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Upcoming

USDA Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program Workshops
Hilo, Waimea, and Kealakekua, Hawai‘i Island
May 13-14, 2014

The Seventh Annual School Learning Garden Symposium
Waimea, Hawai‘i Island
June 7, 2014

ʻĀINA In Schools Garden & Nutrition Curriculum Training
Waimea, Hawai‘i Island
June 8, 2014

Kū ‘Āina Pā Summer Intensive
Waimea, Hawai‘i Island
June 9-11, 2014

Waimea School Garden Tours
Waimea, Hawai‘i Island
June 12, 2014

Natural Farming Certification Course
Kailua-Kona, Hawai‘i Island
June 17-21, 2014





Recent News

The Honaunau School garden, run by Melissa Chivers and Jessica Sobocinski, is more than just a place where flowers and vegetables grow; it is a living classroom where students and teachers can observe, interact with, and learn about the natural world that is responsible for supporting human existence on this planet.
more

Almost two years since it was completed, The Kohala Center’s Health Impact Assessment on Hawaii County’s Agriculture Plan has garnered national attention and helped produce meaningful effects on the local food system.
more



© 2008-2014 The Kohala Center
All rights reserved.

News 2006 - 2008

Fellowships for Native Hawaiian Scholars
December 31, 2008


The Mellon-Hawaii Doctoral and Postdoctoral Fellowship Program provides Native Hawaiian scholars the opportunity to complete their dissertations or to publish original research. Applications for the 2009-10 fellowship program are being accepted by The Kohala Center.

» read more

Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.

Fellowships for Native Hawaiian Scholars
December 30, 2008

By The Kohala Center

The Mellon-Hawaii Doctoral and Postdoctoral Fellowship Program provides Native Hawaiian scholars the opportunity to complete their dissertations or to publish original research. Applications for the 2009-2010 fellowship program are being accepted by The Kohala Center.

Click here to view the article online.

Used with permission from Guava Bee.

Blessings upon all
December 28, 2008

By Carol Yurth

Happy New Year. May this year bring you unimagined blessings! Here's a year-end message from Matt Hamabata, Ph.D, entitled "Paradoxically, a Time of Opportunity and Optimism."

» read more

Used with permission from Hawaii Tribune Herald.



Growing Trend
December, 2008

By Shara Enay

IT’S NO SECRET: Hawaii is facing a farmer shortage, which could one day cripple the state’s local agriculture industry. That’s why for the past year, Nancy Redfeather, executive director of the Hawaii Island School Gardens Network, has been working closely with Big Island parents and educators to get students interested in farming by creating their own on-site gardens.

» read more

Click here to view the article online.

Used with permission from Hawaii Business.


Saturday workshop focuses on growing food
Wednesday, November 19, 2008


In the last year, the Hawaii Island School Garden Network has expanded to serve school gardens in communities around the island. There are currently 45 projects, at varying stages of development, participating in the Garden Network.

» read more


Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.



Field of Dreams - Why Big Island farmers are key to a sustainable state economy
November, 2008
By Shara Enay

Friends of Richard Ha, president of Hamakua Springs Country Farm, describe him as the ultimate Big Island boy: humble, a little bit country and deeply passionate about the place he calls home. When he started out as a modest banana farmer more than 30 years ago, he had simple goals: raise his crops and provide for his family.

» read more

Click here to view the article online.

Used with permission from Hawaii Business.



A guide for volunteering out

Sunday October 26, 2008
by Bobby Command

"Preserving Paradise: Opportunities in Volunteering for Hawai'i's Environment." by Kirsten Whatley. Ever since humans have been in Kona, Kahalu'u Bay has been a community focal point. Its fertile soils and water supply once supported a major village of Native Hawaiians, and today snorkeling and surfing attract 400,000 users a year.

» read more

Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.



Hawaiian park reborn, thanks to UW students
Thursday, July 10, 2008

By Catherine O'Donnell

For Iain Robertson, a UW landscape architecture professor, Kahaluʻu Beach Park turned out to be one of the most fascinating projects he's ever worked on.
» read more

Used with permission from University Week, the faculty/staff newspaper at the University of Washington.



Thinking Big
Tuesday, July 01, 2008

By Shara Enay

Last year, the Big Island spent about $750 million on fossil fuels, despite the abundance of alternatives such as solar, wind and hydro energy right in its backyard, according to The Kohala Center…
» read more

Click here to view the article online.

Used with permission from Hawaii Business.



The new energy reality: Kanu Hawaiʻi asks forum attendees to be counted
Thursday, June 12, 2008

By Kristine Kubat

We know, it's The Kohala Center, again. Might as well get used to it. There's just no getting away from these leaders in the transition to Hawaiʻi's sustainable future if your mission is to document the trend.
» read more

Used with permission from Big Island Weekly.



Reality check: Actuary advises islanders to cross their fingers
Thursday, June 12, 2008

By Kristin Kubat

It was a day-long gathering of experts as well as business and political players on the subject of Hawaiʻi's energy future and it began with a list of woes titled "Economic implications of the rising prices and diminishing supplies of liquid fossil fuel."
» read more

Used with permission from Big Island Weekly.



Burning desire: No new oil-fired plants but HELCO's future is highly combustible
Thursday, June 12, 2008

By Kristine Kubat

They were assigned different topics by The Kohala Center, but private consultant Jim Lazar and new HELCO president Jay Ignacio both chose to focus on how the utility might, or might not, change in the face of the current oil crisis.
» read more

Used with permission from Big Island Weekly.



A call to action: Former state energy director goes activist
Thursday, June 12, 2008

By Kristine Kubat

Maurice Kaya served the State of Hawaiʻi as the director of its Energy Division for 20 years. Working within the confines of a department primarily responsible for business, economic development and tourism, he became known for his stoic persona, perfected during the height of the controversy over geothermal development.
» read more

Used with permission from Big Island Weekly.



Energy forum decries dependence on oil
Saturday, June 7, 2008

By Jim Quirk

HILO -- "Wake up! The crisis is upon us!"

Maurice Kaya, a strategic energy and management consultant, used these words during a Friday forum to raise awareness of Hawaii Island's energy crisis, which will worsen without effective government intervention.
» read more

Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.



Energy freedom begins at home: Consumers can do what government will struggle with
Saturday, June 07, 2008

By Bret Yager

Energy experts and local lawmakers sounded the alarm on rising fuel prices Friday. Calling for greater energy self-sufficiency on Hawaiʻi Island.
» read more

Used with permission from Hawaii Tribune Herald.



Designing minds: The Kohala Center & ʻAno ʻano Aloha collaborate on Institute for Pacific Design
Wednesday, June 4, 2008

By Kristine Kubat

You hear it in boardrooms and government chambers, classrooms and coffee shops, the word 'sustainability' is in standard usage when discussing the future and it seems this island has attracted an exceptionally high number of people who not only believe in the concept but feel compelled to make it a reality.
» read more

Used with permission from Big Island Weekly.



Protecting Kahaluu Bay: Interpretive signs attempt to create awareness, provoke action
Wednesday, September 26, 2007

By Carolyn Lucas

A delicate balancing act is afoot to protect the resources at Kahaluu Bay while trying to bring people closer to the wildlife and appreciate the sacredness of this place.
» read more

Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.



Kahaluu Beach Park to get fresh coat of paint: Volunteers needed for the next two Thursdays
Monday, March 19, 2007

By Carolyn Lucas

Kahaluu Beach Park's main pavilion is getting a facelift this week. Hawaii County Department of Parks and Recreation recently gave The Kohala Center and University of Hawaii Sea Grant Extension Service permission to paint the building, benches and tables.
» read more

Used with permission from West Hawaii Today.



A Living Laboratory - July 13, 2006
by Kathy G. Rawle

On the mainland, summer camp is a chance for kids to experience environments different from home: sunshine, swimming, outdoor games and cooking out. But here on the Big Island — where all that is available year round and close by — what's the point of camp?
» read more



Team on Big Isle Examines Prospects for Industrial Ecology - March 13, 2006
by Kathy G. Rawle

A group of Yale scholars is studying how the Big Island can better use its resources and industrial waste. Marian Chertow, director of Yale University's Industrial Environmental Management Program, and seven of her postgraduate students are spending a week on the Big Island gathering data about the island's energy, materials, waste and water systems.
» read more



Program Teaches Kids About Art, Science and Health - February 23, 2006
by Ron Eland

Through March 2, local artist Peter Kowalke will be showing his recent collection of paintings and prints, titled "Hawi Horses and Beach Faces" at MacArthur & Company.
» read more