Aunty’s Corner
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Aloha no, Aunty Kapua
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Coffees of Hawaii New Hours
December: Espresso bar: Mon.-Fri. 10-2, Sat. 8-2, closed Sun.
Gift shop: Mon.-Sat. 10-2
Starting New Year:
Bar: Mon.-Fri. 10-2, Sat. 8-2, Sun. 2-5
Gift shop: Closed
Molokai High School (MHS) winter sports season has arrived and teams are already hitting the floor, field and sea in search of victory. Here is a preview of the wrestling, paddling and swimming programs. Check out next week’s Dispatch for a look at soccer and basketball.
Wrestling
Kicking off the highly anticipated wrestling season was an invitational for the girls’ side, held last Saturday on Oahu. Over 25 schools turned out for the Punahou Invitational, including eight Lady Famers.
“It should be pretty good gauge of what the girls are up against, especially for states,” said head coach Randy Manley. The meet will “show where they need to improve.”
Roland Lizotte didn’t have any family on Molokai, so when he died on Nov. 18, it was his neighbors at Home Pumehana who were by his side. When he was buried last Saturday, it was in a coffin built by member of a local veterans group, in honor of a fellow solider.
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Community Contributed
By Glenn I. Teves, County Extension Agent, UH CTAHR Cooperative Extension Service
The relationship between humans and honeybees is ancient, as demonstrated by cave paintings in Spain, South Africa, and Nepal, depicting honey hunters collecting honey from wild hives. The honeybee was introduced to Hawaii in 1857, but the accidental introduction of the Varroa mite in 2007 puts this relationship in jeopardy and is one example of Hawaii’s vulnerability to invasive species.
Community Contributed
Provided by Amy Fujimoto
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Back in the mid 1900s on Molokai, it wasn’t unusual to go into the hospital to get your tonsils out and perhaps see a gurney with a dead body down the hall. Your doctor would have just come from delivering a baby. Hours before that, he would have taken your neighbor’s appendix out. You would have stayed in that hospital for a few days while your tonsils healed.
That was health care on Molokai 50 years ago. Dr. Paul Stevens was one of those doctors – and one of the few that stuck around on Molokai to tell the tale.
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Molokai Farmer without a farm? Not for long.
Molokai High School (MHS) recently celebrated the clearing of farmland adjacent to the school, allowing student to once again bring agricultural learning out of the classroom.
“This year, its like the new era – getting back to the land… and the opportunity to do some agriculture projects in the field,” said Principal Stan Hao.
The lot, which sits between MHS and the Ho`olehua Fire Station, was neglected over the last few years and became overgrown.
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Dear Monsanto Molokai,
Molokai High School would like to express our gratitude for the assistance with the clearing of our agriculture field.
• Coco Augustiro for coordinating everything, kindly working around our school schedules, having patience with us, and ultimately, “Making it all happen!” You made everything seem so simple! MAHALO!
• Dean Place, Gaylan Chang, and Rod Dudoit, for your awesome and exciting operator skills! It has been almost six years since we last had crops in our agriculture field; this task for us alone would have taken at least a year or two, or even three years to complete. The work you folks have done saved us valuable time, tons of money, and work. We enjoyed watching the machines push large trees and overgrown brush to clear our field. MAHALO!
• Deluna’s Equipment Services, for your assistance with the hauling of equipment and anything else that was needed, MAHALO!
Your donation to us has excited our students and faculty. Our faculty and students plan to have many things happening in our fields; the ideas range from native plants, kalo, sweet onions, ti-leaf, various flowers, fruit orchard, and a variety of vegetables. We are in the process now of strategizing parcels and putting in our irrigation system.
Again, a huge mahalo to you folks for all that you’ve done! You have helped to create an environment where students are more eager to learn and produce. Your time, dedication and commitment to us are much appreciated and will not be forgotten.
From all of us at Molokai High School,
Mahalo!
There is a traditional Molokai chant that tells of a prophecy made by the kahuna of Paku`i: After the ali`i have fallen, the common people will come together and hold Hawaii up.
That prophecy, in a way, came true last weekend in Honolulu. Three years after Act 212 set out to reestablish `Aha Moku councils, the ancient resource management system, nearly 200 representatives from each island, including Ni`ihau and Kaho`olawe, met to discuss their progress.