 internment centers from a Buddhist temple in the plantation village he grew up on Kaua‘i’s February 1942 to 1945. Westside. But just like most ethnic groups here, the local Hawaiian In Hawai‘i, probably because of the large percentage of the culture super-imposes all that. Japanese community, only 1,500 Japanese were sent to interment “Growing up, although I always had a very strong sense of idencenters, and they were mostly community leaders such as Buddhist tity, I always perceived myself as local, because when I go to Japan, ministers, Japanese language teachers and other prominent memI feel like a stranger there,” he said. “So I think of myself as local boy bers, according to Hirata. who is multi-cultural but with a strong Japanese identity. And I think Despite widespread discrimination during the war, the Japanesethere are a lot of other ethnic groups that think the same way.” Americans volunteered to fight for the U.S. and were banded th nd Giving koden is a Japanese tradition that has been incorporated by together in the 100 Battallion, 442 Regimental Combat Team. To this day, the “Go for Broke” regiment, as they became known, remain the broader local community. It is about offering money at a funeral to the surviving family, Hirata said. the most highly decorated unit in the U.S. military history. “In Hawai‘i now, whether you go to a Filipino funeral, a Hawaiian When the war was over, many from the “Go for Broke” regiment funeral or Portuguese funeral, people will give koden to the family,” utilized the G.I. Bill to attend university. Among those was the late Sen. Daniel Inouye, who became the first Japanese-American elected he said. Another folk Japanese tradition that found a home in the islands to the U.S. House in 1959 and to the U.S. Senate in 1962. “We were convinced we deserved something better than the plan- is the bon dance during the summer. From June 6 through Aug. 8, all nine Buddhist temples on Kaua‘i will take turns hosting a bon dance tation and second-class citizenship. We wanted to exert ourselves each Friday and Saturday, with the exception of July 4 weekend. and participate in developing Hawai‘i and in making policy,” Inouye It’s a time when the spirits of the Japanese ancestors come back once said. to visit and dance with their living relatives. It’s a family affair, a Inouye remained in the U.S. Senate until his death on Dec. 17, happy time, Hirata said, with lots of dancing, music, singing and 2012. Because he was the longest-serving U.S. senator at the time respect for the deceased. of his death – and the second longest-serving senator ever – he And because it’s a festival in Hawai‘i, it inevitably involves food. was also the President Pro Tempore of the United States, third in the Hirata said every island has a different kind of bon dance. Kaua‘i is presidential line of succession. He was largely responsible for much the only one where we can find the famous Flying Saucer, an ovalof the federal funding for education, military and infrastructure shaped sandwich stuffed with sloppy Joe. projects in Hawai‘i. Hirata, who grew up in a plantation camp, said the only choice for “My mom told me that we were the first temple to do (the Flying Saucer),” Hirata said. “I have enough sources to confirm that.” his generation was to leave the island to pursue higher education or He said the Kaua‘i Soto Zen has the largest bon dance on Kaua‘i, better employment. and some even say it’s the largest in the state. “A lot of us had to leave, I wasn’t going to work for the sugar “Our temple’s goal is to really continue this folk tradition,” said plantation or the pineapple fields,” he said. Hirata, adding they make sure people learn the dances, the drum Though O‘ahu had more choices in furthering education, many ming, the singing, and then “carry on with the food, making it a nice of his contemporaries left to Mainland colleges. Today, Hirata said, festival so people can enjoy it.” there are more work and educational opportunities on Kaua‘i and So this summer, keep calm and bon dance. across the state. KAUAI MADE Gourmet Hawaiian Sea Salts & Spices “From the heart of the ‘aina and the soul of the sea” WHAT THE SOLAR GUYS MAY NOT TELL YOU Not everyone needs a $25,000 photovoltaic system. Installing a solar water heater is the cheapest, easiest way for most Kaua‘i households to save at least 40 percent on their electric bill. Water heaters use more electricity than any other appliance. Using the sun to heat water can save you $80 to $100 a month, maybe more, depending on the size of your family. Right now, KIUC is offering a $1,000 rebate toward the purchase and installation of a solar water heater. With the rebate and state and federal tax credits, your final cost could be less than $2,000. Available at community markets & our store in Hanapepe Salty Wahine Do the math yourself and see how much money you can save just by using a solar water heater—unless you’re in a big rush to spend $25,000. Call 246.4300 or go to www.kiuc.coop for a list of approved contractors and information about how you can start saving. 1-3529 Kaumualii Highway, Unit 2B, Hanapepe 808-378-4089 SaltyWahine.com KIUC is an equal opportunity emloyer and provider. Mayor-A-Thon 2015 By Tommy Noyes You’re invited to join the bicyclists, runners, walkers and strollers who will once again gather at Kapa‘a Beach Park early Saturday morning June 20 for the 7th annual Mayor-A-Thon. The theme of this year’s Mayor-A-Thon is “Hats Off to Dads,” in recognition of Fathers Day. Participants who register for the event at www.GetFitKauai.com will be given hats (while supplies last) with this year’s Mayor-A-Thon logo printed in colors honoring Kauai’s five moku – Napali, Halelea, Koolau, Puna, and Kona. “It’s a fun, family-oriented event that takes place on our beautiful coastal path! I encourage residents and visitors from across the island to join us,” Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. sums it up. Community This free, high-energy, annual event is co-sponsored by the Nutrition and Physical Activity Coalition, Get Fit Kaua‘i and the County of Kaua‘i to encourage physical health and fitness among island residents, and to celebrate the multi-use path, Ke Ala Hele Makalae, or the path that goes by the coast. “The Mayor-A-Thon is an annual event – it’s a community event – it’s free, and it’s actually to celebrate a place on the island where we can walk safely, bike safely and support physical activity in a safe environment,” Get Fit Kaua‘i coordinator Bev Brody said. “We have had hundreds of people come out every year, and they use this Tommy Noyes In addition to leading warm-up exercises and livening up the Zumba dancers during Mayor-A-Thon 2014, Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. biked Ke Ala Hele Makalae towing his granddaughter, Welina Carvalho-Brede, in a trailer. path that we are continuing to build.” All registered participants are served a delicious, wholesome breakfast. This year, the breakfast fare reflects the growing popular interest in gluten-free baked goods. Mark’s Place will be catering the event, and their chef has found new ingredients to bake the glutenfree scones with an appealing taste and texture that will be served as part of the complete breakfast. Participants should be prepared to strut their smoothest Electric Slide dance moves, loosen up their hips for the hula hoop contests, get funky with Zumba, enjoy family closeness and laugh a lot. The 2014 Mayor-A-Thon attracted more than 1,300 people, including several folks from the Mainland who decided to visit Kaua‘i over other islands due to this event, enjoyed a beautiful morning full of fitness, dancing, games, breakfast and celebration. The registration process includes an option to assist as a volunteer. If you add in the comments section that you’d like to work with Kaua‘i Path, you may be assigned to help move the large numbers out of the Kapa‘a Beach Park and onto Ke Ala Hele Makalae in an orderly process. Volunteers in this detail will still be able to fully participate in all aspects of the Mayor-A-Thon. “I believe that the Mayor-A-Thon will get bigger and bigger each year,” Brody said. “Every year this event draws more people, and every year the team who put it together reach out and get more people involved.” Visit www.GetFitKauai.com to register or you call Tommy Noyes at 808 639-1018 for more information. • Tommy Noyes works for the Hawai‘i State Department of Health’s Public Health Preparedness branch, serves on Kaua‘i Path’s board of directors, and is a League of American Bicyclists certified instructor. Pub: For Kauai Issue: June 2015 Size: 1/2 pg, 4C (9.25” x 5”) DUE: May 19 Sunset Dinner Specials Free Valet Parking | 6:00pm-9:00pm Monday - Thursday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday $21 Chef’s Daily Specials All You Can Eat Pasta, Soup & Salad Sizzling Platters Seafood Buffet Paniolo Steak and Guava Smoked Ribs with Baked Potato & Corn on the Cob Call 245.1955 for reservations and more information www.kauaibeachresorthawaii.com Aqua Kauai Beach Resort 4331 Kauai Beach Drive | Lihue, HI Page 8 FRE EE 2015 THE KING’S CELEBRATION & PARADE VEN T Theme – Hu‘e ‘ia ka wai i pa‘a Drawing water from rock This ‘olelo is about extracting deep knowledge from true sources of knowledge. Saturday, June 13 9 am to 2 pm Fabulous Floral Parade Starts at the Vidinha Stadium to Historical Building Full Pa‘u Units Floats Walking & Riding Units If any auxiliary aid support is needed, please contact Sugai by phone or email at least seven days prior to the event. Photo: Dennis Fujimoto and The Garden Isle Newspaper Contact: Melissia Sugai 635-7205 Melissia_sugai@hotmail.com Dennis Fujimoto, The Garden Island Newspaper Live Entertainment to Follow Crafts & Local Food Summer Adventuring, Kaua‘i Style By Virginia Beck Kaua‘i in the summer calls our wild nature, the part of us that cannot bear to be indoors or wear shoes a moment longer than necessary. Even T-shirts and slippers seem too much, as bathing-suit weather beckons. The summer waves, rising swells on the South Shore, schools empty and beaches fill as families and friends celebrate the longer days with camping, picnics, boat trips and luaus. We all feel the lengthening days with relief; there is time to relax at the end of the workday. Summer ball games. Surfing and beach Malamalama parties. Gardening takes more time. Fishing and hunting serve as an excuse to get out to the ocean and mountains. Boat trips down the Na Pali Coast wash away the land-bound thoughts, bringing us spray and dolphins, and tradewinds that comb our hair free of dusty worries. Engagements and wedding abound, romance is in the air. And what a romantic place for it! A full moon in Hawai‘i is so amazing, the brightness of the moonlight so clean and clear, it illuminates the surf and glitters off the night breakers. And the stars, oh glory, there is nowhere like Kaua‘i to watch the stars, especially down at the beach, away from the lights. “Hanalei by moonlight.” Or Polihale, or Kalalau by starlight. With the recent rains, the plants are growing and blossoming their heads off. Jacarandas and the shower trees are starting to bloom. Stephanotis bursts blossoms for leis; cheeky mynahs and green parrots assault the lychee trees, and trees everywhere are festive canopies of color. Summer mangoes are dropping their delicious fruit, and the farmers market overflows with fresh greens, luscious fruits and vegetables as well as the wonderful honeys, jams and jellies, and other made-on-Kaua‘i products. The early sun floods the land with long shadows that reveal the deep valleys folding into the heartland of our mountains. Trucks and jeeps packed with families and friends, haul picnics, fishermen, and hikers to the ridges of Koke’e, and the summer cabins there. Tourists and locals alike mingle at Koke’e Lodge and spread their blankets on the “Meadow”, Kana-loa-huluhulu, “Hairy, tall Kana”, a legendary robber whose story you can read in one of the many books available through Hui o Laka’s Natural History Museum. The far horizons call us. Locals go adventuring on the Mainland to visit family or friends, or the Las Vegas night life. The airport hums, and everyone is carrying bags and boxes of goodies and gifts. The TSA agents are friendly but vigilant, and everyone is in the mood to get moving. Visitors come to Kaua‘i for their first experience of enchantment or the return to beloved hotels and condos to pretend for the moment that they live here, on an amazing little jewel of an island tucked away on the edge of the world’s most peaceful ocean. But that doesn’t mean you can ignore the power of our turbulent waves. Families celebrate Fathers Day, with barbeques, brunches and picnics. Park pavilions overflow with laughter, music and tasty snacks and pupus. We pause to appreciate our fathers and give thanks for our lives. They brought us into this world and helped give us values. We appreciate the sacrifices made by fathers and grandfathers, the veterans, and those who stayed to teach, farm, fish and care for their families. We are so blessed that they brought us to life so that we could live on Kaua‘i. 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FARM CREDIT FARM FARMCREDIT CREDIT SERVICES OF SERVICES SERVICESOF OF HAWAII, ACA HAWAII, HAWAII,ACA ACA Kauai Wedding Professionals Association Neighbor Islands Call Toll Free 1-800-894-4996 www.hawaiifarmcredit.com Page 10 Kauai Wedding Professionals Association members are licensed wedding industry professionals working together to share beautiful Kaua‘i’s aloha with couples and with each other. Association members are sensitive to, and are respectful of, local culture and sacred sites. Our members understand the long lasting importance of arrangements for a couple’s special day and pledge to set the standard for the Kauai Wedding Industry. CALL ONE OF OUR LOAN OFFICERS AT: CALL CALLONE ONEOF OFOUR OURLOAN LOANOFFICERS OFFICERSAT: AT: oaHu office • 99-860 Iwaena St., Suite A, Aiea, HI 96701 oo aHu oo ffice • 99-860 Iwaena St., Suite A,A,Aiea, aHu ffice • 99-860 Iwaena St., Suite Aiea,HIHI96701 96701 Ph: 808 836-8009 • Fax: 808 836-8610 • www.hawaiifarmcredit.com Ph: Ph:808 808836-8009 836-8009• Fax: • Fax:808 808836-8610 836-8610• www.hawaiifarmcredit.com • www.hawaiifarmcredit.com Hilo office • 988 Kinoole St., Hilo, HI 96720 Federal Land Bank Assn. ilo oo ffice • 988 Federal Land Bank Assn. H ilo ffice • 988 Kinoole St.,Hilo, Hilo,HIHI96720 96720 Bank Assn. H Ph: 808 836-8009 • Kinoole Fax: 808St., 961-5494 ofFederal Hawaii,Land FLCA • Hawaii Ph: 836-8009 • Fax: 808 Ph:808 808 836-8009 • Fax:Toll 808961-5494 961-5494 ofofHawaii, FLCA • •Hawaii Hawaii, FLCA Hawaii From: Neighbor Islands, Free 1 800 894-4996 Production Credit Assn. From:Neighbor NeighborIslands, Islands,Toll TollFree Free1 1800 800894-4996 894-4996 Production ProductionCredit CreditAssn. Assn. From: Registered with Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS ID# 613610) FCS of Hawaii, ACA is part of the Farm Credit System, a nationwide system of leading agricultural financial institutions which started FCS of of Hawaii, ACA is part of the Farm Credit System, nationwide ofof leading financial started Hawaii, ACA part of the Farm Credit System, anationwide nationwide system of leading agricultural financial institutions which started FCS of Hawaii, is is part ofhas the Farm Credit System, system leading agricultural financial in FCS 1917. FCS ofACA Hawaii, ACA been doing business inaaHawaii sincesystem 1966 through itsagricultural subsidiary the Federalinstitutions Land Bankwhich Association in 1917. FCS of of Hawaii, ACA has been doing in in Hawaii through its subsidiary Federal Land Association 1917. FCS Hawaii, ACA has been business Hawaii since 1966 through its subsidiary the Federal Land Bank Association ofin Hawaii, FLCA. The FCS of1917. Hawaii, ACA isbusiness not aACA Federal Agency of1966 the Federal institutions which started in FCS ofdoing Hawaii, has beensince doing business inGovernment. Hawaii since the 1966 through its Bank of Hawaii, FLCA. The FCS of Hawaii, ACA is not a Federal Agency of the Federal Government. of Hawaii, FLCA. The FCS of Hawaii, ACA is not a Federal Agency of the Federal Government. subsidiary the Federal Land Bank Association of Hawaii, FLCA. The FCS of Hawaii, ACA is not a Federal Agency of the Federal Government • Virginia Beck, NP, Certified Trager Practitioner®, does private Wellness Consulting and Trager ® practice at the YWCA Women’s Center in Lihu‘e. She is part of the Women’s Health Team at West Kaua‘i Clinics, and can be reached at 635-5618. KauaiWedPro.com All properties auctioned by Malama Auctions come with a free third party detailed inspection, property survey, TMK map, purchase agreement, bidder/buyer agreement, disclosure and broker participation is always welcomed. All documents are available and/or can be downloaded at any time to all interested by looking at the details of any property online. Contact us in a way that is convenient for you: Call 1-888-2-BID-4-IT (888-224-3448) Email: Info@malamaauctions.com Or visit us online A local business on Kauai bringing “Black tie service with true Aloha” Does Your Coach Have a Coach? By Samantha Fox Olson Think of a time when you were really kicking ass and taking names in any particular area of your life. Consider how much you were learning at that time. Feel into the energy of transformation and growth at that time. Exciting, right? There is ease there. There is motivation there. Inspiration is alive there and it feels empowering. Who was supporting you at that time? Who were those paramount pillars assisting you at that rock-star level? Take a moment and hear the answers. Now, think of a time when you were struggling in any particular area. Feel into the energy. Frustration, doubt, defeat and fear are probably some of the influences that were part of this reality. Who was supporting you at this time of struggle? Who was guiding you and coaching your way? I bet the answers to the different scenarios are night-and-day. And hopefully, your answers are quite insightful. These are great questions to ponder because no one purposefully chooses to feel incapable of reaching their goals, to feel like a failure or to struggle where there can be ease and enthusiasm. These questions will help you to make a powerful shift. When I look back at times where I was “kicking ass and taking names” – I can go back to my competitive gymnastics days, starting my online business, my body building competition last year and even where I am right now – and see what all of these things have in common: I had a coach mapping out and supporting my dreams and desires! I had a coach who I respected, I could learn from and I trusted to help me to get to where I wanted to be. I am blessed to look back and see the wealth of coaches, teachers and mentors who have supported me in becoming who I am. I am also grateful for those who are in my life now, assisting me in becoming more of who I can be! On the other hand, when I take a look at what kind of support, coaching or mentorship I had when I experienced great struggle and frustration, I see I had none. And this is pretty universal, my friends. I am not saying that you can’t accomplish your greatest goals without a coach – whether it is looking good in a bikini, hiking Kalalau or having a loving and passionate relationship. But this is one thing I know for sure. If you want to get to where you want to be in record time, if you prefer to take the fast lane to epic results, just like me, seek out and learn from those who have what you want. Put away those excuses saying you have to do it all alone. Throw out those beliefs that say you just aren’t good enough or you have missed the boat. Incinerate those lame thoughts focusing on why you can’t have the best coach possible right now, and focus on how you can! A coach will help you excel in ways that you may not even have Meditation Breathe, Relax, Explore… FIT and Discover Your True Happiness , Success, Prosperity, Health and more! PS&D TIRES 4044 Rice Street Lihue (808) 245-9502 Hours M-F 7:30am-4:00pm Sat: 8:00am-12:00 Page 12 • Samantha Fox Olson teaches yoga and fitness classes, private lessons and retreats on the North Shore of Kaua‘i as well as online to a global audience. Visit kauaiyogaandfitness.com for more information and follow her at www.facebook.com/onlineyogaandfitness. Aloha Lomi Massage Academy Offering Quality, Affordable Massage Certification Island Coping Skill Meditation Program Overcoming from Stress, Forgiveness, Focus, Self Esteem, Sense of Calm, Compassion and Love… $35 Student Massages Professional Massages Available Call 245-LOMI (5664) Kapaa Dragon Building 2nd Floor & Lihue Happiness Planting Center • Behind Isenberg Park Web: happyscience-kauai.org and happinessplantingcenter.org www.AlohaLomiAcademy.com 3092 B Akahi St., Lihu‘e 96766 Happy Science Call 822-7007 M. Kawamura Farm Enterprises, Inc. 2824 Wehe Road Lihue, HI 96766 245-3524 FAX 245-5126 kawamurafarm.com considered before. Ask yourself some of these questions when looking for potential coaches: Are they living the life you wish to live? Are they resonating with an attractive and inspiring energy? What are their clients saying? What are their results with others? How do you feel while in their care? Do they inspire you to take massive action? Do they genuinely care about your highest good? In case you’re asking if I have a coach, the answer is YES. I have a couple coaches in a couple different areas of my life right now. I say YES to receiving the support required in getting to where I want to go faster. Why putter in the slow lane when you can be accelerating toward your best body and life ever? Establishment number is MAE 2666. GET THE GARDEN SOIL READY FOR PLANTING It is time to get started and to get your soil ready for planting season. M. Kawamura Farms has everything you need. Gardner & Bloome Compost is a great choice for soil building and soil amending. It provides a rich black topdressing, is a organic and natural Soil Building Compost. Come in this month and get a head start by shopping for everything you need for planting, at Kawamura Farms Enterprises. OVER 4,000 TIRES IN STOCK PS&D Tires is a Bridgestone/Firestone Affilated and a Hankook Dealer. Other brands include: Fuzion & Toyo plus more. PS&D tire experts use Hunter Computeized Alignment machines to service your tires. Come visit us at 4004 Rice Street or Call 245-9502 and let our friendly staff help you with ALL your tire needs. PS & D TIRES …Visit our 10,000 Sq. Ft. Showroom in Lihue NEW CONTAINER ARRIVAL Direct from North Carolina Loaded with Recliners ★ Bedroom Sets in Stock for ★ Sleepers Dad ★ Recliners ★ Sofas, Love Seats ★ Dining Room Sets ★ Rugs & Accessories www. alohafurniture.com The Visitor Aloha Society of Kaua‘i (V.A.S.K.) is a community based non-profit organization that assists visitors affected by crime or other adversities during their stay on Kaua‘i. Share the Spirit of ALOHA! Become a V.A.S.K. Volunteer or Business Contributor Learn more about V.A.S.K. and visit us at: visitoralohasociety.org 2981 Umi Street, Lihue • 246.4833 • Mon-Sat 9-6 PUHI PAINT Mixing it for you for 21 years • Custom Color Matching • Purdy Brushes • Sikkens Wood Finishes • Graco Sprayers 246-8828 across from Kauai Community College 4490 Puhi Road, Lihue Mon-Fri 7:30-4pm • Sat 8am-Noon CLOSING SALE EVERYTHING ON SALE * Ladies’ Wear • Men’s Wear Jewelry • Accessories Handbags & more *Limited to items in stock at Hanapepe store. HANAPEPE ONLY 3837 Hanapepe Rd., Hanapepe 335-5332 Mon-Thu 9:30am-5:30pm • Fri 9:30am-9:00pm • Sat 9:30am-5:00pm Hawai‘i Wisdom E aloha kekahi i kekahi “Love one another.” Source: ‘Olelo No‘eau, by Mary Kawena Pukui Family Fun Kaua‘i Style Smith’s Wailua River Cruise Fern Grotto Kapaa 821-6892 smithskauai.com EXPERIENCE A KAUAI TRADITION Experience this unique river boat tour on Hawaii’s ONLY navigable river: the Wailua. We will bring you through the rainforest to the famous Fern Grotto and share the legendary stories of the place where Royalty once lived. Enjoy music and dance of Old Hawaii. Call 821-6892 or visit www.smithskauai.com Puakea, a Place to Call Home! Puakea Golf Course 4150 Nuhou Street Lihue, HI 96766 808-245-8756 www.puakeagolf.com Puakea offers fabulous views of the Pacific and is built amid volcanic cliffs, massive ravines and lush tropical foliage. With 7,000 yards and four sets of tees, golfers can pick their challenge as they play this Robin Nelson classic design. Each of the holes are distinctly different with the golfers constantly facing new, interesting challenges. A COURSE UNLIKE ANY OTHER Poipu Bay Golf Course Poipu 808-742-8711 or 1-800858-6300 This outstanding course is backed by lush emerald mountains and sculpted from a rolling plateau eight stories above the Pacific Ocean. Nestled among the gentle contours of Poipu Bay. Home of the PGA Grand Slam of Golf from 1994-2006. Tee Times for Kaua‘i Residents at Kukui‘ula! Kukui‘ula Golf Course The Club at Kukui‘ula 2700 Ke Alaula Street 808-742-3010 www.kolepakukuiula.com Page 14 Four daily Tee Times have been reserved for Kaua‘i residents, with green fees of just $35 per player. Starting time blocks for Kaua‘i Residents are: Wednesday-Friday: 12 PM, 12:10 PM, 12:20 PM 12:30 PM Saturday & Sunday: 11 AM, 11:10 AM, 11:20 AM, 11:30 AM TEE TIME HOTLINE: 808-742-3010 (All golfers must provide proof of Kaua‘i Residency.) Please visit www.kolepakukuiula.com for more details. 4th Happiness Planting Festival CULTURAL ARTS AND WORLD PEACE HAPPINESS PLANTING CENTER IN LIHUE 3343 KANAKOLU STREET BEHIND ISENBERG PARK, NEXT TO KEO , NEAR AT&T Hiroshima Peace Exhibition. Fresh Green Tea Ceremony, Food & Gift Vender Booths, Games, Bon-dance Kimono, Hair Pin & Tabi Socks Store, Kimono Dress Up Picture, Ikebana, Live Music Entertainment, Omashar, Taiko Drum by Joyful Noise, and Hawaiian Hula by Rose T. Warken Ceballos. 9am - 4pm SAT, JUNE 20 Enjoy Free Admission Program Web: http://happinessplantingcenter.org El Cantare Foundation, Happy Science Booths available call 808–635-7127 Kauai Auto Detail “KAD” “KAD” SPECIALIZES IN SALTWATER & CORROSION PROTECTION SATISFACTION GUARANTEED!!! 808-639-2353 4-1176 KUHIO HWY, KAPAA www.kauaiautodetail.com Receive 10% discount by mentioning you saw us in ine!!! A‘I mag5 az for K AU y onl 201 e Jun Good For Kaua‘i Chamber of Commerce 17th Annual Governor’s Luncheon with David Y. Ige Governor of the State of Hawai‘i Tuesday, June 9, 2015 Courtyard by Marriott Kaua‘i at Coconut Beach, Paddle Room 11:30 a.m. - Registration & Networking 12:00 p.m. - Lunch Buffet 12:30 p.m. - Governor Ige More info call: 245-7363 www.kauaichamber.org TIRE WAREHOUSE Serving KAUA‘I for Over 38 Years Foreign & Domestic Cars & Trucks FAST & PROFESSIONAL Mon-Tues, Thurs-Fri 8am-5pm • Wed & Sat 8am-1pm FOR FREE ESTIMATE Ask for George or Laurie 245-6754 3028 Aukele St. Lihue • Industrial Park II www.tirewarehousekauai.com tirewarehousekauai@yahoo.com Win, Win! Benefits Employees Benefits Employers Select Employer Group Program (SEG) Join the other 125+ Employers and/or Associates already enrolled in this no-cost benefit for your Employees. Receive Name Recognition: { KGEFCU Website { KGEFCU Quarterly Newsletter { KGEFCU Annual Report For more information Call 855-2942 or email lisa@kgefcu.org Mention this ad and receive a FREE Gift Page 16 PS&D Napa Auto Parts Parts & Tires First in Service & Support Lihue Kapaa Hanapepe Kalaheo Tire Shop 245-9561 823-6211 335-5035 332-8532 245-9502 AUTO & TRUCK PARTS Savings and service come standard. 808-246-0204 www.enterprise.com Perfect for a Kama‘aina Get Away Serene, Ocean-Front Setting Ask about our Kama’aina Special — 20% Savings Valid for stays through June 30, 2015 Information & Reservations 808-338-1625 Wayne Medeiros • Manu Medeiros • JR. Longboy 808-245-1941 • pyramidins.com wayne.medeiros@pyramidins.com Island Activities Stories and photos by Chandley G. Jackson Riding on the Kaua‘i Bus, the backseat view is something to keep your eyes on. Let the driver do the work. The local bus is always an experience, especially around the Garden Isle. People are quick to talk story, laugh and respectfully offer their seat to an auntie or uncle. Earlier in the morning or later in the evening, sleepy silence lulls the passengers as the little bumps in the road rock the cradle of transportation love. ur r 3.5 hour long to ou on es in pl zi 8 ZIP! Experience NLY Half Mile Long O ’s nd la is e th de and ri Fish Fish for for tilapia, tilapia, large mouth large mouth bass, bass, and and tucunare tucunare (peacock (peacock bass) bass) on the fresh on the fresh water water of of the the Waita Waita Reservoir. Reservoir. OFFROAD OFFROAD ADVENTURES ADVENTURES l zipline harness Zip in a traditiona Flyin Kaua ian ! or upgrade to the s on Ride to waterfall rivate trails. over 25 miles of p ! of a lifetime ! It ’s the experience Page 17 Island Activities A monk seal pup nurses from its mama on the beach. A volunteer for the Kaua‘i Monk Seal Watch Program explains this baby is about three weeks old and will be venturing out into the world on its own soon. He says the seals are carefully protected when they come ashore so they can get rest and feed their young. The endangered species is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands, and is called ‘ilio holo i ka uaua, which means “dog running in the rough seas” in Hawaiian language. At the Aloha-N-Paradise Art Gallery, satisfied customers thank Kelsey at the espresso bar for “the best coffee in town.” Kelsey indeed brews up some magic. “I had my first espresso ever here long ago,” she says. There is an art to making a perfect cappuccino, and this Waimea wahine has it down. Ching Young Village, Hanalei • 808 826 7500 • RobinSavageGifts.com Page 18 Island Activities The Kaua‘i Makers Club discusses imaginative ideas for engineering projects big and small during a meeting at the Kaua‘i Beer Company. On the table is a “flame thrower” created by the man on the left in the yellow shirt, Dan Loeffler. He tells how the craft utilizes “the awesome power of free waste vegetable oil firing at 2000 degrees Fahrenheit.” On the right is Bryan Knopf, who specializes in laser cutting and etching at his business, Firelight Kaua‘i, and Chris Hardi, who regularly repairs surfboards along with numerous other projects that tickle his fancy. Club President Carl Lozar has a great enthusiasm for helping out his community with all the various ingenuities of the group in this Makerspace. The Kaua‘i Makers Club meets at 6:30 p.m. every first Wednesday at the Kaua‘i Beer Company and every third Tuesday at Ha Coffee Bar, and is “free to all to come share what you are working on!” MOKIHANA TRAVEL Let the experts at Mokihana Travel Service take care of all your bookings Why spend hours searching? • • • • • • • Wholesale Airline Rates on Select Airlines Car Rentals, Hotel, Interisland Air/Room/Car Pkgs Las Vegas Packages, Vacations Hawaii Charter Pkgs Disneyland & Disney World Pkgs & Disney Cruise Rail Passes (Japan, Eurorail, Amtrak, VIA Rail) Group & Corporate Travel Travel Insurance & Passport Photos & Visa A great frigatebird soars over the ocean near Po‘ipu. This seabird can have a wingspan up to eight feet wide. They can be seen dipping and diving on the coastal winds all around the shores of Kaua‘i and other Hawaiian Islands in search of swimming meals just below the surface of the water. Explorer Kauai’s Coastal Wonders w for i a au K n eo c i r tp s be atching w e hal only $69 per passanger + tax And more! (808) 245-5338 (808) 246-4601-fax info@mokihanatravel.com Lihue, Kauai • Na Pali snorkel tour • south side snorkel • sunset tour • sports fishing 808.338.9999 www.napaliexplorer.com Page 19 Kau Kau Delights Going Feral at The Pig By Anni Caporuscio The Feral Pig refers to itself as “pork-centric”, which I take to mean “concerned with all things pork.” This, however, is not what makes its clientele so comfortable. The Pig – as its regulars call it – is a watering hole, a great place for a sandwich, a good place for news and to meet people. And it’s a friendly place where everyone actually knows your name. Owner Dave Powers explains it as the marriage of an Irish Pub with Kaua‘i Island feel. And its mission: Really good food at a really decent price, using the most local ingredients as possible. The Feral Pig strives to make in-house as much of what they serve; from salad dressings and sauces to smoked meats. The Feral Burger is a mix of Kaua‘i Ground Beef, Smoked Pork Shoulder and their House-Cured Pork Belly (capitalized for respect, these are top quality meats). Sizzled with cheddar cheese, caramelized onions and Spicy Aioli Secret Sauce (SASS), and served on Passion Bakery’s Taro Brioche Bun. It’s not just a burger; it’s a work of art any meat eater wholly respects. But let’s talk cocktails. Dave melts his passion for bartending with history, so he can talk the story of a drink and make you feel like you are participating in its re-creation. Try him. Just get him talking. He’ll ask you a few questions and then make you something good. We asked about gin, and Dave took us through the history of the Tom Collins, starting with an Old Tom Tom Collins, a recipe dating prior to 1890. He keeps a handy drink list based on classics – 1935 or before. The Feral Pig has a lively beer selection featuring many local brews, including beer from Kaua‘i Beer Company. And Dave can talk about beer as well, all the way down to temperature, yeast, hops, sugars, etc. He knows his product well. The Pig has live entertainment every Sunday evening and on special holidays such as St. Paddy’s Day and Repeal Day, the day Prohibition was repealed, Dec, 5. They also do beer tastings and special food pairing events, very tasty and educational. Find The Feral Pig at 3501 Rice St., at Harbor Mall in Nawiliwili. They are open Wednesday through Monday from 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Visit www.theferalpigkauai.com or their Facebook page or call 246-1100 for more information. But the best way to learn about special events is to get a text from Dave himself: Make friends at The Feral Pig. This historic cocktail is the Toronto, served up. Dating from around 1956, it’s an old fashioned with Canadian rye, fernet and a lemon twist. The Feral Burger with house-made French fries and pickles. As far as pub burgers go, this one is luxurious. The Fish Tacos is one of the more popular menu items. Almost everything in it is locally sourced, or at least from Hawai‘i. You have a choice of corn or wheat tortillas. The locally caught hebi, or shortbill swordfish, is blackened and quite spicy. Dave Powers, pictured here, and Scott Kessinger opened The Feral Pig in August 2011. Just a little bit of what goes on at a dynamic pub. Page 20 As part of our gin tour, here is a simple Tom Collins. Nothing fancy or disrespectful, it gives you the full flavor of the gin with complementing citrus and a taste of tradition. • Anni Caporuscio is a food lover and can be found daily at her Kapa‘a business, Small Town Coffee. Kau Kau Delights Lappert’s Hawaii SHARE THE ALOHA Since our humble beginnings selling ice cream out Hanapepe of a tiny storefront in sleepy Hanapepe Town, to Kukui‘ula Shopping Village our other retail locations, Lappert’s Hawaii is now Coconut Plantation Marketplace celebrating its 30th year anniversary of indulging the Princeville Shopping Center lappertshawaii.com Hukilau Lanai Restaurant Kapaa 520 Aleka Loop 822-0600 hukilaukauai.com Tues-Sun 5-9pm Kountry Kitchen Kapaa 4-1485 Kuhio Hwy parking next to gift shop 808-822-3511 Wrangler’s Steakhouse 9852 Kaumualii Hwy Waimea 338-1218 Ho‘okipa Café 4150 Nuhou Street Lihue, HI 96766 808.246.4555 www.puakeagolf.com Islands’ sweet tooth. And though our business has grown, our principles remain the same—top quality, handmade products served with the Aloha Spirit. RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED Early Evening Food & Wine Tasting Menu available for reservations between 5-5:45…that’s 5 courses with wine for only $50. Looking for a lighter meal? Check out Wally’s Lobby Bar & Lounge for nightly live music & ono pupus— see website for music schedule. Local Style Dining Voted “Best Breakfast on Kauai.” A favorite for Breakfast and Lunch. Great taste at reasonable prices. Extensive menu includes our famous pancake selection, omelettes, benedicts, loco mocos and fruit salads. Lunch menu includes sandwiches, burgers, local plate lunches, and salads. Open daily 6 am-1:30 pm. Breakfast from 6 am-1:30 pm lunch from 11 am. A GREAT STEAKHOUSE And not just steaks! Polynesian and seafood specialities as well. We welcome families with children and feature outdoor seating. Open for lunch and dinner. Your hostess, Colleen Faye, will assure that you have the best meal and smooth service. Sizzling steaks cooked over a mesquite wood fire are our signature dish. Ho‘okipa Café, a Local Twist on some café classics Ho‘okipa Café is open daily for breakfast, lunch and pupus and is a great place for your next outing, office meeting or event. Specializing in a local twist on some café classics, Ho‘okipa Café offers Loko Moko, Korean BBQ Chicken, Beerly Chili, Pupu Steak with garlic butter and daily soups and salads. Ho‘okipa Café serves fresh food with Aloha! Kau Kau Delights Hawaiian Handmade Popsicles Local & Organic Flavors Hawaii’s only Farm to Stick Pops Over 13 Kauai Locations at www.OnoPops.com Kauai Coffee Mocha • Strawberry Lemonade • Macnut Banana • Butter Mochi • Lilikoi Cheesecake • Pineapple Li Hing • Chocolate Banana • Mexican Chocolate • Kona Latte • Green Tea • Beet Strawberry • Macnut Brittle • Guava Tamarind • Starfruit Lemongrass Saddle Room part of Wranglers Steak House, Waimea Hours Fri. 4:00 - 10:00 pm Sat 11:00 - 10:00 pm Sun 11:00 - 4:00 pm Weekend Specials Burgers & Beers Grass fed Kauai beef 338-1218 COOL, CLEAN & COMFORTABLE 9th Island Sports Bar & Grill 4-831 Kuhio Hwy # 206 Kapaa, HI 96746 808-822-7773 The Lodge at Koke‘e 808-335-6061 thelodgeatkokee.net info@thelodgeatkokee.net Mon-Sun 9am-2:30pm Take out until 3pm Tiki Iniki Princeville Center 5-4280 Kuhio Hwy., A101 808-431-4242 tikiiniki.com 11:30AM to Midnight Rated the best burgers on Island and the best Sports Bar on the east side. We are open for breakfast on the week ends from 9am-noon. Happy hour Monday-Saturday 3-6pm, offering drink discounts and food specials. We offer an extensive menu of appetizers, fresh salads with local greens, Keiki Menus, plate lunches, sandwiches, burgers, steaks, ribs and now offering our 30 minute lunch special (in and out in less than 30 minutes) for those in a hurry or just on a lunch break. Come join us in our cool air conditioning, clean surroundings and comfortable environment. WELCOME TO THE LODGE A favorite kama‘aina and visitor destination for decades, The Lodge at Koke‘e provides rustic cabin accommodations, a hearty menu, and a warm gathering place to relax and enjoy Koke‘e. Breakfast from 9am to 11am and lunch from 10am 2:30pm with take out until 3pm. $85 per night lodging available. IT’S FINE DINING IN A WILD SETTING! Tiki Iniki Bar & Restaurant is the most fun place on the north shore for fresh fruit vintage Hawaiian cocktails and Hawaiian fusion cuisine. Owners Todd & Michele Rundgren’s Tiki collections & Coco Palms memorabilia fill every nook and cranny for a retro Hawaii vibe. Locals and visitors are raving about Tiki Iniki’s beautiful creations and flavors using fresh local fish, beef, pork, garden vegetables, and fruits. Open 11:30am–Midnight for lunch, happy hour, dinner, and late night dining. What's Happening on Kaua‘i? • Online Calendar • Online Around Kaua‘i • Community E-News! Page 22 Mark Your Calendars! Next Quarterly Dinner Meeting July 28, 2015 (Tuesday) 5:30 PM Kauai Beach Resort Hotel (Jasmin Ballroom) Please visit our website for more information: Speaker is the new Hawaii Senate President Ron Kouchi www.kauaifilipinochamber.org and email: filipinochamber@aol.com Presentation of 2015 Scholarship Recipients 808.651.9139 IS EXPANDING OUR SERVICES! ING T PRESEN (808) 245-2006 Phone (808) 245-9006 Fax www.LANIBOYDUPHOLSTERY.com COMMERCIAL Learn about us Like us Tweet us Learn with us Call us E-mail us Meet us INDUSTRIAL RESIDENTIAL print @inkspotkauai.com Go ahead, Small giveWith your business, life insurance, 15-year Big the benefits notice. live on. savings. Mike Martinez, Agent Mike Martinez, Maybe you’reThere retiring in Agent are also benefits now. Kuhio Highway 4-831 Kuhio Highway 4-831 Kapaa, HI 15 96746 I’ll No showmatter you how life years or 50. Bus: 808-821-2630 insurance Mike Martinez, Agent mike.martinez.r6ss@statefarm.com Discounts up to can come in Kapaa, HIHighway 96746 for more immediate when you’re handy retiring, let me 4-831 Kuhio * needs, family like college. Kapaa, HI 96746 Bus: 808-821-2630 help make sure We your put theretirement life back Bus: 808-821-2630 mike.martinez.r6ss@statefarm.com mike.martinez.r6ss@statefarm.com 40%. in life insurance. Anytime. Anywhere. Any day... Syngenta Hawai‘i supporting Kaua‘i agriculture ™ happens toTODAY. plan. Cut costsaccording while still getting the CALL ME coverage you need. From GET TO A BETTER STATE.™ Business Insurance to Employee CALL ME TODAY. Retirement plans, I make it my business to protect yours. a good neighbor, State FarmLike Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) 1501235 State Farm, Bloomington, IL Bloomington, State Farm isILthere.® 1311019 CALL ME TODAY. www.NKOlandscaping.com facebook.com/NKOLandscape twitter.com/NKOLandscape kauailandscaping.blogspot.com 808.335.5887 info@nkolandscaping.com Kona Rd, Hanapepe Seeds • Crop Protection Seed Treatment • Farm Management Darrellyn Lemke, Agent 4-1593 Kuhio Hwy Kapaa, HI 96746 Bus: 808-822-7335 That’s when you can count on State Farm®. I know life doesn’t come with a schedule. That’s why at State Farm you can always count on me for whatever you need – 24/7, 365. www.darrellynlemke.com GET TO A BETTER STATE™. CALL ME TODAY. 1101198.1 State Farm, Home Office, Bloomington, IL Navigating Hawai‘i’s Oceans: Don’t be a victim of drowning Hawai‘i’s beaches are the envy of many, but as beautiful as they are, the ocean can pose great danger to the inexperienced or unaware. According to the Hawai‘i State Department of Health Injury Prevention and Control Section, there were 861 fatalities among both visitors and residents due to drowning from 2004-2013. Awarded for care. Recognized for quality. But the real reward is a healthy you. Additionally, ocean activities accounted for the majority of spinal cord injuries in Hawai‘i between 2009 and 2013. “Spending time at the beach is a favorite activity for many of us, but it’s very important to understand the power of our ocean, as well as our own limits in order to prevent injury and loss of life,” says Monty Downs, MD, an emergency room physician at Wilcox Memorial Hospital and ocean safety advocate. Downs advises people to always be vigilant. Swim only at beaches with lifeguards, and be extremely cautious when walking on rock ledges. “Pay close attention to the intense ocean currents,” Downs says, stressing that the white water created by breaking waves is not your friend. “The white water – or at times even clear-appearing water – can hold currents (rip currents) that will pull you out to sea,” he explains. “If you do get caught in a current and are being pulled out, the key is DO NOT PANIC. Don’t fight against the current or you’ll get exhausted.” Instead, Downs says you should “go with the flow, and the current will release you. Then you can gather yourself and figure out what to do next – for example, wave for help, find another place to come back to shore or wait for a rescuer. “STAY CALM,” he adds. “That’s the key to survival.” Other important tips for enjoying a safe time at the shore this summer include: • Never turn your back to the ocean. Ninety-five percent of serious trauma injuries (i.e., cervical/spinal injuries, broken bones, head wounds, reef gashes) occur when the surf is 3 feet and less. • Don’t dive into the water until you have a clear understanding of its depth. There may be rocks, a reef or other obstructions hidden by a dark spot or waves. • Always slather on the sunscreen. An SPF 45 will provide all the sun protection you need, as long as you reapply every two hours and after going into the water. When Kaua‘i’s families are healthy and happy, we’ve Take time to master the basics of any new watersport. A snorkeling safari can turn tragic if you don’t know how to use a mask, clear your snorkel or swim with fins. And if you’re new to SUP (stand-up paddleboarding), learn on a day with no wind; you’re like a sail when you stand up on the board, so if conditions are windy, you could get blown out to sea. with health care ranked among the nation’s best. Being in and around the ocean year-round is one of the great things about living in Hawai‘i, but it’s vital to be aware of the dangers. “The more you know about Hawai‘i’s oceans, the better and more enjoyable your day in the water should be,” Downs says. To learn more about ocean safety, visit hawaiibeachsafety.com. Page 24 done our job. We’re proud to serve our community To learn more, visit wilcoxhealth.org. wilcoxhealth.org • 808-245-1100 Wilcox Memorial Hospital is part of Hawai‘i Pacific Health, a not-for-profit health care network. HURRICANE SEASON STARTS JUNE 1ST! ARE YOU PREPARED? EU2000i EU3000iHandy Quality HONDA generators for every application in stock NOW! Avoid the rush when the hurricane warnings start! The Finest Quality Chainsaws, Trimmers,Blowers, and Hedgers For All Your Yard and Garden Needs Lightweight, Durable Aluminum Trailers 823-0556 Heavy Equipment Trailers – Custom Built! You Deserve the Best ZTR Mower! SERVING K AUAI FOR 30 YEARS! 1337 Ulu St Kapaa, HI 96746 Read the owner’s manual before operating Honda Power Equipment. Paper reFashion at Galerie 103 Tom Niblick ART reFASHIONED 2014, left to right, Craig Palmer (model Lauren Pingree); Deyana Mielke (model Talia Irene); Katherine Soucie (model Nani Leininger); and Wayne Zebzda in his own Suit to Disappear In. In a delightful mix of artfulness and humor, Galerie 103 will present Kaua‘i, O‘ahu and Mainland artists joining their creative forces for reIMAGINED PAPERWORKS, a unique art and fashion event during the Kukui‘ula Art of Fashion Art Walk June 13. “With the great success of our fashion show last year, we are excited to continue this on as an annual tradition of ART reFASHIONED,” Galerie 103 owner Bruna Stude said. The inspiration for this year’s art and fashion event was paper doll fashion on porcelain dolls. The materials used are “reincarnated” paper shopping bags, cardboard, and odds and ends Last year’s runway featured designs created from buckets full of bottle caps, a bucket, hundreds of teabags, cardboard, paper, Discover the Magic of Water Gardening includes ceramic pot, water lily, aquatic plants, fish & snails GARDEN PONDS NURSERY OPEN Wed-Sun 12 - 5 PM located on Kuhio Hwy. in Kilauea Mauka of Banana Joe’s & Kauai Mini Golf New Container Just Arrived 828-6400 www.gardenpondskauai.com The staff at the Kauai Adult Day Health Center works with you in mind by providing quality care, personal enrichment and increased self-worth. Located at the Lihue Christian Church Social Hall • Call or email for more information 246-6919 • Dayhealth@ohanapacific.com Page 26 magazines, bicycle tires, tape, rope, bubble-wrap, plastic bottles, vinyl and much more. PowerHound, a Kaua‘i group formed in 2005 with the mission of playing music differently, will again improvise and create a sonic landscape for the evening. The event will be at The Shops at Kukui‘ula at 2829 Ala Kalanikaumaka in Po‘ipu. MORE PEOPLE READ FOR KAUA‘I Invitation to Ride By Larry Feinstein Pack your bags; we’re going for a ride. You have to meet me in San Francisco on the afternoon of Sept. 8 because that is when we pick up our Indian Chieftain, a legendary bike, beautifully brought back to life a few years ago. In all my years of riding, I have never taken a passenger, so this ride is a first for both of us. How can you go along for a ride without being on the Indian with me? I am going to imagine your invisible presence, sitting close behind me. You will not be paying any attention to the ride. Each day, I am going to tell you what you missed. Spending so much time together in close quarters could result in you wanting to share, and I am Mind and the Motorcycle encouraging it. We’re going to roll on two-lane roads, meandering through Northern California, up into Southern Oregon and down the coastline of both states. I am going to take pictures, write short posts on my blog and record daily podcasts to capture the immediacy of the experience Heading east on the big highways out of San Francisco will take me to my first stop, Groveland, the street address for the opening to Yosemite. Sitting here, I can conjure the sensations from just yesterday on my own roads. When the sun is above the line of sight, with the trades blowing gently from the east, under a blue sky with shaggy, puffed clouds, surrounded by ocean and held together by an interior of lollypop green mountains, I melt into my bike. At some marker on the first day’s ride, this fleeting moment of familiar, biker bliss will slip in as Yosemite rolls into view. The moment I thought about the ride, the urge to record it instantly attached itself. Writing is difficult for me. I am most comfortable when I have a person or purpose drawing me out. I spent a year and a half writing my life story to my young grandson, a gift he will receive when his parents think he’s old enough, probably 30 years old! The past few years have felt a little like word MMA, always ending in a draw. Giving myself permission to commit to this ride nearly a year ago pulled me quickly back into the world of shared words. I am now obligated to meet up with the Indian and tell crisscrossing stories, one in my mind and one from the road. I am going way outside my comfort zone. A seasoned biker would likely think I am crazy. My primary experience is a dozen years riding on the stress free, familiar roads of Kaua‘i, on easy to handle Hondas. On our trip, we will be on a much bigger bike, riding on roads that will vary each day, with no idea what is around the other side of every blind curve. There are daily destinations, never staying in one place for more than a night. I am not sure I’d be enjoying my life as much without taking chances, although sometimes I want to pull the covers over my head and disappear from the see-everything mirror. I don’t know how many times I have forced myself to overcome horrific trepidation, only to find that getting out of bed and folding into the day was not the monster I feared. Riding a motorcycle can be like that. You always have near misses or riding miscalculations that burn your throat and explode your heart, but cruising the coastline of Kaua‘i washes it gently away and you smile, leaving the anxiety ghost over your shoulder, behind you on the disappearing road. Whenever you feel like it, get on the back and introduce yourself because I can’t turn around while I am riding. • Larry Feinstein has spent a lifetime wondering what we’re all about. Visit www. mindandthemotorcycle.com email larry@ mindandthemotorycle.com to receive updates on plans for the ride. Weekly Programming on Ho‘ike Kauai Community Television (Channel 52) Monday 6:00 am Open Mic / Community Camera 7:30 am Music and the Spoken Word 8:00 am Word of Peace by Prem Rawat 12:00 pm Open Mic / Community Camera 6:00 pm Open Mic 7:00 pm Coconut Festival Cooking Demonstrations 8:00 pm Church at Koloa 9:00 pm A Meeting with Gangaji 11:00 pm Employees Today Tuesday 6:00 am Community Camera 7:30 am Music and the Spoken Word 8:00 am Church at Koloa 9:00 am Employees Today 12:00 pm Open Mic 3:00 pm Community Camera 6:00 pm Open Mic 8:00 pm Calvary Chapel of Kauai 9:00 pm Words of Peace by Prem Rawat 9:30 pm Key of David 11:00 pm Eckankar Wednesday 6:00 am Community Camera / Open Mic 8:00 am Calvary Chapel of Kauai 9:00 am Key of David 12:00 pm Open Mic 4:30 pm Ohana Christian Fellowship 5:30 pm Emergence 7:30 pm Waimea United Church of Christ 10:00 pm Astrology with Rollin Frost Thursday 6:00 am Ohana Christian Fellowship 7:00 am New Beginnings Christian Church 9:00 am Waimea United Church of Christ 12:00 pm Open Mic 5:30 pm Astrology with Rollin Frost 7:00 pm Unko Funki Clubhouse 8:30 pm Voices of Truth 9:00 pm WIN A FREE TRIP FOR 2 TO LAS VEGAS! The Truth Will Set You Free Friday 6:00 am Open Mic / Community Camera 7:30 am The Truth Will Set You Free 8:30 am Voices of Truth 12:00 pm Open Mic / Community Camera 5:30 pm Astrology with Rollin Frost 7:00 pm A Meeting with Gangaji 8:00 pm New Beginnings Christian Church Saturday (and/or) Sunday At will Open Mic / Community Camera 8:30 am Astrology with Rollin Frost 9:00 am Alonzo’s Sports (Saturday) 4:00 pm Alonzo’s Sports (Sunday) 6:00 pm Emergence 7:00 pm Unko Funki Clubhouse (Saturday) For more details on additional programs being cable cast on Ho’ike go to our web site at www.hoike.org 3022 Peleke St., Suite 8, Lihue, HI 96766 (808) 245-7720 or 245-8951 Program schedule may be Check Ho’ike website for our monthly changed if tape(s) are not Basic Video Production classes and call 246-1556 for information and registration. submitted on time. 4211 Rice Street #103, Lihue, Hawaii 96766 • ph: (808) 246-1556 fax: (808) 246-3832 • www.hoike.org WHICH HOMBRE’S THE FASTEST CALLER IN THE WEST? FM97’s BB Choi and Jason Fujinaka are makin’ random calls askin’, “Who’s Kauai’s 1st Radio Choice? ” Just say, “FM97,” and you’re automatically entered in our drawing for a FREE TRIP FOR TWO TO LAS VEGAS plus 5-NIGHT DELUXE HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS, including all meals and ground transportation courtesy of Vacations Hawaii. Random drawing is limited to the 1st 97 qualifiers. Listen to FM97 Radio at 96.9 for complete details. Still Kauai’s 1st Radio Choice. *All qualifiers must be 21 years or older and residents of Kauai. Roundtrip airfare from Honolulu. Some restrictions apply. Complete rules posted at FM97 Radio, 1860 Leleiona Street, Lihue. CALENDAR Wondering what to do today? See the best, most complete calendar of Kaua‘i events at www.forkauaionline.com To get your event listed, enter it yourself on the web or send to calendar@forkauaionline.com • 808-652-2802 June 5 - August 8 Kaua‘i Japanese Bon Festival Season An important part of the present-day culture and life of Hawaii. Games, food booths and fun for the entire family. June 5 & 6, Waimea Shingon Mission; June 12 & 13, Kapa‘a Jodo Mission; June 19 & 20, WKH Waimea Temple; June 26 & 27, Kapa‘a Hongwanji Mission. Info www.parrishkauai. com/blog/bon-dance-startskauai-summer Fri, June 5, 5-9:30 pm “The Dinosaurs are Breeding” Free movie showing of Jurassic Park in McBryde garden. See trees from the movie in a guided walk. Pre show activities and shuttles, bring blankets and chairs, food available for purchase. $10 donation. Info www. ntbg.org Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday on Channel #6 Islandwide at: 7:00 a.m., 12:00 noon, 4:00 p.m., 7:00 p.m., 12:00 midnight Sat, June 6 Hanalei Canoe Club 8 Mile Ha‘ena Run Course from Ke‘e beach to the Hanalei pier. Pancake breakfast free for all runners, or just come and eat for $7. Entry fee $35/45. Info 639-4048, www.hanaleicanoeclub.org Sat, June 6, 10:30am-2 pm Puerto Rican Festival Come and enjoy Kachi Kachi music, dancing, and delicious Puerto rican cuisine. Live entertainment by Wally Rita y Los Kauaianos. At Kaua‘i Museum. Info www.kauaimuseum.org Sat, June 6, 4-7 pm, 7th Annual Love Life Creative Festival & All Styles Dance Showcase This event is purposed to create a drug free and suicide free culture on Kaua‘i through education and exposure to positive outlets such as dance, art, music, fashion, and food. At KCC. Info Lila Metzger 651-4383, kuganow@gmail.com The Garden Isle’s Fossil-Rich Landscape By Jan TenBruggencate A lot of folks think of fossils in terms of dinosaurs – things a couple of hundred million years old. A place like Kaua‘i, which emerged from the ocean just five million years ago, couldn’t have much of a fossil supply. Right? Wrong. There are fossils all over the island – fossil shells, fossil birds, even fossil plants. Let’s start with what a fossil is. It can refer to a form of life that has been preserved in stone or converted to stone, like dinosaur bones. But a liberal definition is any evidence of a form of life from a distant time. Even the burrows of ancient animals are considered fossils. Most of our island’s fossils are stone memorials of sealife or coastal life. They are actually quite easy to find in sandstone fields, like the lithified (turned to stone) sand dunes of Maha‘ulepu, east of the Hyatt hotel. There, fossil shells are common in the Kumu Haumana Kaua‘i geologist Chuck Blay, left, is seen here talking about geology and fossils with two members of the National Tropical Botanical Garden 2015 Environmental Journalism Fellowship. rock. Kaua‘i geologist Chuck Blay, author of the book “Kaua‘i’s Geological History,” regularly takes tours to fossils in geological formations. Fossils of extinct Kaua‘i birds have been uncovered in those same hardened dunes by Storrs Olson, curator emeritus of birds at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. His work proved that long before humans, numerous species of flightless ducks and geese waddled the island’s shores. At the South Shore’s Makauahi Sinkhole, paleoecologist David Burney has found sediments dating back to long before humans arrived on the island. The fossil array, preserved in moist sediment, has been just amazing. There were shells, and bird bones, but also a really remarkable archive of the ancient botany of the island. Burney was able to find fossil pollen, bits of wood and ancient seeds, and to identify plant species that once lived in the region. One of the bits of evidence he was able to uncover was that WHY SUBSCRIBE? WE’RE FREE & YOU GET the latest in news, culture, people, everything that’s happening on Kaua‘i SUBSCRIBE TODAY NAME __________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________ CITY ______________________________ STATE _______ ZIP _________________ the useful tree kou, Cordia subcordata, grew on these islands long before humans arrived. That was news, since it had long been assumed kou was brought by the first Hawaiian settlers in their canoes. He also confirmed through pollen analysis that hala, Pandanus tectorius, fell into a similar category – it had previously been assumed a Polynesian introduction, but it was in the Islands long before humans. There is additional fossil evidence for the hala – another kind of fossil. On a North Shore cliffside, in a lava flow several hundred thousand years old, are ancient hala impressions – molds in the black rock of hala fruit and hala trunks. It was fossil proof that a hala forest had stood on the island’s north shore when the island was still volcanically active. Since the first humans only arrived about a millennium ago, that makes hala clearly indigenous. Shell collectors like Reginald Gage have found evidence of many species of native land shells – now all extinct – in the soils of the island. In sediment, sandstone, lava rock and soil, fossils, clearly, are all over the island. • Jan TenBruggencate is a Kaua‘i based writer and communications consultant. for KAUA‘I magazine Coming direct to you from many locations such as Lihu‘e and Honolulu inter-island terminals, all Kaua‘i public libraries, neighborhoods centers, Big Save Supermarkets, Times, K-Mart, Foodland, Safeway and over 60 other community distribution points. Locations listed on EMAIL (OPTIONAL) ______________________________________________________ Mail to: For Kaua‘i PO Box 956 Waimea HI 96796 Page 30 “Thank you for all of your great local stories and information!” — B. Obra, San Francisco, CA website for KAUA‘I www.forkauaionline.com CALENDAR Sun, June 7, 9am- 2 pm ACTRA Roping Event At CJM Country Stables ACTRA roping events, free. Info 6526100, cjmstables@hawaii. rr.com, www.cjmstables.com dazzling musicians, Hank Curtis on piano; Edd Cook on bass; Jim Fiore on drums. At All Saints Church, 1065 Kuhio Highway, Kapa‘a. Free. Info https://www. facebook.com/KISSKauai Sun, June 7, 11:30 am 27th Annual Taste of Hawaii Rotary Club of Kapa‘a Signature Fundraiser, 27th Annual Taste of Hawaii - the Ultimate Sun Brunch. Serving Kaua‘i’s Youth, Community and Vocational. At Smith’s Tropical Paradise. Tickets www.tasteofhawaii.com Wed, June 10, 9:30-11:30 am AARP Scam Jam Protect yourself from fraud: Con artists are targeting you and the people you care about. Learn how to fight back and spot the crooks before they spot you. At Kaua‘i War Memorial Convention Hall. Info Deana Shelby 823-0502, deana_shelby@ hotmail.com Sun, June 7, 5 pm KISS Concert, The Magic of Broadway Kaua‘i Island Singers Showcase presents songs of Broadway! 20 sensational songs; 10 luminous singers; three Fri, June 12, 6:30 pm Free Movie Screenings Kumu Hina & Showgirls Kumu Hina - Finding a place, at 6:30 pm, Showgirls at 9 pm, both at Mahina Kai Ocean Villa. Byob and pupus to share. Dress in your favorite showgirl outfit. Free. Info 846-4429, www.lambdaaloha.com, www. pflagkauai.org Sat, June 13, 8am-2 pm Kaua‘i Island Crafters Fair An amazing array of quality hand-made products from Kaua‘i’s own crafters and artisans. Proceeds to benefit The Church of the Pacific, 4280 Kuhio Highway, Princeville. Info 635-4314 Sat, June 13, 9am-3 pm King Kamehameha Celebration Parade Kamehameha parade and ho‘olaule‘a in Lihu‘e, starting at Vidinha Stadium and processing to the County Building on Rice Street. Ho‘olaule‘a to follow. Free. Info 635-7205, ags.hawaii. gov/kamehameha Sat, June 20, 9am-4 pm Happiness Planting Festival The day’s activities include Japanese food making demonstration, local foods, games, vendor booths. Hiroshima peace exhibition, Ikebana flower display, Hula dance by Rose T. Warken Ceballows, Taiko drum artists Joyful Noise led by Aki Conquest and music flute artist Omashar and Kyle Chew. At Happiness Planting Center, Lihu‘e. Info Nicole Sakurai 722-3679, nicole.sakurai@gmail.com Sat, June 20, 10-11:30 am Hawaiian Islands Land Trust Talk Story on the Land Guided hike of historic Waioli Valley led by Jennifer Luck, Kaua‘i Island Director, and Bob Schleck of the Waioli Corporation. Begins at Waioli Mission House. Info Jennifer Luck 7555707, jennifer@hilt.org more fun, more events at www.forkauaionline.com Gini Stoddard Gini was born in Long Beach, California. She majored in Fine Arts at USC. She met her husband Joe on a train to a Stanford vs USC football game. They were married for 62 years and have a daughter and a son, both married and living in Nevada. Gini and Joe lived in Wailua for over 25 years. Two years after Joe's passing Gini made the decision to move with her little dog Teddy to the Regency at Puakea. Call 808.246.4449 for a tour REGENCY AT PUAKEA www.regencypuakea.com Kaua‘i Business Directory “Everything Bamboo… And Beyond” • Furniture • Bamboo Clothing • Building Materials • Gifts & Accessories • Home Decor • Window Treatments 4-1388 Kuhio Hwy in Old Kapaa Town Open Monday thru Sat. 10-6 Sun. 11-4 www.bambooworks.com 808-821-8688 “Quality you can clearly trust!” (808) 631-6559 • Window cleaning & screen cleaning • Hard water stain removal from glass surfaces • Post construction window cleaning • Solar panel cleaning using ultra-pure water • Pressure washing Free Estimates | Licensed & Insured www.GardenIsleWindowCleaning.com Bakery Kitchen Sales & Ser vice New & Used Computers PC / Mac • ALL Brands 1347 Ulu Street, Kapaa • 822-2667 Sun to Sat 5:30am-closing • Take Out & Dine In Available 2436 Kaumuali‘i Hwy, Kalaheo • 808-332-0821 Island wide service • Carpet Cleaning • Tile & Stone Cleaning • Rug Cleaning 24 hour water damage & mold remediation service 1 hour response All work guaranteed Family Owned & Operated • 808-346-7344 www.KauaiRestoration.com THE COMPUTER HOSPITAL Sunset Art Exquisite, Exotic, Koa Wood Products Handcrafted on Kauai By: Sarah Rapozo Like us Facebook @sunsetarthawaii follow us on IG @sunsetartkauai email: sunsetartkoaproducts@gmail.com call Jill Caisey, Director of Sales, 808-634-8062 to advertise here or email jill@ForKauaiOnline.com Page 31 The Only Raft Company Touring the Entire Na Pali Coast! Snorkeling Sea Caves Dolphins photo: Erik Van Enbden Not only the best day of your vacation, but possibly one of the best days of your lives! photo: Erik Van Enbden conditions permitting 808.742.6331 www.NaPaliRiders.com Use Your Smart-Phone to Watch our Videos! Na Pali Coast Page 32 Dolphins! Sea Caves!
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