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The New Health Center

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Community Contributed

Aloha. As the Vice President of the Molokai Community Health Center Board of Directors, I want to share a video that I recently produced to help spread the word about this special organization and its forward thinking, holistic approach to the health and wellness of our entire island community. Check out molokaimatt at YouTube.com or his website IslandLifeVideos.com for more information.

Matt Yamashita

 

Aunty’s Corner

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Aunty’s Corner

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Malama Ko Aloha, Aunty Kapua

Mango Season Not Pau

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Mango Season Not Pau

Community Contributed

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

Mango is called the King of Fruits for good reason. Nothing could be better than an ice cold mango on a hot afternoon. Native to South and Southeast Asia, mango has been cultivated for over 4,000 years, and was introduced into Hawaii in the early 1800s from Mexico. Molokai has an ideal hot, dry growing climate, and the best area is a belt running from Kalamaula to Kamalo. Unfortunately, the further east you go, the windier it gets, and nothing can be more damaging to a potentially great crop of mango than wind blowing off flowers and fruits. On most islands, mango season runs from June to October with the peak in the earlier half of the season, but for Molokai if you look hard enough, you can probably find mango 9 months of the year especially around the Kaunakakai area.

Mango is not without its problems. Of the tens of thousands of flowers it bears, less than a fraction of 1 percent will actually make it to harvest. With the challenges of four to five months of growing from flower to mature fruit, they face serious diseases and other maladies along the way. Powdery mildew, a whitish fungus, favors dry cool weather and can destroy all the flowers. Anthracnose, a blackish fungus that favors wet weather, can destroy both flowers and even mature fruits. The mango weevil will bore into the fruit and seed through the stem or pedicel of the mango, ruining a good mango. Fruit flies, especially the Oriental Fruit Fly, will inject its eggs into a half-ripe or mature fruit and rot it. Another common problem is jelly seed, where the flesh around the seed gets translucent and will ferment, imparting a bad taste to a good mango. After all is said and done, it’s amazing we can still find edible mangoes on our trees.

Mango varieties recommended for Hawaii face rigorous testing at UH Research Stations throughout the state. Unfortunately, we have no research stations on Molokai. Some of the recommended varieties for Hawaii include Fairchild, Gouviea, Harders, Keitt, Manzanillo, Momi K, Pope, Rapoza, and Molokai’s own Ah Ping. These are considered regular bearers, and will bear a good crop each year. Others, such as Haden, have an alternate bearing habit and will bear heavy one year, with a light crop the next. Still, a great Haden is hard to beat. Some varieties, such as Exel, Mapulehu, and Pirie require ideal mango weather only found in Molokai’s mango belt to grow well. In wetter areas, only a few varieties will perform well, including Fairchild and Rapoza since they appear to have some tolerance to anthracnose. New varieties are brought in from Florida and southeast Asia, and some do very well in Hawaii, but until they’re tested over a long period of time, you really cannot determine if they will match up to what we already grow.

There are also many excellent unnamed varieties on Molokai, and part of this is due to the presence of the old Hawaii Sugar Planters Experimental Station at Mapulehu where there are about 40 acres of mango, including many rare Indian varieties, such as Mulgoba, Sandersha, Alphonso, Bombay Green, and others. Many residents have planted seedlings, and now have a new variety. Common mango is still a local favorite because it’s a heavy bearer, will bear off season, can be eaten ripe or picked green and made into pickled mango, a local treat.

A friend, Henry Pali Jr. mentioned to me that he believes mango was the fruit in the Garden of Eden because it made man go. Enjoy it while it lasts, because when there’s no mango, you’ll be craving for just one more.

Fall Race Series Results

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Community Contributed

Meet the Candidate: Charmaine Tavares

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Meet the Candidate: Charmaine Tavares

Mayor Charmaine Tavares knows Molokai, having held a Maui County Council seat for 10 years prior to being elected mayor three years ago. She visited the Friendly Isle two weeks ago to talk story with residents, and stopped by the Dispatch to discuss Maui’s economy, Molokai’s agriculture and alternative energy.

Molokai Dispatch (MD): How’s your campaign going?

Charmaine Tavares (CT): It’s going. It’s very busy because just running the county as the current mayor keeps me busy and now the forums and the panels and the invitations for coffee hours to come talk to this group and that group. I love meeting with those groups because that’s how I get a feel for what the community is thinking or what segments of the community are thinking, and I get a better picture of how people feel we’re doing economically or their personal lives or their community lives.

MD: What concerns have voters been talking to you about?

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The Hawaii state primaries are on Sept. 18.

Free 21st Century Classes Open to the Public

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Community Contributed

Aka`ula to Host Youth Visioning Summit

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Community Contributed

By Dara Lukonen

In 1999, students from four elementary schools and the middle school came together to generate a youth vision for Molokai.  Eleven years later, it is time to revisit and re-evaluate the visioning goals and rekindle the spirit that infused the original visioning project. 

For Ka Ho`omohala Nu`ukia Molokai – Youth Vision Project 2010, 22 sixth through eighth grade students will be selected to attend and we would love to see all Molokai schools (serving grades six through eight) represented. This project is free of charge for students and has been made possible through grants and donations. 

Primary Colors

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Primary Colors

She may not be old enough to drive or stay out past 10 p.m., but this week sixth grader Ava Hughes will cast a vote in the primary election.

Sort of.

Hughes is one of thousands of students participating in Kids Voting Hawaii. The mock voting program, which is a part of the national program Kids Voting USA, began in 1996 as a way to prepare students for the responsibility of voting. In the 2008 presidential election, over 119,000 Hawaii students voted, according to the program’s website.

This week, Molokai students will vote online in a primary election for congressional, governor, lieutenant governor and mayoral candidates. Results will be published on the website Saturday for kids to see how their picks measured up.

“It’s a good thing for kids everywhere to know how to vote before they do for the first time,” Hughes, who attends Aka`ula School, said.

Aka`ula students are discussing the election and political issues in class this week before voting. Hughes has already done some research – she said the issues she is focused on are education and the environment.

“We talk to students about the civic responsibilities of voting, like knowing who the candidates are,” said Dara Lukonen, Aka`ula principal.

And unlike actual elections, participation in Kids Voting Hawaii is mandatory at many schools.

“Our kids vote a lot better than adults do,” said Richard Stevens, Kilohana Elementary School principal.

Organic Program Chopped

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Organic Program Chopped

The state’s only organic-certifying body, the Hawaii Organic Farmers Association (HOFA), will suspend its program this month, forcing organic farmers in Hawaii to look to the mainland for certification.

Rising costs and a limited client pool prompted the Hilo-based group to end certification, which it began in 1993. HOFA certifies a bounty of products – from coffee to herbs to beer.

“Part of the reason HOFA is not surviving is that we didn’t charge enough,” said Sarah Townsend, HOFA’s certification coordinator. “We’re not big enough to sustain ourselves.”

Some organic farmers on Molokai worry certification from the mainland will come at a higher cost.

“It’s hard enough trying to make a living farming and now we have to go to the mainland?” said Rick Tamanaha of Kaleikoa Farms, an organic papaya farm in Ho`olehua.

Tamanaha’s farm was certified organic by HOFA in October 2007, and he has renewed his certification through the organization every year since. The organic label, he said,  allows his farm to compete with non-organic farms that sell at lower costs.  

Townsend said farmers will see a slight increase in the cost of certification. However, HOFA has also struck a deal with North Dakota-based International Certification Services (ICS) to give HOFA certified-producers discounts on application and certification fees.
 
“They seem like they have the closest philosophy to HOFA,” Townsend said. She is now working with ICS as its Hawaii region customer care specialist to help farmers with the transition.

The two Molokai-based organic inspectors have also notified ICS they want to continue inspecting. James Boswell and Faith Tuipulotu were trained by HOFA in 2008 to do certification inspections, saving Molokai farmers the cost of inspectors’ travel expenses when applying for certification.

Boswell, who works at the University of Hawaii Maui College’s Molokai Farm, said he has not heard back from ICS.

HOFA will end its certifications Sept. 30; farms certified by HOFA will be certified until mid-2011. Townsend said HOFA is now focusing on education and farmer advocacy. 

Molokai Taro Variety Field Day

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Molokai Taro Variety Field Day

Community Contributed

By Alton S. Arakaki, County Extension Agent

Lehua or Lehua Maoli is a native Hawaiian taro variety name most familiar today.  That is because it is the most common variety that is made into poi we see in the market today.  But have you ever heard of taro varieties called Lauloa Eleele ula or Ulaula Poni or Manini Kea or Nihopuu?  At one time these varieties, along as many as 300 other varieties, were in the common kalo language in native Hawaiian communities as Lehua. 

On Saturday, Sept. 18, Hawaiian taro varieties and their significance to the Hawaiian culture will be discussed at the 2010 Molokai Taro Variety Field Day. Held at the Molokai Agriculture Park at 8:30 a.m., Mr. Jerry Konanui will be our featured speaker.

Many years ago, as poi making became a commercial activity and fewer families made their own poi, commercial poi mills like any other manufacturing operation tried to deliver a predictable and consistent product their customers expected.   This required commercial poi mills to narrow their selection of taro varieties for poi making to deliver a poi product that had consistent taste, viscosity and stickiness, and most of all color.  Taro farmers also conformed to the needs of poi mills and began to produce varieties that produced a consistent poi product.  Eventually that variety became Lehua Maoli, and a more narrowly focused, Lehua Maoli that are produce in lo`i, or wetland paddy fields you see today in Hanalei and Waimea Valley on Kauai.  Other varieties fell victims to farming philosophy “if you can’t sell’um don’t grow’um.”  Today lesser known taro varieties are grown by families that are familiar with them through generations of growing and consuming them or by private collectors and institutions that share similar cultural or educational goals.  Thus the numbers of native Hawaiian taro varieties we have today have dwindled down to about 70 today.

Taro farming is hard work that requires the use of valuable and limited land, water and labor resources.  I’d like to believe that Native Hawaiians developed and maintained many of these varieties because they had some value.  They had hardly the resources to waste on things that didn’t contribute to their daily existence.  At one time many ahupua`a, or land divisions, grew their own varieties, and even grew varieties that were reserved for Hawaiian royalties that visited their ahupua`a.  Why they grew certain varieties in certain ahupua`a is knowledge that has not been captured well in historic information.  All we know is certain varieties were favored over others in many of the ahupua`a that had different micro climates throughout the state.   At least one of the reasons I’d like to believe they produced a particular variety is that it produced well in the ahupua`a to meet the five-to-nine pound of taro consumption per person per day, for the carbohydrates needed to generate the body energy to perform the daily physical tasks of survival.  Now that there is increasing awareness and more discussions on sustainable communities and food security, the source and security of nutritional carbohydrates need to be part of the discussion.  Or maybe it is also about time for these varieties are returned to their ahupua`a to learn more about what the Native Hawaiians knew about them and for their safe keeping.

We will have cooked samples of different taro varieties.  A limited amount of native Hawaiian variety taro huli will be available for you to cut.  If you are interested in cutting huli, come in your field attire, taro sap will stain.  Please bring your own container, tools, pens and labels.  A tank of Clorox solution will be prepared for treating your huli for soil plant diseases that might be on the surface of the planting materials.  Planting native Hawaiian varieties will help preserve and perpetuate these rare culturally significant plants and also help clean and prepare the field for the next project.