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HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR A plywood mock-up of a 1952 Mercedes-Benz 300SL. Six years after the end of World War II, the grand dame of the auto industry was struggling. Daimler-Benz had filed the first patent ever for an automobile in 1886; its cars had dazzled the grand prix racing circuit in the 1930s. But the war had devastated the company, and in the early’50s it
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofTHE `OHANA PAGES
Our Pago Pago ‘ohana welcomed Peter and the Talk Story team with music, song, dance and a meticulously rehearsed, traditional ava (kava) ceremony – a solemn ritual in Sāmoan society, in which the beverage is shared to mark important occasions. As is always the case in American Sāmoa, the spirit of talofa (aloha) was fully on display.PUBLIC WORKS
Over the 2014-2015 academic year SFCA funded ninety-one schools statewide, the most yet. Arts education program manager Vivien Lee has received 110 applications—nearly half of all public schools in Hawai‘i—for 2015-2016. Funding of up to $6,000 per school gives students access to painters, sculptors, actors, photographers, poetsand others.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR A plywood mock-up of a 1952 Mercedes-Benz 300SL. Six years after the end of World War II, the grand dame of the auto industry was struggling. Daimler-Benz had filed the first patent ever for an automobile in 1886; its cars had dazzled the grand prix racing circuit in the 1930s. But the war had devastated the company, and in the early’50s it
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofTHE `OHANA PAGES
Our Pago Pago ‘ohana welcomed Peter and the Talk Story team with music, song, dance and a meticulously rehearsed, traditional ava (kava) ceremony – a solemn ritual in Sāmoan society, in which the beverage is shared to mark important occasions. As is always the case in American Sāmoa, the spirit of talofa (aloha) was fully on display.PUBLIC WORKS
Over the 2014-2015 academic year SFCA funded ninety-one schools statewide, the most yet. Arts education program manager Vivien Lee has received 110 applications—nearly half of all public schools in Hawai‘i—for 2015-2016. Funding of up to $6,000 per school gives students access to painters, sculptors, actors, photographers, poetsand others.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR A plywood mock-up of a 1952 Mercedes-Benz 300SL. Six years after the end of World War II, the grand dame of the auto industry was struggling. Daimler-Benz had filed the first patent ever for an automobile in 1886; its cars had dazzled the grand prix racing circuit in the 1930s. But the war had devastated the company, and in the early’50s it
POWER TO THE PEOPLE
In Lāwa‘i, on Kaua‘i’s south side, the morning sun shimmers across two hundred acres that sixty years ago was prime sugar cane land. Today the cane is gone, replaced by 64,800 solar panels connected to 17,000 batteries housed in 9 containers the size of semitrailers.
THE TORCHBEARER
The Torchbearer. La‘akea Perry and Ke Kai o Kahiki carry on the ancient tradition of kāne hula. Story by Shannon Wianecki. Photos by Ha‘a Keaulana. In the pavilion at Lanikūhonua Cultural Institute in West Oʻahu, twelve men kneel on the cement, ignoring the agony in their shins. “Breathe,” says their kumu (teacher), La‘akeaPerry.
THE BIONIC MAN
The Bionic Man. Earl Bakken invented the battery-powered pacemaker in 1957. Today his invention keeps his own benevolent heart beating. Story by Tiffany Edwards-Hunt. Photos by Sarah Anderson. Earl Bakken was 85 years old in 2009 when a surgeon at North Hawaii Community Hospital in Waimea slipped a silver-dollar-size pacemaker beneath theskin
THE MASTER OF EDOMAE At 53, Nakazawa has abdicated cultlike status in Japan to start over—in a place of poke bowls and California rolls, where few have heard of Edomae sushi and even fewer understand it. It’s a daunting challenge, an improbable mission. And it’s the story of a sushimaster’s rebirth.
A ROAD LESS TAKEN
At the age of thirty and fresh off of Hui Alaloa’s success, Ritte found himself on a boat at dawn and seasick, enlisted to join the historic first invasion of the restricted island of Kaho‘olawe. The date was Jan. 4, 1976. At the time, the U.S. Navy was using the rugged forty-four-square-mile island, eight miles off the south Maui coast and dotted with Hawaiian archeological sites, as a THE MYSTERY OF THE HAWAIIAN AVOCADO Down at the farmers market at Kapi‘olani Community College, Ken Love and I watch people file through his avocado-tasting booth. Under the canopy, there’s a cornucopia of avocados. Love has lugged in more than 300 pounds of them from the Big Island. The avocado mavens quietly sample each of five varieties heaped in bite-size chunks onpaper
SHROOM BOOM
Fungus farms are among the strangest agricultural operations I’ve encountered—all are inside, though inside of what varies. Across from a car dealership in Kāne‘ohe, O‘ahu, two friends grow blush pink and silky gray oyster mushrooms on the second floor of a former recording studio (before that it was a paintball arena—the walls of the growing chambers are still splashed with orange). THE ASTOUNDING, ASTONISHING TAVARES BROTHERS The Tavares home was full of noisy activity. Cyrus, one of the older boys, showed his younger brother Freddie the way around a guitar, while the other kids banged away on the piano in the parlor. Ernest, the seventh child, was a proficient pianist by age nine and busied himself next with clarinet.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR It takes more than just mechanical skill to become the world’s premier classic Mercedes restorer. Add to Passarelli’s talent a passion for meticulous research and an elephantine memory for details. “I’ve seen him just walk into his shop where there are thousands and thousands of parts, and he’ll pick up a bolt and tell you what year and make of the car and where it was built,” saysMAN OF STEEL
Clang! The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME The first HAPA album debuted in 1993, ten long years after the group’s formation, offering a body of work that had slow-simmered, gradually incorporating spices and flavors and carefully selected ingredients (such as guest appearances from Stephen Stills and Kenny Loggins) until it was practically flawless.THE `OHANA PAGES
The arrival of Hawaiian Airlines’ DC-3s in 1941 presented a distinct set of challenges when it came to servicing Kaua‘i. Initially, the runway at Port Allen was found to be too short: The only strip of pavement long enough to handle large aircraft was at the Mana Airfield Military Reservation, alsoPUBLIC WORKS
Art for the keiki: Since 1965, the Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts has brought art and art education to Island people. Here teacher Jayson Isobe leads students from Pōmaika‘i Elementary on Maui through figure-drawing exercises.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR It takes more than just mechanical skill to become the world’s premier classic Mercedes restorer. Add to Passarelli’s talent a passion for meticulous research and an elephantine memory for details. “I’ve seen him just walk into his shop where there are thousands and thousands of parts, and he’ll pick up a bolt and tell you what year and make of the car and where it was built,” saysMAN OF STEEL
Clang! The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME The first HAPA album debuted in 1993, ten long years after the group’s formation, offering a body of work that had slow-simmered, gradually incorporating spices and flavors and carefully selected ingredients (such as guest appearances from Stephen Stills and Kenny Loggins) until it was practically flawless.THE `OHANA PAGES
The arrival of Hawaiian Airlines’ DC-3s in 1941 presented a distinct set of challenges when it came to servicing Kaua‘i. Initially, the runway at Port Allen was found to be too short: The only strip of pavement long enough to handle large aircraft was at the Mana Airfield Military Reservation, alsoPUBLIC WORKS
Art for the keiki: Since 1965, the Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts has brought art and art education to Island people. Here teacher Jayson Isobe leads students from Pōmaika‘i Elementary on Maui through figure-drawing exercises.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. MASTER OF THE MOTORCAR Passarelli figures it will take him another two years to finish the car, though he expects to have the engine and chassis operational within a few months. The original car was built, he says, “in, like, four months, which is unbelievable. Of course, they had a huge factory with an unlimited budget, probably.”POWER TO THE PEOPLE
In Lāwa‘i, on Kaua‘i’s south side, the morning sun shimmers across two hundred acres that sixty years ago was prime sugar cane land. Today the cane is gone, replaced by 64,800 solar panels connected to 17,000 batteries housed in 9 containers the size of semitrailers.
PA POHAKU - HANA HOU Hana Hou! Magazine. In addition to pa pohaku, the Hawaiian landscape houses kuapa, seawalls that enclose manmade fishponds known as loko i‘a. Peter Keka is too modest to come out and say it, but he must have known he was the right guy for the job when he was hired to help restore Kaloko-Honokahau National Park’s massive loko i‘a, which was originally constructed some 800 years ago at the THE MYSTERY OF THE HAWAIIAN AVOCADO Down at the farmers market at Kapi‘olani Community College, Ken Love and I watch people file through his avocado-tasting booth. Under the canopy, there’s a cornucopia of avocados. Love has lugged in more than 300 pounds of them from the Big Island. THE MASTER OF EDOMAE In sushi there is kaisen—the style of pristine raw seafood atop pristine white- vinegar rice known widely around the planet—and there is Edomae.It takes skill, a keen palate and finesse to master kaisen sushi; it takes all this plus alchemy to succeed in Edomae. From the beginning Nakazawa chose the latter.THE BIONIC MAN
Earl Bakken was 85 years old in 2009 when a surgeon at North Hawaii Community Hospital in Waimea slipped a silver-dollar-size pacemaker beneath the skin covering his rib cage and threaded a tiny electrode through a vein to his heart.. Under general anesthesia and wide awake during the procedure, Bakken was accustomed to being on the receiving end of implantable medical devices.SHROOM BOOM
Fungus farms are among the strangest agricultural operations I’ve encountered—all are inside, though inside of what varies. Across from a car dealership in Kāne‘ohe, O‘ahu, two friends grow blush pink and silky gray oyster mushrooms on the second floor of a former recording studio (before that it was a paintball arena—the walls of the growing chambers are still splashed with orange).THE TORCHBEARER
In the pavilion at Lanikūhonua Cultural Institute in West Oʻahu, twelve men kneel on the cement, ignoring the agony in their shins. “Breathe,” says their kumu (teacher), La‘akea Perry.A ROAD LESS TAKEN
At the age of thirty and fresh off of Hui Alaloa’s success, Ritte found himself on a boat at dawn and seasick, enlisted to join the historic first invasion of the restricted island of Kaho‘olawe. The date was Jan. 4, 1976. At the time, the U.S. Navy was using the rugged forty-four-square-mile island, eight miles off the south Maui coast and dotted with Hawaiian archeological sites, as aHANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofFETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.THE HEALING TREE
The Healing Tree. Story by Lesa Griffith. Photos by Michelle Mishina. David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even THE VALLEY’S KEEPER The Valley’s Keeper. Story by Sonny Ganaden. Photos by David Chatsuthiphan.. Dawn breaks, filling Roddy Kawehi Kamawaelualani Akau’s living room with light and illuminating a large collection of old black-and-white photographs on the wall. In one photo a group of women, nude from the waist up and staring straight into the camera,bathe in a
HANA HOU!ABOUTISSUE 22.1 FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019SHAPING FOR THE AGESHIVE MINDERSHAWAI‘I ON THE PLAYA Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
FETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.THE GREEN BRIGADE
The Green Brigade. Rappelling from ridges and slogging through swamps, the Plant Extinction Prevention Program protects Hawai‘i’s rarest species. Story by Christie Wilcox. Photos by Mallory Roe. The wind whips around our faces as Josh VanDeMark loops his orange rappellingrope
HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.THE HEALING TREE
The Healing Tree. Story by Lesa Griffith. Photos by Michelle Mishina. David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even THE VALLEY’S KEEPER The Valley’s Keeper. Story by Sonny Ganaden. Photos by David Chatsuthiphan.. Dawn breaks, filling Roddy Kawehi Kamawaelualani Akau’s living room with light and illuminating a large collection of old black-and-white photographs on the wall. In one photo a group of women, nude from the waist up and staring straight into the camera,bathe in a
HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
FETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.POWER TO THE PEOPLE
In Lāwa‘i, on Kaua‘i’s south side, the morning sun shimmers across two hundred acres that sixty years ago was prime sugar cane land. Today the cane is gone, replaced by 64,800 solar panels connected to 17,000 batteries housed in 9 containers the size of semitrailers.
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofMAN OF STEEL
Man of Steel. Story by Meghan Miner Murray. Photos by Ronit Fahl. It’s a hot, dusty day in the Kona Old Industrial Area, but it’s even hotter behind the metal door to the garage that serves as a workshop for Neil Kamimura. A tiny forge radiates an electric orange akin to the lava lake inside Kīlauea on the other side of the island,and it
LIHOLIHO'S PRIDE
Liholiho's Pride. The artifacts from Kamehameha II’s lost yacht tell a remarkable tale of nineteenth-century Hawai‘i. Story by Paul Johnston. In the spring of 1824, a stately two-masted sailing ship named Haaheo o Hawaii dropped anchor in Hanalei bay on Kaua‘i. Eighty-three feet at the waterline and one hundred feet on deck, shewas the
THE FARTHEST SHORE
A year and a half and more than ten thousand nautical miles into her epic journey around the world, Hōkūle‘a has arrived in South Africa—virtually as far away from Hawai‘i as you can get—only to be welcomed to a spot that all of us might call home. In 1997 Peter and fellow archeologist Jonathan Kaplan were conducting a survey here at Pinnacle Point, near the beach town of Mossel Bay SHAPING FOR THE AGES Shaping for the Ages. Story by Kyle Ellison. Photos by Dana Edmunds. When millions of grasshoppers took to the skies and descended upon Lemmon, South Dakota, the sport of surfing was changed forever. It was the 1930s, when farmers were already grappling with drought, and the insect invasion was enough reason to pack up and drive west until thePELE'S PH.D.
Pele's Ph.D. story by Stu Dawrs. photo by Monte Costa. Kuleana can be a difficult concept for those who like their meaning cut and dried. It can translate alternately as “right” (as in an entitlement), “authority” or “responsibility” or simultaneously as all three. But really it’s a simple equation: Rights carry power andHANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofFETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.THE HEALING TREE
The Healing Tree. Story by Lesa Griffith. Photos by Michelle Mishina. David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even THE VALLEY’S KEEPER The Valley’s Keeper. Story by Sonny Ganaden. Photos by David Chatsuthiphan.. Dawn breaks, filling Roddy Kawehi Kamawaelualani Akau’s living room with light and illuminating a large collection of old black-and-white photographs on the wall. In one photo a group of women, nude from the waist up and staring straight into the camera,bathe in a
HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME Hapa’s Long Journey Home. After seventeen years apart, the dynamic musical duo has reunited. Story by Larry Lieberman. Photos by Michelle Mishina. When I first moved to Maui in 1985 as a young musician, there was one group playing around town that everyone told me not to miss. It consisted of two guys with guitars—Irish-American BarryBACK FROM THE DEAD
Back from the Dead. After thirty years drumming for the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann’s found a new groove. Story by Michael Shapiro. Photos by Mike Coots. Bill the drummer loves the sheep. They trot away from the golf cart as we tool around on his farmland in ruralKaua‘i, the
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofFETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.HEWING TO TRADITION
In the dark is where your dream starts. In that time you formulate the utterance. Then E ala e!”. His voice rises as he quotes a phrase often used to greet the dawn. “You utter the utterance. Then you finish the prayer by doing what you have uttered.”. Every star, Ka‘ai believes, is a campfire of someone’s ancestor.THE HEALING TREE
The Healing Tree. Story by Lesa Griffith. Photos by Michelle Mishina. David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even THE VALLEY’S KEEPER The Valley’s Keeper. Story by Sonny Ganaden. Photos by David Chatsuthiphan.. Dawn breaks, filling Roddy Kawehi Kamawaelualani Akau’s living room with light and illuminating a large collection of old black-and-white photographs on the wall. In one photo a group of women, nude from the waist up and staring straight into the camera,bathe in a
HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
FETE IN THE GARDEN
The wind drops and goes quiet before a sudden rain pours on twenty dancers performing in costumes made of plants from nearby forests and gardens. A thousand spectators crowd under tarps encircling the grass stage. As the dancers rush off to the drumming of the ten-piece band, cheers and applause mix with the drumbeat of rain on the tarps.POWER TO THE PEOPLE
In Lāwa‘i, on Kaua‘i’s south side, the morning sun shimmers across two hundred acres that sixty years ago was prime sugar cane land. Today the cane is gone, replaced by 64,800 solar panels connected to 17,000 batteries housed in 9 containers the size of semitrailers.
MAN OF STEEL
The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf. He means the sweaty exertion, the pure pleasure of reshaping steel. Under Greywolf’s hammer, metal morphs into hunting knives, daggers, swords, throwing axes, machetes and even full suits ofMAN OF STEEL
Man of Steel. Story by Meghan Miner Murray. Photos by Ronit Fahl. It’s a hot, dusty day in the Kona Old Industrial Area, but it’s even hotter behind the metal door to the garage that serves as a workshop for Neil Kamimura. A tiny forge radiates an electric orange akin to the lava lake inside Kīlauea on the other side of the island,and it
LIHOLIHO'S PRIDE
Liholiho's Pride. The artifacts from Kamehameha II’s lost yacht tell a remarkable tale of nineteenth-century Hawai‘i. Story by Paul Johnston. In the spring of 1824, a stately two-masted sailing ship named Haaheo o Hawaii dropped anchor in Hanalei bay on Kaua‘i. Eighty-three feet at the waterline and one hundred feet on deck, shewas the
THE FARTHEST SHORE
A year and a half and more than ten thousand nautical miles into her epic journey around the world, Hōkūle‘a has arrived in South Africa—virtually as far away from Hawai‘i as you can get—only to be welcomed to a spot that all of us might call home. In 1997 Peter and fellow archeologist Jonathan Kaplan were conducting a survey here at Pinnacle Point, near the beach town of Mossel Bay SHAPING FOR THE AGES Shaping for the Ages. Story by Kyle Ellison. Photos by Dana Edmunds. When millions of grasshoppers took to the skies and descended upon Lemmon, South Dakota, the sport of surfing was changed forever. It was the 1930s, when farmers were already grappling with drought, and the insect invasion was enough reason to pack up and drive west until thePELE'S PH.D.
Pele's Ph.D. story by Stu Dawrs. photo by Monte Costa. Kuleana can be a difficult concept for those who like their meaning cut and dried. It can translate alternately as “right” (as in an entitlement), “authority” or “responsibility” or simultaneously as all three. But really it’s a simple equation: Rights carry power andHANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME The first HAPA album debuted in 1993, ten long years after the group’s formation, offering a body of work that had slow-simmered, gradually incorporating spices and flavors and carefully selected ingredients (such as guest appearances from Stephen Stills and Kenny Loggins) until it was practically flawless.HEWING TO TRADITION
“The institutionalized knowledge that had been preserved and passed down from generation to generation of kāhuna kālai ki‘i came to an abrupt end in 1819, because the kāhuna carvers were no longer needed,” Perez says.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
MAN OF STEEL
Clang! The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf.BACK FROM THE DEAD
Just after Deal was published in 2015, the surviving members of the Grateful Dead reunited for “Fare Thee Well,” a run of five shows at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, and Chicago’s Soldier Field, where the Dead had played their final show before Garcia’s death. As the name suggests, it was to be a farewell and thank-you to the ardent fans—a.k.a. Deadheads —many ofFETE IN THE GARDEN
Teaching Tahitian dance and music is an ‘ohana-friendly way to make a living. Several of Moua’s students—Coco Hotahota, Roiti Tahauri Sylva and others—traveled the world teaching workshops, often subsidized by government and businesses, which introduced non-Tahitians to the athletic and demanding practice of Tahitiandance.
MAN OF STEEL
It’s a hot, dusty day in the Kona Old Industrial Area, but it’s even hotter behind the metal door to the garage that serves as a workshop for Neil Kamimura. A tiny forge radiates an electric orange akin to the lava lake inside Kīlauea on the other side of the island, and it’s about as hot, too.THE HEALING TREE
David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even though“he knew nothing about cows,” he says. He bought land in Wai‘anae, called it MountainHANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more. HAPA’S LONG JOURNEY HOME The first HAPA album debuted in 1993, ten long years after the group’s formation, offering a body of work that had slow-simmered, gradually incorporating spices and flavors and carefully selected ingredients (such as guest appearances from Stephen Stills and Kenny Loggins) until it was practically flawless.HEWING TO TRADITION
“The institutionalized knowledge that had been preserved and passed down from generation to generation of kāhuna kālai ki‘i came to an abrupt end in 1819, because the kāhuna carvers were no longer needed,” Perez says.TREASURE ISLANDS
photos by Rae Huo text by Liza Simon. In the beginning, there was the palaoa, a whale’s tooth hung on a necklace of woven hair, an amulet reserved for the alii.The palaoa set the course for Island-style adornment: Hawaii’s earliest artists used material formed in nature’s incubator shell, bone, coral, feathers, fiber to crafttheir jewelry.
MAN OF STEEL
Clang! The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf.BACK FROM THE DEAD
Just after Deal was published in 2015, the surviving members of the Grateful Dead reunited for “Fare Thee Well,” a run of five shows at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, and Chicago’s Soldier Field, where the Dead had played their final show before Garcia’s death. As the name suggests, it was to be a farewell and thank-you to the ardent fans—a.k.a. Deadheads —many ofFETE IN THE GARDEN
Teaching Tahitian dance and music is an ‘ohana-friendly way to make a living. Several of Moua’s students—Coco Hotahota, Roiti Tahauri Sylva and others—traveled the world teaching workshops, often subsidized by government and businesses, which introduced non-Tahitians to the athletic and demanding practice of Tahitiandance.
MAN OF STEEL
It’s a hot, dusty day in the Kona Old Industrial Area, but it’s even hotter behind the metal door to the garage that serves as a workshop for Neil Kamimura. A tiny forge radiates an electric orange akin to the lava lake inside Kīlauea on the other side of the island, and it’s about as hot, too.THE HEALING TREE
David Wong didn’t set out to be a moringa farmer—in fact, the ‘Iolani School graduate was a General Motors executive in Detroit. But in 1967 he was called home to save the family dairy business even though“he knew nothing about cows,” he says. He bought land in Wai‘anae, called it MountainHANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.HANA HOU!
Hawaiian Airlines’ inflight magazine Hana Hou! is the premier arts, culture and lifestyle magazine of the Hawaiian Islands, with an akamai, or clued-in, regional perspective that’s entertaining and informative for visitors and residents alike. Features long-form stories covering the arts, sciences, natural history, sports, Native Hawaiian culture and much more.MAN OF STEEL
Clang! The blacksmith’s hammer smites a red-hot metal rod. Sparks fly. The rod flattens one blow at a time. “I love this,” says Christopher Greywolf.THE TORCHBEARER
In the pavilion at Lanikūhonua Cultural Institute in West Oʻahu, twelve men kneel on the cement, ignoring the agony in their shins. “Breathe,” says their kumu (teacher), La‘akea Perry.THE GREEN BRIGADE
The wind whips around our faces as Josh VanDeMark loops his orange rappelling rope around a large ‘ōhi‘a tree several times. We are standing on the rim of Kalalau valley on Kaua‘i. The lush, green cliffs plunge into a fertile gorge. In the distance I can see the shore and the sparkling ocean.THE FARTHEST SHORE
A year and a half and more than ten thousand nautical miles into her epic journey around the world, Hōkūle‘a has arrived in South Africa—virtually as far away from Hawai‘i as you can get—only to be welcomed to a spot that all of us might call home. In 1997 Peter and fellow archeologist Jonathan Kaplan were conducting a survey here at Pinnacle Point, near the beach town of Mossel BayPELE'S PH.D.
So it is that Kuualoha is one of several modern scholars who have accepted as their kuleana the task of delving into early Hawaiian literature and restoring the original depth and complexity to these stories. In doing so, they are not only giving voice to a history that was largely unheard for much of the twentieth century, but also allowing that history to be reincorporated into day-to-day life.THE BIONIC MAN
Earl Bakken was 85 years old in 2009 when a surgeon at North Hawaii Community Hospital in Waimea slipped a silver-dollar-size pacemaker beneath the skin covering his rib cage and threaded a tiny electrode through a vein to his heart.. Under general anesthesia and wide awake during the procedure, Bakken was accustomed to being on the receiving end of implantable medical devices.MAPPING THE STONES
Forbidden fruits were just the start. Once that kapu was shattered, the entire religious scaffolding collapsed—or rather, was torn down. With the consent of the high priest Hewahewa, Liholiho ordered the destruction of all the temples and sacred images throughout thekingdom.
THE VALLEY’S KEEPER Dawn breaks, filling Roddy Kawehi Kamawaelualani Akau’s living room with light and illuminating a large collection of old black-and-white photographs on the wall.. In one photo a group of women, nude from the waist up and staring straight into the camera, bathe in a forest pool. logo__hanahou- menu* logo__hanahou-
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HANA HOU!
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Issue 23.4
October - December 2020 While it might not be easy to fly to the Islands this fall, it’s easy to stay connected with our October/November/December issue full of the stories of the people and places of Hawai’i, including a feature about the harrowing and heroic work of the Coast Guard’s elite rescue swimmers; a look back at the fight for the right of Hawai’i's women to vote on the hundredth anniversary of women’s suffrage; and a beautiful photo feature about marine symbiosis—relationships among the ocean’s creatures. Also in this issue: Renowned Maui luthier Steve Grimes celebrates the creation of his thousandth instrument; the late kālai waʻa (canoe carver) Ray Bumatay visits the Smithsonian Institution to study Queen Kap’iolani’s gift of an outrigger canoe when she visited the museum in 1887; and painting _en plein air _(outdoors) in Hawai’i’s only plein air event, the Maui Plein Air Painting Invitational. Thank you for reading, and aloha ‘oe until we can once again travel freely to and from these beloved Islands.ARTICLES
The Tone Poet
The thousand instruments of Steve Grimes Story by Deborah Caulfield Rybak. Photos by Todd Soliday & BruceForrester.
The Perfect Vessel
What can Queen Kapi‘olani’s gift to the Smithsonian teach the kālai wa‘a of today? Story by Catharine Lo Griffin. Photos by Dino Morrow.Outside Job
Hawai‘i is the inspiration at the fifteenth Maui Plein Air PaintingInvitational
Story by Paul Wood. Photos by Dana Edmunds.Sponsored
Indich Collection
Indich Collection celebrates 40 years as Hawaii’s premier importer of fine quality Oriental Carpets & Hawaiian Rugs®.Read more...
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Issue 22.2
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