in

Search Results for: <

Fire Closes Oviedo’s

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Fire Closes Oviedo’s

A fire broke out in the kitchen of Oviedo’s Lunch Counter last Thursday afternoon, causing significant structural damage to the restaurant. No one was injured in the fire.

Owner Reynaldo Oviedo said he was talking story with a customer when he noticed the fire.

“Accidents happen,” he said. “The kitchen has been used for 36 years while I have been here and this is the first problem; you can’t avoid it.”

The fire spread east to the adjacent building, and damaged part of the first and second floor. Next door neighbor Sundown Deli was closed on Friday, Dec. 17.

“I was a little panicked to see in the kitchen a big fire so I grabbed a hose but couldn’t do much,” Oviedo added.

Capt. Travis Tancayo of the Kaunakakai Fire Station said the fire traveled fast, and people were yelling across the street to the fire station as calls were coming in.

Initial estimates are $50,000 in structural damage and $10,000 in content damage.

Giving the Gift of Art

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Giving the Gift of Art

A four-man string band, tables of fine craftsmanship and a crowd of art lovers breathed life into Molokai Arts Center last week in a show of appreciation and support for the new organization.

In an effort to bring Molokai its first collective space for creativity, the Molokai Arts Center hosted a fundraiser to help them reach their $30,000 goal for building renovation and upgrades.

“I have always wanted to retire into the arts, but there is center for support to do so!” said Gladys Stenen, a Molokai resident and business teacher. “I am here to support the artists and their goal to enrich the community of Molokai.”

An estimated 400 Molokai residents and visitors placed donations at the silent auction and enjoyed refreshing folk music from Brown Chicken Brown Cow band of Maui. 


“Today we are seeing a lot of generosity. I’m really happy people are opening their hearts and wallets to make it possible to bring an art center to Molokai,” said Treasurer Kim Markum. “We are just hoping for success.”

And a success it was.  The Molokai Arts Center raised nearly $4,000 and was recently awarded a $10,000 grant from the Atherton Family Foundation.

“We have about half of the necessary funds for the project,” said Molokai Arts Center President Emilia Noordhoek. “I know it sounds crazy but we are still pushing to reach our goal of finishing the building upgrade by April or May to open a summer program for the kids.”

The arts center bought a building behind Coffees of Hawaii, and money raised will go toward structural improvements.

For more information about the arts center, or to make a donation, visit www.molokaiarts.yolasite.com or contact Emilia Noordhoek at 808-216-3663.

The Christmas Flower

Friday, January 7th, 2011

The Christmas Flower

Community Contributed

By Glenn I. Teves, County Extension Agent, UH College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources

If there’s one plant that conveys the feeling that Christmas is near, it’s the poinsettia. Native to Central America and tropical Mexico where they’re known as flores de Noche Buena, flowers of the Holy Night, it adorns many households and ushers in the Christmas season. The plant is named after Joel Poinsett, the first U.S. Minister to Mexico, who introduced the plant to the U.S. in 1828. He shipped plants to his plantation in South Carolina, grew them successfully and began giving them away to friends. Poinsettia can be found growing on Molokai as a foot tall plant with pink streaks on its uppermost leaves or bracts.
 
It took almost 100 years before the real poinsettia fad began – not until the plant’s blooming cycle caught the attention of Albert Ecke and his son, Paul. Poinsettias ‘bloom’ in December and this is triggered by the short day length. Before long, a new holiday tradition was created. At their ranch in Encinitas, California, the Eckes began mass producing poinsettias, and selling them at roadside stands in Hollywood and Beverly Hills. Through a two-prong strategy of hybridizing and intense marketing, the poinsettia tradition was established. Several decades of work refining and diversifying their product bore “flowers.” Before long, they created new colors through intensive hybridizing, including scarlet, maroon, peach, greenish, shocking pink, white, and two-tones marbled or splashed, but the reds are still the top seller. Today, delicious new colors include Ice Punch, Eggnog, and Strawberries and Cream.


Paul Ecke began traveling nationwide, touting the virtues of this “Christmas plant” and it was a determined and successful marketing campaign few plants have ever enjoyed. The Ecke Ranch branched out, supplying field-grown “mother plants” to growers across the country, who in turn raised individual holiday pots from cuttings. To this day, the Ecke outfit sells plant material to about 80 percent of the American nursery trade – making the poinsettia a wildly successful family venture. Today, the company is led by Paul Ecke III, promotes conservation causes such as saving the polar bear through the sales of a new white poinsettia aptly named Polar Bear. This story is a testament to a farm family who ran with an idea and a dream, and never looked back.

Poinsettia’s brilliant color is not from flowers, but from bracts or modified leaves. The true flowers are the small yellow buttons called cyathia. In November and December, as our day length shortens, the bracts begin to form. When caring for poinsettia in the home, situate them where they’ll receive bright light, but without extreme heat. The wrapping around most pots will prevent the water from draining, so it’s a good idea to make some holes in them and use a saucer to catch excess water. Water plants when they’re dry to the touch, and add until it drains from the bottom of the pot.

During the six-week holiday season in Hawaii, over 300,000 poinsettias are sold here. Although poinsettia is a member of a plant family known to be poisonous, poinsettia itself is not poisonous. For more information on the care of poinsettia, you can download a brochure from the UH College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources website: http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/OF-44.pdf  Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night.

Students Today, Leaders Tomorrow

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Students Today, Leaders Tomorrow

Community Contributed

By Dara Lukonen

Acclaimed speaker, author and Molokai resident W. Mitchell, shared his inspiring story with the students of Aka`ula School, their family and the community recently. Mitchell spoke about the leadership lessons that can be learned from Dr. Seuss’s “The Lorax.”

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better.” He encouraged the students by explaining that anyone can be a leader and leadership knows no age limit. 

“If your actions inspire others to dream more, do more, become more, you are a leader,” he quoted John Quincy Adams.

Mitchell spoke at Aka`ula School’s 14th annual PRISM Symposium on Dec. 10. PRISM stands for Providing Resolutions with Integrity for a Sustainable Molokai.  This means students look at local issues and try to find answers by collecting a variety of viewpoints and information from the community.  They use their data to make recommendations and write action plans.  Students then create PowerPoint presentations to share with the community.


This year’s theme, “Being the Leaders of Tomorrow Today,” was inspired by the revision of Molokai’s Community Plan.  Experienced students conducted small group investigations on issues. PRISM also included workshops, where the community could learn to could pound poi, wili a lei, or carve a fishhook from wood, among others. The younger and new students in the PRISM 101class also shared their video documentaries of the visioning project and their monk seal investigation.
Aka`ula also awards a PRISM Excellence Award – this year honoring eighth grader Luke Kikukawa, who time and again has taken on a leadership role amongst his peers, working toward improving our island's sustainability and lessening our environmental impact. Luke’s father summed it up best. “Luke is keen, sharp, and motivated. Once he has a thought it is immediately put into action. You cannot hold him back.”

It was apparent on Saturday that these students truly believed in their theme.  By any definition they are leaders today working to make a better tomorrow for all of us.

Life of the Land

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Life of the Land

Community Contributed

By G.T. Larson

The Pacific Ocean, approximately 1000 A.D. The morning breaks like many others, bright and warm. The day wears on, providing a steady breeze allowing good progress of the voyage. As evening approaches, the cooling breeze seems to be whispering a note of change. The navigator’s diligent gaze travels the arch from the crimson glow of the western setting sun, to the purple afterglow and the inky black of the Earth’s shadow; night fall spreads across the heavens from the east. As he scans the heavens, he finds his newly acquired friend. When the voyage began, this flickering point of light was much lower to the northern horizon. As this journey of exploration has continued on its northerly traverse of the vast blue ocean, the starry night sentinel has risen steadily toward the zenith, directly overhead. This brilliant, slightly red guide will later be named Hoku`lea by these voyaging ancestors.

As the navigator’s experienced gaze takes in the heavenly inventory of the hundreds of stars and their associated constellations, his attention is again drawn to the faint red glow on the horizon. He quickly realizes that this shimmering light is straight off the sailing canoe’s bow to the north, whereas the last fading ember of the tropical sunset is to the west of the seafarers. This red-orange glimmer arrests the attention of all onboard. Faces of weathered age and wisdom, faces aglow with youth and vitality, faces that have endured tropical tempests and equatorial doldrums, all gaze in wonder, concern, and interest. As the glow intensifies it seems to have a movement of its own.


As the travelers continue their approach a small dark point begins to rise. The point becomes a spot and then a mass. On this mass, bright fiery ribbons lace the night sky with golden hues. The largest land mass any of them have ever seen rises from the dark depths, piercing the night sky. For most, if not all, it is the first time they have seen the earth molten. The now brilliant display of glowing red rivers abruptly ends in a spectacular battle of fire, steam and surf; as usual the sea is victorious. As the voyagers stare in amazement, the navigator takes note of the bright celestial friend, it is now directly overhead. Man has discovered Hawaii.

The preceding account is the author’s speculation of how it could have been. There are no written records, only chants, legends, and tales. What we do know is man traveled across a vast watery expanse, the Earth’s largest ocean. How many never made landfall we do not know, but Polynesians finally discovered Hawaii and a period of migration from the Southern Pacific began.

Today, both the ancestors of these early explorers and newly arrived settlers have a responsibility to share in the preservation of this land and the life therein. Be still, consider the wonders around us, lest we forget and are ultimately forgotten ourselves. Aloha Nui Loa.

No Mo Common Sense

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Paddlers Inn had four previous owners with a liquor license to operate a bar restaurant.  New local owner owns two establishments with liquor license; one on Kauai and one on Oahu, and has been given the third degree by Maui County. Six months later and today no liquor license. This equals fifteen to twenty people without work, less income tax to the state and federal government, commerce to Molokai and Maui County, and more unemployment claims.  

Molokai Dispatch 2010 Survey

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

Permaculture Stays on Molokai

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Permaculture Stays on Molokai

By Jill Ross and Harmonee Williams

Permaculture may be a relatively new word, but the idea behind it is ancient. Permaculture comes from studying traditional native systems that were truly sustainable, one of them being the ahupua`a system of Hawaii. It was bringing back this system, as well as tackling some of Molokai’s large-scale problems, such as mauka erosion and the resulting siltation on our reefs, that prompted Sust`aina-ble Molokai to initiate a recent comprehensive series of training.

From October through December, four intensive permaculture courses were held on Molokai, offered through a partnership between the Permaculture Research Institute (PRI) USA, Sust`aina-ble Molokai, and the Alu Like, Ho`ala Hou Program. The goal of these trainings was to provide tools to restore Molokai’s threatened watersheds, including the fishponds and reefs, to increase food security (i.e., grow more food on-island), and to create economic opportunities for residents.

Over 20 Molokai residents participated in the courses, as well as more than 20 students from around the world. Regardless of agricultural background and experience, most participants seemed to agree that the five weeks of training were inspirational and eye-opening.

Permaculture is a design system that works towards harmonious integration of landscape and people to provide food, shelter, energy, and other needs in a sustainable way. After participating in the courses, some residents described it as “being Hawaiian,” “sustainable agriculture,” and “just good common sense.” 


These courses taught practical, sustainable agricultural techniques, such as composting, mulching, seed-saving, and water harvesting (Earthworks).

The partnership that hosted this recent series of courses benefited all parties since Sust`aina-ble Molokai was interested in training residents with permaculture concepts, while PRI had been looking for a community-based organization to work with. In addition, a site was needed to conduct the trainings, and the Ho`ala Hou Wellness Center, located in Mahana, was able to provide both a classroom setting, as well as an outdoor site to implement the techniques.

For those who are interested in learning more or becoming involved, please check out the websites www.permacultureusa.org and www.sustainablemolokai.org. In addition, resident Kimo Melcher has been organizing bi-monthly permaculture meetings, which offer opportunities to talk story about permaculture ideas, as well as join work groups. The meetings are on the first and third Saturdays of each month at 1 p.m. at the old Kolapa House in Kaunakakai.

Thank you again to all who participated in these trainings, and shared their time, efforts, food, and mana`o. The island needs more sustainable agriculture now, and together, we’re bringing it.

Boxing Victories

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Don't have a Molokai Dispatch ID?

Sign up is easy. Sign up now

Lost Password