About The Kaʻū Calendar

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Ka`u News Briefs Thursday, July 10, 2017

Rodrigo Romo, PICES program manager ,will give a talk on using Hawaiian basalt as construction
materials simulant for use on the moon and Mars. Photo from PICES
HAWAIIAN BASALT VOLCANIC ROCK could be used as a simulant for construction on the moon and Mars. Hawaiian basalt found on this island can be employed for experimentation, says Rodrigo Romo, Program Manager at PICES - the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems. He will give a presentation on the subject at Imiloa in Hilo on Friday, August 18 at 7 p.m.
     Romo explains that basalt is a volcanic rock formed from the rapid cooling of basaltic lava. Volcanoes in Hawai‘i primarily erupt basalt, and have a relatively high fluidity that favors the formation of lava flows. “We have conducted chemical analysis on the composition of Hawaiian basalt using samples collected at various locations on Hawai‘i Island,” says Romo. “We’ve found that some of these samples closely resemble lunar regolith (fine dust) in composition. This makes our local basalt an ideal lunar simulant, and we are using it to research how we can harness the basalt found on the Moon as a construction material.”
    
PICES Rover, developed to help with construction on a moon or
other planet. Photo from PICES
     PISCES has been involved in researching various methods through which Hawaiian basalt can be utilized to produce quality construction materials. This work has been done in collaboration with NASA and Honeybee Robotics, and has led to various research proposals that are currently being evaluated. In his talk, Romo will present an update of the work being done in this field of study.
     Romo originates from Guadalajara, Mexico where he obtained his degree in Chemical Engineering. He joined PISCES in 2014 as a Project Manager and has over 25 years of experience in Project Management. He has been interested in space exploration and the development of sustainable materials ever since his experience as a crewmember during Biosphere 2’s second manned mission in the Arizona desert in 1994.
     Maunakea Skies presentations are held on the third Friday of each month. General admission tickets are $10, $8 for members (member level discounts apply). Pre-purchase tickets at ‘Imiloa’s front desk or by phone at 808-932-8901.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram andTwitter.

Raise money for Friends of Hawai`i Volcanoes
National Park by entering the "Zero-Mile Event"
at the Rain Forest Runs.
A ZERO MILE  fundraising event across the Volcano Rainforest Runs Finish line on Sat. Aug. 18, will bring income to Friends of Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. It will also celebrate the organization's 20-year anniversary.
    A statement from Friends invites people to "Walk, roll or crawl across the finish line and receive a beautiful medal celebrating Friends of Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park's 20 Year Anniversary. Every participant who can traverse the entire zero mile (about 15 feet) through the finish line to a cheering crowd, will receive a Friends' medal. Medals cannot be purchased, you must register and be present to receive."
     The fundraiser takes place at Cooper Center in Volcano Village at the race place. Donations to enter are $20 for adults, $10 for those 14 and younger and free for children in strollers. CLICK HERE TO REGISTER
     Friends will have a booth at the Rainforest Run/Zero Mile  with new merchandise for sale. We now have keiki sizes, including babies, along with 10 color choices. The booth will be open from 8am - 3pm on August 19 - stop by and see us. 

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram andTwitter.

THE FEDERAL CLIMATE CHANGE REPORT draft, released this week, should be taken seriously, says Sen. Brian Schatz. It's entitled the U.S. Global Change Research Program Climate Change Special Report.
Hawai`i is is one of the many places in the U.S. where the average annual temperature rose
between 1986 and 2016. Image from U.S. Global Change Research Program Climate Change Special Report.
     Says Schatz, “This report confirms what we already know: climate change is real, it is caused by people, and we need to do something about it. The federal government should not suppress or deny these facts, nor should it try to silence government scientists. Instead, our leaders need to come together to raise the alarm and find a way forward. Congress should lead the way, and we can start by looking at carbon fee proposals as part of tax reform.”
    The report states that "Since the Third U.S. National Climate Assessment was published in May 2014, stronger evidence has emerged for continuing, rapid, human-caused warming of the global atmosphere and ocean......The last few years have also seen record-breaking, climate-related weather extremes, the three warmest years on record for the globe and continued decline in arctic sea ice. These trends are expected to continue in the future over climate (multidecadal) timescales.....Since 1980, the cost of extreme events for the United States has exceeded $1.1 trillion, therefore better understanding of the frequency and severity of these events in the context of a changing climate is warranted."
This graphical representation shows how natural and human activity contributes to chemical composition changes
in the atmosphere leading to climate change. 
Image from U.S. Global Change Research Program Climate Change Special Report.
     The report also shows extreme concern for the arctic ice melting, rising see levels, and warming oceans raising air temperatures. It advises that "Choices made today will determine the magnitude of climate change risks beyond the next few decades." 
     Schatz points out that the draft of a federal climate report was authored by scientists in 13 federal agencies. "As expected, its conclusions are at odds with the Trump administration’s views. I am deeply concerned the Trump administration is going to try to sabotage this report to prevent the American people from learning the truth about climate change," says the Hawai`i U.S. Senator.
     Schatz concludes that "With this report at the White House for review, now is the best time to make your voice heard. Add your name to tell the Trump administration not to shut down the federal government’s new climate change report. The American people deserve to hear the facts that the federal government has collected about climate change. We must resist any attempt to dismiss climate change, and we cannot allow the Trump administration to cover up ideas they disagree with by burying this report. I fundamentally believe climate change is one of the most important issues facing our immediate future and generations to come. I hope I can count on your energy and effort in this moment."

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram andTwitter.

Pick up the August edition of The Ka`u Calendar delivered
free to 5,500 mailboxes throughout Ka`u, from Miloli`i 
through Volcano. Also available on stands throughout
the district. See it online at www.kaucalendar.com
PANCAKE BREAKFAST, SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., Ocean View Community Center. 9389-7033.

KA`U PLANTATION DAYS begins with a parade from Na`alehu School to Na`alehu Park on Highway 11 this Saturday, Aug. 12 at 9 a.m, followed by a gathering at Na`alehu Community Center and park.
      There will be food booths, arts and crafts, information booths, games, keiki photos by the police department, tug o war, food contest, lauhala weaving, arm wrestling, archery shoot, silent auction, horseshoes, Hawaiian games, lei making and Hawaiian medicine.
   Free, call Ka`u Multicultural Society's Darlyne Vierra or Liz Kuluwaimaka at 640-8740 or 339-0289. Retired teachers who taught in Ka`u will be honored.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram andTwitter.

JAZZ IN THE FOREST SUMMER SERIES continues Saturday, Aug. 12 at 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. The performance is called The Odyssey of Saxy Jazz!
    The evening explores evolution of the American jazz saxophone and highlights the historic diversions as America opened up on the East and West coasts with the creation of many styles and personalities. Jazz in the Forest takes place at the Volcano Art Center campus on Old Volcano Highway. The Wine and Beer Room will be open for attendees to enjoy before and after the concert. An area is set aside for dancing. Tickets are $18 for VAC members, $20 non-members. For more information or to register call Volcano Art Center at 808-967-8222.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram andTwitter.

Tango and classical music are among the offerings at the Hawai`i International Music Festival concert at Pahala Plantation House on Wednesday, Aug. 16 at 7 p.m.




Wednesday, August 09, 2017

Ka`u News Briefs Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2017

Distance from North Korea to Guam, Alaska, Hawai`i and the mainland.
PRES. DONALD TRUMP CALLING OUT NORTH KOREA drew quick response from Hawai`i Sen. Brian Schatz on Tuesday and Wednesday. Responding to Trump's threat to meet North Korean threats with "fire and fury that the world has never seen," followed by North Korea's threat to fire missiles at Guam, Schatz pointed to the lack of positions filled in the U.S. State Department for diplomats and experts, particularly in Asia. One unfilled post is U.S. Ambassador to South Korea.
Sen. Brian Schatz calls for staffing the
state department as Trump threatens
North Korea.
    Schatz tweeted, "This is a national emergency. And it's not just for Korea. We have this problem across the planet. No diplomats, no diplomacy." Another tweet from Schatz: "More than 80 jobs w/no nominee at State, out of 131. Arms control, public diplomacy, political-military affairs, diplomatic security, Asia."
   Schatz posted one of the pages from an 11-page document listing positions filled and mostly unfilled at the State Department and tweeted, "receding from the world stage is not what America does. Those key positions are not just for a crisis but to protect our voice everywhere."
     Another Schatz tweet: "This is either malpractice or malfeasance. We have dozens of key leadership positions in DOD and State across the globe with no nominee."
     Schatz also looked to the 2018 election: "Let's win the 2018 election cycle and take our country back." And to 2020: "It would be excellent to have a President experienced in foreign policy and government leadership next time."
     In the near term, he recommended that Congress should "quickly move" on Asia-related nominations for Department of State and Department of Defense; clarify Asian policy in the National Defense Authorization Act, which funds the Armed Services; fund diplomacy; and "fund Asia rebalance." He urged the administration to ask professionals with knowledge of Asia what they think. "This is too serious for cable partisan punditry from campaign flacks."
     Schatz stated: "We are fortunate to have a United States Pacific Command "PACOM Commander and U.S. Forces Korea Commander with lots of wisdom and experience. We should listen to them."
     Just after Trump yesterday warned North Korea to "best not make any more threats to the U.S. They will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen," Schatz responded, "This is unwise. We need Ambassador to South Korea, Secretary for East Asia Affairs, and Secretary for Asian Pacific Security Affairs sent to Senate now," for confirmation.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

AUGUST IS NATIONAL WATER QUALITY MONTH, and "the people of Hawai'i understand the importance of clean and healthy water resources. Unfortunately, 52 percent of America's national parks have waterways considered impaired under the Clean Water Act, meaning they do not meet appropriate water quality standards," says U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa in a statement released today.
     "Protecting our natural resources goes hand-in-hand with protecting our future. Healthy people, healthy parks and healthy communities depend on healthy clean water.
     "As Ranking Member of the Federal Lands Subcommittee of the House Natural Resources Committee, I am fully committed to protecting our nation's water quality and restoring water quality in our national parks.
     "As residents of an island state, we all know the importance of protecting our state's water quality. I hope you will join me in recognizing National Water Quality Month and doing your part to keep Hawai`i's water clean."
     The American Water Works Association, through its DrinkTap.org  released the following reminder:
     "We are very fortunate in the United States that most of us have easy access to safe tap water, and that’s because of the thousands of water systems working hard to make that happen. "Our tap water is safe because water utilities are required to meet the standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) through the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA). The SDWA not only protects our drinking water supply but also the sources of our drinking water supply.
     "To keep our tap water safe, water utilities are required to monitor for almost 100 contaminants regularly. The SDWA requires EPA to identify contaminants that need to be regulated in drinking water and also to set limits for those contaminants.
    "Because nearly all of our water utilities meet the regulatory standards set by EPA, we can feel secure knowing that our tap water is safe.
     "The SDWA also requires water utilities to provide their customers with a Consumer Confidence Report, which is an annual report on local tap water quality. A CCR details what contaminants, if any, are detected and at what levels they are at locally. Customers must receive their CCR by July 1 each year. If you haven't received yours yet, contact your local water utility."
     Go to www.drinktap.org to visit Local Water webpages and the What’s In My Water? section to learn more about water quality.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
Pick up the August edition of The Ka`u Calendar delivered
free to 5,500 mailboxes throughout Ka`u, from Miloli`i 
through Volcano. Also available on stands throughout
the district. See it online at www.kaucalendar.com

RED CROSS VOLUNTEER MEETING, Thursday, Aug. 10, 7 p.m. at HOVE Road Maintenance Corp. office. Hannah Uribes 929-9953.

PANCAKE BREAKFAST, SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., Ocean View Community Center. 9389-7033.

KA`U PLANTATION DAYS, with the theme Culture and Tradition Lives on, starts with a parade from Na`alehu School to Na`alehu Park on Highway 11 this Saturday, Aug. 12 at 9 a.m, followed by a gathering at Na`alehu Community Center and park. 
     The day features food booths, arts and crafts, information booths, games, keiki photos by the police department, tug O war, food contest, lauhala weaving, arm wrestling, archery shoot, silent auction, horseshoes, Hawaiian games, lei making and Hawaiian medicine. 
     Free, call Ka`u Multicultural Society's Darlyne Vierra or  Liz Kuluwaimaka at 640-8740 or 339-0289. Retired teachers who taught in Ka`u will be honored.

THE 2017 JAZZ IN THE FOREST SUMMER SERIES continues on Saturday, Aug. 12 with two performances, at 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.  The performance is called The Odyssey of Saxy Jazz!
   The evening explores evolution of the American jazz saxophone from the beginning of the 1900’s in New Orleans, through the roaring Dixieland times of jazz, and up the Mississippi River to Chicago with exciting stops along the way, includingKansas City. The Odyssey of Saxy Jazz! highlights the historic diversions as America opened up on the East and West coasts with the creation of many styles and personalities.
     Sax soloists such as Sidney Bechet, Frank Trumbauer, Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Cannonball Adderley, Stan Getz, John Coltrane, and Ornette Coleman, and many others contributed to the path of jazz in big bands as well as small musical combos, as society changed and audiences kept on dancing to different beats.
     Jazz in the Forest takes place at the Volcano Art Center campus on Old Volcano Highway. The Wine and Beer Room will be open for attendees to enjoy before and after the concert. An area is set aside for dancing. Tickets are $18 for VAC members, $20 non-members. For more information or to register call Volcano Art Center at 808-967-8222

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

Tango and classical music are among the offerings at the Hawai`i International Music Festival concert at Pahala Plantation House on Wednesday, Aug. 16 at 7 p.m.

Tuesday, August 08, 2017

Ka`u News Briefs Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2017

Kamehame is the hawksbill turtle preserve owned and managed by The Nature Conservancy
makai of Pahala.  Photo by Geneveve Fyvie
THE NATURE CONSERVANCY, which owns and manages thousands of acres in Ka`u, including the Kamehame Hawksbill Turtle Preserve and Kaiholena,  has named three new board members. 
A hawikbill turtle with her nest at Kamehame.
Photo by Will Olsen/Hawksbill Recovery Project
Richard Zwern
     Richard N. Zwern is worldwide director of WPP, one of the world’s largest communi-
cations and marketing services group. He  served as chairman and chief
executive of Hill & Knowlton’s Hawaiʻi operation. Zwern sits on boards of Hawaiian Airlines, the Straub Foundation and the Hawaiian Humane Society, where he is a former chairman. He was recently named to the John A. Burns School of Medicine Dean’s Advisory Council.
Chris Kobayashi
     Chris Kobayashi is a longtime coordinator of government and community relations for Alexander & Baldwin. 
Dr. Alan Friedlander
     Dr. Alan M. Friedlander is director of the Fisheries Ecology Research Lab at the University of Hawaiʻi.  as well as chief scientist for National Geographic’s Pristine Sea’s Project, where he leads research efforts to help understand and conserve the last wild places in the ocean. Along with the Pristine Seas team, he was awarded the 2014 Environmental Hero Award by the Environmental Media Association and the 2016 Crystal Compass National Award from the Russian Geographical Society. 
     Ulalia Woodside, the  Conservancy’s Hawai‘i executive director said, “We are honored to have the expertise and enthusiasm of three professionals with such a diverse range of experience. All three value the environment and understand the contribution it makes to our economy and quality of life.”
Kaiholena preserve between Pahala and Na`alehu.
Photo by John Replogle
   In addition to its work in Ka`u with the Kamehame Hawksbill Turtle Preserve and pristine native forests, The Nature Conservancy is a leading conservation organization working around the world to protect ecologically important lands and waters for nature and people. The Conservancy and its more than one million members have protected nearly 120 million acres worldwide.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, seeFacebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.


KA`U PLANTATION DAYS offers a parade through Na`alehu on Highway 11 this Saturday, Aug. 12, followed by a gathering at Na`alehu Community Center.
Liz Kuluwaimaka and Darlyne Vierra, co-chairs of Ka`u
Plantation Days. Photo by Julia Neal
     The parade begins at 9 a.m. from Na`alalehu School to Na`alehu Park. At the park will be food booths, arts and crafts, information booths, games, keiki photos by the police department.    
     Special events include a Tug O War, Food Contest, lauhala weaving, arm wrestling, archery shoot, silent auction, horseshoes, Hawaiian games, lei making and Hawaiian medicine, says organizers Darlyne Vierra and Liz Kuluwaimaka.
     Retired teachers who taught in Ka`u will be honored. The organization sponsoring the event is Ka`u Multicultural Society, with the slogan "Culture & Tradition Lives On."
Call 640-8740 or 339-0289.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

Pick up the August edition of The Ka`u Calendar delivered
free to 5,500 mailboxes throughout Ka`u, from Miloli`i 
through Volcano. Also available on stands throughout
the district. See it online at www.kaucalendar.com
VOLCANO FESTIVAL CHORUS, a holiday staple for years, is practicing for another season.
    Anyone who likes to sing and is interested in a holiday choir is invited to join. The first meeting is on Tuesday, Sept. 12 at Volcano School of Arts & Sciences, Keakealani (middle school) campus.
     Rehearsals are on Tuesdays at 7 p.m.  Performances take place early in December.      Volcano Festival Chorus is sponsored by Kilauea Drama & Entertainment Network. For more information, call Suzi Bond at 982-7344 or Roch Jones at 985-7026.

To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

Haku Hulu, Wed, Aug 9, 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., Kīlauea Visitor Center lānai in Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park. Local practitioner Pilialoha Johnson introduces the ancient Hawaiian skill of featherwork. Free; park entrance fees apply.

Backpack Name Tags, Wed, Aug 9, 3:30 – 5 p.m., Pāhala Community Center. Grades K – 8 register Aug 1 – 8. 928-0312.

Tango and classical music are among the offerings at the Hawai`i International Music Festival
 concert at Pahala Plantation House on Wednesday, Aug. 16 at 7 p.m.