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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Sunday, July 14, 2013

Young hula dancers of Keiki o Halau o Kekuhi share their message and skills at the Kahua Hula Dance Platform yesterday during the 33rd annual Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park Cultural Festival. Photo by Dave Boyle
OVER 2,000 PEOPLE took in Hawaiian culture yesterday at the 33rd Annual Cultural Festival at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. The theme stressed the learning of the child, and cultural practitioners shared their mana`o – knowledge – with keiki and adults. `Ukulele playing, feather lei making, lauhala weaving, beating kapa, quilting and making hula instruments, hats, baskets, bracelets, bamboo stamps and cloth, using plants for medicine and creating a native garden were among the skills that were taught during the day. Keiki o Halau o Kekuhi, Halau Ulumamo o Hilo Paliku and Hua Halau Ke `Olu Makani o Mauna Loa presented hula and chant. Diana Aki, Ben Ka`ili, and Leabert Lindsey offered song. Children learned to make and play the nose flute.
Hawaiian nose flutes are fashioned and played at the cultural festival yesterday.
Photo by Dave Boyle
      HVNP superintendent Cindy Orlando talked about event: “The beautiful Pele mist, incredible practitioners, mele and chant all contributed to what I thought was one of the best festivals we have hosted. What a legacy to those who began this event in 1980.”

FORMER KA`U POLICE CAPTAIN Andrew Burian, who transferred recently to Hamakua, encourages landowners and tenants to report illegal hunters. Burian told Hawai`i Tribune-Herald staff writer John Burnett that the issues with illegal hunting are the same in both locations.
      “In Ka`u, we’re addressing (illegal hunting) with some of the landowners,” he said. “At Kapapala Ranch, for instance, one of their concerns is trespassing to go up to lands to hunt up above the ranch. At the same time, it also involves hunting on their lands.”
      County Prosecutor Mitch Roth told Burnett that “we’ve had problems with people illegally hunting on private property, not just pigs, but shooting cows.”
Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park superintendent Cindy Orlando at
Volcano Art Center with Dietrich Varez, whose artwork was chosen
to represent the festival. Photo by Emily Catey
      Hunting on private property requires permission from the landowner, and night hunting is prohibited. Hunters must be licensed and abide by laws governing transportation of  firearms.
      Roth said that trespassing with a loaded firearm is a Class B felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison, in addition to a misdemeanor trespass charge.
      “These guys who are illegally hunting give a bad name to the guys who are actually doing it legally,” Roth told Burnett. “We have a lot of really conscientious hunters on our island who are concerned about preserving the sport and subsistence hunters who are conscious of the environment. It really looks bad when these other guys are out there breaking the law. It gives all hunters a black eye.”
      According to the story, Burian said, “Just like with any other crimes, we may not be able to find any leads, but there are going to be times that we catch somebody. “And more often than not, it’s going to be the same people who are responsible for many of these incidents.”
      See more at hawaiitribune-herald.com.

Keiki play Hawaiian games at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. Photo by Dave Boyle
COUNTY OF HAWAI`I HAS SUBMITTED QUESTIONS regarding Hawaiian Electric Co.’s testimony on the proposed contract to purchase biofuel from `Aina Koa Pono. AKP plans to use feedstock from Ka`u to refine biofuel at a facility it would build along Wood Valley Road above Pahala. 
      Hawai`i County questions Hawai`i Electric Light Co. president Jay Ignacio about his statement that “HELCO’s use of the biodiesel will reduce carbon dioxide emissions on the island of Hawai`i, as AKP is contractually required to demonstrate that its project achieves at least a 50 percent favorable reduction in greenhouse gases over the petroleum diesel currently used by HELCO.”
      “Do you believe that AKP biodiesel will result in no less than a 50 percent reduction in GHG emissions when production of all inputs and all other processes related to biofuel production and deliveries are accounted?
      “If so, would you please provide the complete analysis based on actual AKP process, relevant feedstocks, and all input materials?
Making a lauhala bracelet at yesterday's cultural
festival. Photo by Dave Boyle
      “If you cannot provide this complete analysis of the actual AKP process, then would you please justify why a twenty-year commitment is being requested, when the ability to deliver on the project’s main promises is in question?”
      Hawai`i County questions HECO fuels department manager Cecily Barnes about her statement that “a successful AKP Project is expected to attract additional high-tech investment in the advanced biofuel industry.”
      “An underlying argument behind the proposed AKP contract is that the fixed, high-priced, long-term contract is necessary to attract investors,” the county states. “However, there are multiple incentive programs offered by the federal government, and many other companies have raised funds to demonstrate their technology at pilot/demonstration scale, and then use those demonstrations to fund commercial plants –without requiring such a lucrative off-take agreement. With utility rates that are three to four times as high on average as on the mainland (and, based on the current utility business model, possibly going to an even higher-multiple), could you please explain why yet further price increases to the consumer are justified to ‘attract additional high-tech investment in the advanced biofuel industry.’”
      Regarding Barnes’ statement that “it is expected that the AKP Project will generate direct and indirect jobs, stimulate economic output, and generate tax revenues that are quantifiable,” Hawai`i County says, “This may be true, as any project where higher-priced goods are imposed on customers by government fiat (as is the case with a regulated utility) will in fact ensure that at least some jobs are created and sustained. What is left unsaid in such cases, however, is that consumers are then denied choice (unless they opt out entirely from the system, which many seem to be doing or now seriously considering), and many other sectors of personal preference and economic activity are curtailed.
      “Would you please provide an estimate of how many jobs … AKP will generate, compared to how many jobs would be generated across the Islands and across other economic sectors if electricity rates were reduced by 25 percent, 50 percent, or if we were to work together to reach a mainland equivalent pricing of a 75 percent reduction?”
      This and more testimony is available at puc.hawaii.gov. Docket number is 2012-0185.
      Responses from the utilities are due Friday, Aug. 2.

Longs is ready to open its pharmacy in Pahala tomorrow. Photo by Julia Neal
Pharmacist and manager Leona Goda





LONGS PHARMACY opens in Pahala tomorrow with a blessing at 8:30 a.m. becoming the first pharmacy in Ka`u outside of clinics and the small Ka`u Hospital pharmacy. Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and 8 a.m. until noon on Saturdays, closed Sunday. Longs is located in Pahala Shopping Center between Bank of Hawai`i and Pahala Post Office. In addition to the pharmacy, Longs will offer reading glasses, beauty and health care products and snacks. 
      Pharmacist Leona Goda is the pharmacy manager for Longs in Pahala. Her pharmacy degree is from University of the Sciences in Philadelphia. She has worked in Hawai`i for Longs since 2003. She was previously a Senior medical writer for DoMed Communications. She is certified by the Amercian Pharmacists Association for pharmacy-based immunization delivery. Her skills include medical writing and patient education.
      Overall contractor was The Hatch Group. Local contractors on the project included Taylor Built Construction Company, Inc.

Bento Rakugo performs at Na`alehu Public Library Wednesday.
Photo from Bento Rakugo
BENTO RAKUGO COMES TO Na`alehu Public Library Wednesday at 2 p.m. The troupe honors one of the most popular traditional forms of Japanese theatre while bringing a modern twist to the Japanese comedy. The program is suitable for ages 5 and older. Call 939-2442 for more information. 

HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK Visitor Center hosts Haunani’s Aloha Expressions Wednesday from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. The hula group of native Hawaiians for years has shared the aloha spirit with visitors arriving at the Port of Hilo and Hilo International Airport and patients at hospitals and health care centers around the island.
      Haunani’s Aloha Expressions won overall at the Kupuna Hula Festival and also won the Moku o Keawe competition on numerous occasions. They make all of their own colorful costumes and lei, singing and dancing hapa-haole hula, and have performed at the park’s annual cultural festival on numerous occasions.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Saturday, July 13, 2013

Longs Pharmacy opens with a blessing for the public at 8:30 a.m. Monday at Pahala Shopping Center.
Photo by Julia Neal
LONGS PHARMACY opens on Monday, becoming the first pharmacy in Ka`u outside of clinics and the small Ka`u Hospital pharmacy. It is located in Pahala Shopping Center between Bank of Hawai`i and Pahala Post Office. A pharmacist will be on duty. Other items to be offered for sale in this apothecary-style Longs will include beauty and health care products and snacks. Local contractors on the project have included Taylor Built Construction Company, Inc.
      The public is invited to a blessing Monday at 8:30 a.m.

Nurse practitioner Susan Field will move
from teaching at UH-Manoa to practicing
at Ka`u Rural Health Clinic.
FAMILY NURSE PRACTITIONER Susan Field will join Ka`u Hospital Rural Health Clinic’s staff on Aug. 1 to replace Debra Kettleson, who is transferring to Hilo Medical Center cardiology clinic. Ka`u Hospital administrator Merilyn Harris said, “It was really important that we find someone who was not only well qualified on paper but also somebody who would be very caring and willing to go the extra mile for her patients like Debbie did. Susan Field fits the bill.” 
      Field is a highly skilled nurse practitioner with over 12 years of experience working in clinic settings in Idaho, Hilo, Ocean View, Moloka`i and Lana`i. She is an assistant professor of nursing in the University of Hawai`i at Manoa’s Nurse Practitioner Program. Field teaches supervision for nurse practitioner students throughout the Big Island.
      Prior to becoming a nurse practitioner, Field worked as a registered nurse in a variety of roles, including house supervisor in a 250-bed hospital in Idaho and director of Emergency Services in a rural community in Colorado.
      Field is a resident of Ka`u and lives within six miles of the hospital and clinic. In the community, she is a photographer, plays tennis and teaches karate. She is known to many as “Suz.”

INTERVENTION INTO HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC CO’S FIVE-YEAR ACTION PLAN is a suggestion by Life of the Land. The document was recently submitted to the state Public Utilities Commission. Life of the Land writes that the plans “call for expanded geothermal, importation of liquified natural gas, smart meters, Hu Honua and `Aina Koa Pono. The plans include virtually no community input nor any discussion on externalities. The PUC is establishing a window of opportunity for potential intervenors to enter the regulatory proceedings. Being a party means being able to file written requests for information to the HECO companies, responding to any questions asked of your group, being able to submit written testimony of witnesses, etc.”
      Life of the Land is providing a description of using the PUC website for e-filing and e-notification and a guide to creating a motion to intervene. “There is no reason that Big Island interests should have only one community group intervening,” said Life of the Land executive director Henry Curtis.
      See lifeofthelandhawaii.org.
      The five-year action plan can be read at hawaiianelectric.com/IRP.

HIKING REGISTRATION FEES for vehicles passed a final County Council vote this week with the only opponent being Ka`u’s Council member Brenda Ford. Last Wednesday, the Council passed the hikes with a vote of eight to one. Registration for cars, trucks, vans and buses will increase $5 to $12 depending on the class of vehicle. For most vehicles, the tax will go up from 75 cents per pound to $1.25 per pound.
      Ford said her objection was based partly on the additional $2.8 million expected to be generated by the hike in vehicle registration and taxes going into the county fund. “There is no way for us to know where this tax increase is going to go and what it is supposed to do,” she said, according to a Tom Callis report in the Hawai`i Tribune Herald on Wednesday. Proponents of the hike promised that it would go to improve roads. The mayor is expected to sign the bill to raise the fees and taxes.
      Another hike to raise money for transportation began Monday with higher public bus fees. The fee to ride the Hele-On Bus went from $1 to $2. Seniors, students and the disabled who previously rode the bus for free now pay $1. Keiki five and under still ride for free.

Hokule`a, sailing past Volcano in June, is expected to be at Miloli`i later this month.
Photo courtesy of Polynesian Voyaging Society
HOKULE`A IS EXPECTED back on the Big Island soon. The Polynesian Voyaging Society canoes Hokule`a and Hikianalia were last at Kalae on June 16 before sailing from South Point to Maui, Kaho`olawe, Lana`i and most recently Moloka`i. Hokule`a and Hikianalia are expected to sail into Miloli`i later this month, where a program for restoration of fishing village canoes is planned. See www.hokulea.org.
      At Miloli`i, the Lawai`a Fishing Camp for youth is being held this weekend by Pa`a Pono Miloli`i, Kua O Ka La Pubic Charter School, Hau`oli Ka Mana`o Congregational Church, Kalanihale Educational nonprofit and Ho`oulu La Hui. 

THE 33RD ANNUAL CULTURAL FESTIVAL for Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park is taking place today until 3 p.m. The fee-free day is focused on interpretation at Kahua Hula at Ka`auea – the hula platform near Volcano Art Center inside the park. The theme is Ka `ike o ke keiki: i ka nana a `ike; i ka ho`olohe no a maopopo; i ka hana no a `ike, which means: The learning of the child; by observing, one learns; in listening, one commits to memory; by practice one masters the skill.
Diana Aki, here with Keoki Kahumoku at Pahala Plantation House,
performs at today's Cultural Festival at Hawai`i Volcanoes
National Park. Photo by Julia Neal
     Enjoy hula kahiko and music with Keiki o Halau o Kekuhi, Halau Ulumamo o Hilo Paliku, Hula Halau Ke `Olu Makani o Mauna Loa, Leabert Lindsey, Ben Ka`ili and Diana Aki.
      Watch skilled practitioners demonstrate art and learn to beat kapa, weave lauhala hats, sew a feather lei, create a native garden and use plants as medicine.
      Play Hawaiian games, weave a coconut basket and lauhala bracelet, make a feather kahili and traditional lei. Taste taro, sweet potato, sugar cane and breadfruit.

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST is live theater this weekend with shows today at 7:30 p.m. and tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. The show runs Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through July 28. The venue is Kilauea Military Camp Theater in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. KDEN is the sponsor, and tickets are available at Kilauea General Store, Kea`au Natural Foods, Paradise Plants, The Most Irresistible Shop and by calling 982-7344. Prices are $15 general, $12 students/seniors and $10 children.

BEFORE THE PLAY, Beauty and the Beast, a casual dinner is served at Kilauea Military Camp’s Crater Rim Café in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. KMC is open to authorized patrons and sponsored guests. Park entrance fees apply. 967-8371.

KILAUEA MILITARY CAMP HOLDS AN OPEN HOUSE today in conjunction with the Cultural Festival. KMC invites visitors to experience how it serves our troops by enjoying all facilities and services.

Na Leo Manu presents Haunani's Aloha Expressions Wednesday.
Photo from NPS
HAUNANI’S ALOHA EXPRESSIONS, with wahine and kane kupuna from 70 to 90 years of age, will present hula Wednesday, July 17 at the Na Leo Manu Heavenly Voices presentation from 6:30 pm. to 8 p.m. at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park Visitor Center. The hula group of native Hawaiians for years has shared the aloha spirit by welcoming malihini (visitors) on cruise ships arriving at the Port of Hilo and at Hilo International Airport. The kupuna also entertain for patients at Life Care Center of Hilo, Hale `Anuenue, Extended Care, Hawai`i Island Adult Day Care, Aunty Sally Kaleohano Lu`au House Senior Program and more.
      Haunani’s Aloha Expressions won overall at the Kupuna Hula Festival with the song, Tutu E. They also won the Moku o Keawe competition on numerous occasions. They make all of their own colorful costumes and lei, singing and dancing hapa-haole hula, and have performed at the park’s annual cultural festival on numerous occasions.

FRIENDS OF HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK host their next volunteer Forest Restoration Project on Friday, July 19, from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. This month they will be planting native trees in one- to three-gallon pots in the Kilauea section of the park. The area chosen depends on how much rain has been received by possible planting sites.
Ranger Corie Yanger helps during a forest restoration project.
Photo from FHVNP
      Volunteers should be at least 12 years old and be able to walk up to 1/2 mile over uneven terrain with a moderate slope. Sturdy walking shoes and long pants are required, along with gear for variable weather conditions (hat, raincoat, sunscreen, etc.) plus drinking water and a snack.
      In addition, it is imperative to scrub soles of shoes prior to arrival on site in order to ensure that outside dirt and invasive species seeds are not tracked in.
      “Our goal is a crew of 12 people, and pre-registration is required,” said coordinator Elizabeth Fien. All participants need to sign a Friends release form and a park volunteer form. For those under 18, an adult will need to co-sign.
      “Be aware that there can be vog or high levels of SO2 in the area. If it is too heavy or the park is closed, we will cancel the project and try to notify everyone in advance,” Fien said.
      To register, contact Friends at 985-7373 or forest@fhvnp.org by Wednesday evening, July 17. Include your first and last name, email address and a phone number.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Friday, July 12, 2013


Hula is a major focus of the Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park Annual Cultural Festival tomorrow in Volcano. Photo by William Neal
FIGHTING THE COFFEE BERRY BORER is receiving immediate help through Ka`u’s U.S. Senator, Mazie Hirono and the United States Department of Agriculture. Yesterday, Hirono and the USDA unveiled a major federal initiative to fight the coffee berry borer that has been ravaging Kona coffee farms for almost three years and threatens to take down Ka`u if it not pushed back.
      The project, a new arm of the USDA’s integrated pest management program, will be a scientifically-based approach to fighting the invasive species, said a statement from Hirono’s office. In the immediate term, USDA will spend $1 million to set-up the Hawai`i operation. 

“This new initiative to fight the coffee berry borer is great news for Hawai`i and our economy, and I am very pleased that the USDA has recognized the threat of this highly destructive invasive species,” said Hirono. “Our state produces some of the world’s best coffee, and coffee is an important export from our state. But the livelihood of Hawai`i Island coffee growers is increasingly being threatened by the coffee berry borer, as many farmers are forced to abandon large portions of their yields due to infestation each year.
      “That’s why I originally urged the USDA to set up this initiative and have been working closely with the department to begin its implementation. USDA, the Hawai`i Department of Agriculture and the University of Hawai`i will collectively work to help coffee farmers combat and contain this invasive species.”


The war is on against the coffee berry borer with the help of federal funding.
      U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack wrote to Hirono: “USDA shares your concerns about the agricultural and economic impacts of this noxious pest. As such, I am pleased to announce the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service has funded an Area Wide Integrated Pest Management program to aid in controlling the coffee berry borer in the United States.”


      Members of the Hawai`i congressional delegation worked for more funding for a possible program in the Farm Bill being considered in Congress. Ahead of USDA’s agreement to fund a program, Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard introduced a successful amendment which was included in the Farm Bill in the U.S. House of Representatives that authorized funding for a USDA program. Congresswoman Colleen Hanabusa cosponsored the measure. Hirono introduced a similar measure in the Senate that was cosponsored by Sen. Brian Schatz.

“The coffee berry borer has been a destructive force striking at the heart of Hawai‘i’s multi-million dollar coffee industry,” said Gabbard. “In just two years, our treasured Kona coffee industry suffered more than $9 million in market losses, representing a roughly 25 percent revenue decrease. The economic impact has been deeply felt by coffee farms, most of which are small family farms, and coffee processors are being forced to lay off workers or reduce hours.”
      The program will be tasked with distributing effective treatments to local farmers and educating them on the most effective treatment practices, researching the genetic makeup of the coffee berry borer to find its weakness and disposing of infected plants. In his letter, Vilsack explained that the new USDA initiative will coordinate with local coffee farmers, the University of Hawai`i and the Hawai`i
Department of Agriculture to use the following techniques to fight the borer: Distribute the most effective repellents to farmers and training them on how to best use these treatments; research new types of pest controls that could be more effective in killing the beetles; create a plant sanitation program that decreases the opportunities for borer to reproduce and spread; study the borer to find how the species is similar or different that other agricultural pest in order to develop better methods for controlling the pest.
     Hawai`i Island is home to more than 700 small coffee farms. In 2011, coffee farmers in Hawai`i produced more than 8 million pounds of coffee, valued at more than $30 million.

 The borer is an insect native to Central Africa that lives, feeds and reproduces in both immature and mature coffee berries. This damage can have a significant negative impact on the quality and quantity of coffee crop yields. As a direct result of the coffee berry borer, many farmers in 2012 have expressed concerns that their yields were in jeopardy. Recent reports have found infestation rates of up to 80 percent for some Hawai`i farms.


NURSE PRACTITIONER DEBRA KETTLESON is moving from Ka`u Hospital Rural Health Clinic to a cardiology clinic at Hilo Medical Center, and the name of her replacement is expected to be released later today. “We are really sorry to see Debra Kettleson leave,” said Ka`u Hospital Administrator Merilyn Harris.
Debra Kettleson honored for a decade of service at Ka`u Hospital
 Rural Health Clinic. She joins a cardiac clinic in Hilo.
    “When Ka’u Hospital opened a rural health clinic in 2003 after Dr. Margaret Kitazawa left, Deb was there at the beginning setting up operations and scrounging for equipment and supplies,” Harris recalled. “Over the years, as physicians have come and gone, Deb has been the mainstay of the clinic as well as a loving provider for many of our long-term care residents. She has a very large panel of patients who have grown to appreciate her for her clinical expertise as well as her sense of humor and willingness to always go the extra mile for them.
      “For the past decade Deb has commuted three hours a day in order to work here. When the opportunity came up for her to work in the Cardiology clinic at Hilo Medical Center, five minutes from her home, all we could be is happy for her - even if it is so sad for us!
      Donna Kekoa, the Ka`u Clinic receptionist, said she is especially sorry to see Kettleson leave Ka`u. “Deb has given her all to the community with a compassionate and caring heart to those whom she served at the clinic. As a co-worker, our supervisor, she has been very supportive of all our work here. To me, she has been a mentor and I hope to follow her lead.”  Kettleson’s replacement is expected to be announced late today.

ABOUT THREE MILLION DOLLARS A YEAR will be the cost of police officer pay raises for Hawai`i County, according to a statement from Mayor Billy Keno’s office. According to a story by John Burnett in the Hawai`i Tribune Herald this morning, the mayor’s spokesman Kevin Dayton said the county will “have to find the money within the current year’s budget.”
The additional money is needed to comply with the recently negotiated State of Hawai`i Organization of Police Officers contract with the counties around the state that will give police officers a 16.8 percent raise over four years. There are 471 union police officer in this county. Dayton said the $3 million will include salaries, wages and benefits, the Tribune Herald story reported. See more at www.hawaiitribune-herald.com.

THE BIG ISLAND’S NEW SENATE SEAT, which resulted in Ka`u having two instead of one state senator will stand. A lawsuit brought by O`ahu residents who lost a senate seat through reapportionment was dismissed yesterday by a federal court. The latest U.S. census showed the Big Island’s population growth and justification to add a state senator. However, O`ahu plaintiffs testified that military personnel, their dependents and students living on O`ahu, who do not call O`ahu home, should have also been counted in the reapportionment population count, which would have left O`ahu with the senator. The O`ahu group may appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, said its attorney Robert Thomas.

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST is live theater this weekend Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. from July 12 through 28. The venue is Kilauea Military Camp Theater in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. KEDEN is the sponsor and tickets are available at Kilauea General Store, Kea`au Natural Foods, Paradise Plants, The Most Irresistible Shop and by calling 982-7344. Prices are $15 general, $12 students/seniors and $10 children.

BEFORE THE PLAY, Beauty and the Beast, a casual dinner is served at Kilauea Military Camp’s Crater Rim Café in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. KMC is open to authorized patrons and sponsored guests. Park entrance fees apply. 967-8371 .

Artwork for tomorrow's 33rd annual Cultural Festival at Hawai`i Volcanoes
National Park is by Dietrich Varez
THE 33RD ANNUAL CULTURAL FESTIVAL for Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park will be held tomorrow, July 13 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The free fee day is focut on interpretation at Kahua Hula at Ka`auea – the hula platform near Volcano Art Center inside the park. The theme is Ka`ike o ke Keiki: I ka nana a `ike; I ka ho`olohe no a maopopo; I ka hana no a ‘ike, which means: the learning of the childe; by observing, one learns; in listening, one commits to memory; by practice one masters the skill.
     Enjoy hula kahiko and music with keiki o Halau o Kekuyi, Halau Ulumamo o Hilo Pliu, Hual Halau Ke `olu Mkani o Mauna Loa, Leabert Linsey and Diana Aki.
      Watch skille practitioners demonstrate art and leant to beat kapa, weave lauhala hats, sew a feather lei, create a native garden and use plants as medicine.
      Play Hawaiian games, weave a coconut basket and lauhala bracelet, Make a feather kahili and traditional le. Tast taro, sweet potato, sugar cane and breadfruit.

SATURDAY’S COASTAL CLEANUP at `Onikinalu Bay near Green Sands Beach is still open for volunteers. Contact coordinator Megan Lamson, of Hawai`i Wildlife Fund, at kahakai.cleanups@gmail.com or 769-7629.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS ATPAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM ANDKAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.