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Ke Ola Magazine

Celebrating the Arts, Culture, and Sustainability of Hawai‘i Island

  • Everyone Wins in Honoka‘a’s Feeding Program

    By Catherine Tarleton Sustainable, adj. 1: capable of being sustained, 2a: of, relating to, or being a method of harvesting or using a resource so that the resource is not depleted or permanently damaged, 2b: of or relating to a…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Photos, Recycling, and the Blues: Paul Buklarewicz’s Sustainable Combination

    By Catherine Tarleton What do a professional photographer, blues harmonica player, and recycling educator have in common? In the case of Paul J. Buklarewicz of Volcano, they’re all the same guy. A modern-day Renaissance man, Paul is a career educator,…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Aunty Aloha Shares the Gifts of Ho‘oponopono

    By Catherine Tarleton It’s all experience. Have you ever thought you were doing something for somebody, and it turns out they’re actually doing something for you? That’s what happened with this writer and Allysyn “Aunty Aloha” Ahuna Bezilla, grandmother, devout…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Sharing Aloha Spirit Worldwide

    By Catherine Tarleton What does Aloha Spirit look like in places outside of Hawai‘i? To find out, we asked an ipu (gourd) artist who grows them in both Kona and California, a kumu hula who teaches in Asia and Europe,…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • The Bray ‘Ohana—A Talented Family’s Deep Connection

    Left: David Kaonohiokala “Daddy” Bray, Lelehua’s great-grandfather, carried extensive knowledge of Hawaiian culture. Middle: Mama and Daddy Bray’s son, David Mililani Bray, Lelehua’s grandfather. Right: Lydia Maunahina Dusson, “Mama” Bray, Lelehua’s great-grandmother, was a renowned kumu hula.

    By Catherine Tarleton The story of the Bray ‘ohana reaches back through generations—from Hawai‘i, back to Tahiti, back to ancient knowledge, history, culture, and wisdom. “I have a book written by my great-grandfather,” says Lelehua Bray, hula teacher, travel professional,…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Hawai‘i Handweavers’ Hui: Hard Work and Endless Play

    By Catherine Tarleton Words about weaving conjure up artistic images all of their own. We weave stories, spin a “yarn,” and embroider narrative with detail. In Hawai‘i, we weave a tapestry of cultures, from East and West, ancient and current.…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Mila Polevia: Music is Home

    By Catherine Tarleton Kohala is almost a mystical place,” says musician Mila Polevia, music director for St. Augustine’s Episcopal Church in Kapa‘au. “Not only is it King Kamehameha’s birthplace, it’s just kind of magical. And there’s lots of famous musicians,…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Mission. Quest. Obligation. Love affair. Award-Winning Photographers on Hawai‘i Island

    By Catherine Tarleton Daredevils, geologists, surf and ski bums, travelers, divers, authors, artists, and poets with pictures, Hawai‘i Island’s award-winning photographers are known around the world. These intrepid souls will go—sometimes literally—to any heights and depths to capture their spectacular…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Castles in the Sand

    By Catherine Tarleton On any given day, a sunset beachgoer might take the stroll along Kauna‘oa or Mau‘umae beaches and happen upon something remarkable. Spires and staircases of sand stand in wait for some tiny mermaid; tan-khaki-taupe hibiscus and plumeria…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Honoka‘a High & Intermediate School Celebrates 130 Years

    Front row (left to right): Daisy Ikeuchi, class of ’46, Roland Kaneshiro, ’57, Milo Ferreira, ’62, Sammie Pung, ’76. Back row: Johnalyn Margheim, ’87, Lane Guzman, ’93, Mahina Hoepner, ’05, Falyn Sebastian, ’19. photo by Sarah Anderson

    By Catherine Tarleton Honoka‘a High & Intermediate School sits on seven ocean-view acres of Hāmākua hillside, its 19 buildings and covered sidewalks painted Dragon (their mascot) green and gold. 611 students, grades 7–12, work and play here. In its 130-year…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Heart and Memory: An Old Plantation Store Still Serves Community

    Hawi General Store had the town’s first faxing service. photo courtesy of NKCRC

    By Catherine Tarleton The 1930s were boom years for the sugarcane industry. Kohala Sugar Company, a giant consolidation of seven sugar mills in North Kohala (Kohala, Union, Niuli‘i, Hawi, Halawa, Hō‘ea, and Star) employed 600 people, and produced 45,000 tons…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Grammy Dust: Charles Michael Brotman is Sparkling with it!

    Charles received a Grammy Producer Award in the first ever Hawaiian Music category in 2005.

    By Catherine Tarleton It’s difficult to describe Charles Michael Brotman in words. He’s a lifelong musician, songwriter, producer, mentor, and Grammy Award winner. Yet, sitting barefoot in his studio, picking the bass line for a new track—sharing it, listening, tweaking…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Woodworking: A Love Story

    Tim and Tiffany working together in the woodshop, once upon a time.

    By Catherine Tarleton Award-winning wood artist Timothy Shafto is part artist, part engineer, and part impresario. A stonemason by trade and self-taught woodworker, Tim presently paints—pours, actually—large epoxy, sand, and wood wall art, using special techniques he has developed over…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Anna Ranch: A Chapter of Waimea History

    By Catherine Tarleton Behind the white rail fence and trellis gate, across the lawn and gardens at the foot of Waimea’s rolling hills, inside the gracious white house with blue-striped awnings on its sunny bay windows, lives a story. Opening…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Larger Than Life: The Work of Marcia Ray

    By Catherine Tarleton “Murals for me are the most important, because they are painted to tell a story,” says Waimea artist Marcia Ray. Four of her murals, and their stories, are stretched across the upper walls of Parker Ranch Center’s…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • A Hospital for the Birds: Hawai‘i Wildlife Center

    By Catherine Tarleton Things are hopping at Hawai‘i Wildlife Center in North Kohala—hopping, chirping, swimming, feeding, fledging, healing, and eventually flying. “Last night, we transported in a seabird from O‘ahu and a pueo (owl) from Kaua‘i,” said President and Center…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Family of Service

    By Catherine Tarleton For the Medeiros ‘ohana of “First Lava Flow” (Honokua) in South Kona, service is a way of life. Both Clarence Medeiros and daughter Kareen did military service in the U.S. Army, yet their legacy of helping others…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • HawaiiCon: Magic and Mōhihi‘o*

    By Catherine Tarleton Every day, people travel from around the planet to bask in the Hawai‘i Island sun, immerse in the ocean and feel the warm culture of aloha. This fall, that welcome extends to those from far, far away…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • A Depository of Stories: Hawai‘i Plantation Museum in Pāpa‘ikou

    By Catherine Tarleton “I never thought I would be in the museum business,” says Wayne Subica, director of the Hawai‘i Plantation Museum in Pāpa‘ikou. Floor to ceiling, wall to wall, the old Onomea Plantation Store is filled with an ever-expanding…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Exceptional Art for an Exceptional Community

    Hawai‘i Preparatory Academy’s Isaacs Art Center By Catherine Tarleton The Herb Kawainui Kāne painting is what draws me in. From the front door of the Isaacs Art Center, “Cook Landing at Kealakekua Bay” is like a window I need to…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • I Love a Parade: Aunty Penny Keli‘i Vredenburg, Mistress of Ceremonies

    i-love-a-parade

    Standing in front of the fire truck, armed only with her cordless microphone, Penny Vredenburg brings the Waimea Twilight Christmas Parade to a halt. She climbs up on the running board, looks in, then shouts out to the folks along Waimea’s…

    By Ke Ola Magazine
  • 1500 Shades of Aunty Betty Webster

    By Catherine Tarleton Aunty Betty Webster and I are having lunch at a local restaurant. She walks in, grabs two menus, and sits in the first booth, facing the door. Aunty, Waimea’s official “sunglass queen” is sporting big bright yellow…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Parker, The Little School that Could

    By Catherine Tarleton The red ranch building with the wide white porch rail is 101 years old, and has lived three different lives: as a social hall, USO, and now Parker School. This small school, originally created to serve “indigent…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Living, Breathing, Eating Music: Hawaii Performing Arts Festival’s Music Education Program

    By Catherine Tarleton These kids have to spread their wings,” says Genette Freeman, Executive Director of Hawaii Performing Arts Festival (HPAF), an annual summer music immersion program that pairs professional teachers with potential stars. HPAF creates opportunities for Hawai‘i’s young…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Puakea Ranch: Sustaining the Land, and the Story

    Puakea Ranch

    By Catherine Tarleton The high green hills of North Kohala have evolved over generations, from forests and farms to blankets of sugar cane and rolling ranch country. As do most places here, Puakea Ranch has a story to tell in…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Mark Yamanaka: “Just a regular dude that loves music”

    By Catherine Tarleton Only in Hawai‘i. Only in Hilo, actually, can you buy a car, turn on the radio, and drive away listening to a hit song by the guy who sold it to you. Nine-time Nā Hōkū Hanohano Award-winner…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Kolohe Diamond: Aunty Maile Spencer Napoleon

    By Catherine Tarleton It could be “Twilight at Kalahuipua‘a,” or another cultural event on Hawai‘i Island where people gather to enjoy music, hula, and camaraderie by the ocean. As the audience waits for the first strum of ‘ukulele, the sun…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Crafting the Rhythm of Hula: Vea’s Polynesian Gifts

    By Catherine Tarleton I had to make an ‘ulī‘ulī for hula class. If you don’t know, ‘ulī‘ulī is a rhythm instrument, a gourd rattle, decorated with a circle of kapa cloth to which feathers are sewn. Finished, it looks kind…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • Sounding the Pū: An Echo of the Past Resonates Today

    By Catherine Tarleton The tropically iconic conch shell trumpet, or pū, is often seen at the lips of malo-clad beach boys, sounding the start of sunset and tiki torch lighting time. The tradition of the pū is ancient, sending out…

    By Catherine Tarleton
  • A Mele Kalikimaka to All: ‘Elves’ Around Hawai‘i Island Helping ‘Ohana in Need

    By Catherine Tarleton This is the first in an occasional series where Ke Ola Magazine highlights some of the important work of our on-island nonprofits. Enjoy learning about these two organizations and please support them. If you have a favorite…

    By Catherine Tarleton
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