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Ke Ola Magazine

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

  • Cruisin’ with Kona’s Kenny Tagavilla

    By Fern Gavelek Music has weaved in and out of Kenny Tagavilla’s life since small kid time. His paternal grandmother sat him down as a keiki to teach him to play ‘ukulele—but no, he didn’t want to pick it up.…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Students Learn, Grow Food, Eat at School Culinary Gardens

    By Fern Gavelek Itʻs all about “connecting the dots to textbooks while making learning delicious.” That’s how Patti Cook, community development director of Waimea Middle Public Conversion Charter School, describes the Māla‘ai Culinary Garden. Started in 2003 through a community…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Darien Hsu Gee: Crafting Ideas into Captivating Stories

    By Fern Gavelek For some people, filling a blank page with their own words can be daunting. Not for Waikoloa Village resident Darien Hsu Gee. The wife and mother authored five novels—three under the pen name Mia King—which have been…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Maka‘eo Path Fosters Health and Community

    By Fern Gavelek Build it and they will come. This statement certainly holds true for the Maka‘eo path at Old Kona Airport State Recreation Area. Flanking the mauka (upland) side of the former Kona Airport runway in Kailua-Kona, the paved…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Life is a Muse for Artist Sachi

    By Fern Gavelek Sachi, the artist formerly known as Karla Musacchia, has been an award-winner since the 1970s. Before that, she mingled with celebrities in Malibu, was Playboy magazine’s first surfer girl centerfold, and appeared in Hollywood movies. The 74-year…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • 200 Years at Mokuaikaua Church: Preserving a Beacon of Faith in Kailua Village

    By Fern Gavelek The first Christian church established in the Hawaiian Islands lives on today as an active and caring fellowship called Mokuaikaua Church. Founded in 1820, the church is commemorating its 200th anniversary with a massive preservation of its…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Bo Williams: Island Teen Proves “It Takes a Village”

    By Fern Gavelek Restrictions brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic presented island youth with a variety of challenges: online school instruction, cancelled sporting events, and minimal, in-person interaction with friends. With the help of his community, a Hawai‘i Island teen…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Kona Cloud Forest Sanctuary: A Living, Teaching Tool

    By Fern Gavelek The sun goes in and out of rain-filled clouds while driving up Koloko Mauka to the Kona Cloud Forest Sanctuary (KCFS). Upon arrival, the air is cool and damp, smelling of dew and moist earth. The sun…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Peer through the Lens of Photographer Wayne Levin

    Body surfer diving under outside wave, Makapu‘u, O‘ahu. photo courtesy of Wayne Levin

    By Fern Gavelek Award-winning photographer Wayne Levin has exhibited images in galleries around the globe. You can see his work in New York’s Museum of Modern Art and the Dimbola Museum and Galleries in England. His photos have appeared in…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Kathleen Abood Creates Purpose, Connects to Imagination Through Art

    Pineapple-shaped dishes tell a new narrative after covering their backside with broken seashells and other materials to form a mask. photo by Fern Gavelek

    By Fern Gavelek One woman’s trash is another woman’s treasure. This saying rings true for Kathleen Abood, who collects treasures to create art with intention. “I’ve always made stuff out of what I have on hand,” muses the Kailua-Kona resident.…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • How One Boy’s Wish Benefits Thousands: The Jonathan Dale Miller Foundation

    By Fern Gavelek A nine-year-old boy has left a legacy that’s been helping Hawai‘i Island’s needy families since 1999. To date, the Jonathan Dale Miller Foundation has personally touched approximately 4,000 families, affecting 15,000 underprivileged keiki (children) and 500 kūpuna…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • The Meaningful Construction of Daifukuji Soto Mission

    The front entry is a distinguishing architectural feature of the Daifukuji Solo Temple.

    By Fern Gavelek The burgundy-colored building with white trim on Highway 11 at the entrance to Honalo (South Kona) is the landmark Daifukuji Soto Mission. The temple sits a bit off the road on the mauka (mountain) side, adjacent to…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • 4-H Clubs Inspire Kids “To Do”

    Chairing the West Hawai‘i Demonstration Day in February 2019 were Busy Bee Buddies 4-H Club members from left: Ka‘i Kunitomo, Shayla Sayphone, Jaymie Kunitomo, Taylie Oshiro, Caileen Kunitomo, and Sara Kimura. photo courtesy of Iris Higashi-Oshiro

    By Fern Gavelek “It teaches kids life skills…It led me in the right direction and helped me while going through teenage moments…It offers projects for positive youth development…It enables kids to master a skill and chart their own direction…” What…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Future Forest Nursery: Say YES to Planting Trees

    By Fern Gavelek “Trees are poems that the earth writes upon the sky.”—Khalil Gibran Trees make us look up. Their canopy provides shade and collects rain to replenish the watershed. Their roots sequester carbon, mitigating global warming, and store rain…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Ke Ola Magazine: 10 Years of Sharing ‘The Life’ of Hawai‘i Island

    Ke Ola Magazine co-creators, Barbara Garcia and Karen Valentine, at the December 2008 launch party.

    By Fern Gavelek You’ve read about well-known people such as pacemaker inventor Earl Bakken and landowner/steward Ed Olson. Musicians such as Cyril Pahinui and Kahulani. Artists such as Kathy Long and craft maker Ika Vea have been featured. There have…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • The Wow Factor of Chef Sam Choy

    Chef Sam Choy, who put poke on the culinary map, taste tests an entry during a past Keauhou Poke Contest. photo courtesy of Kirk Shorte

    By Fern Gavelek He cooks a mean oxtail soup and made poke a nationwide sensation. With 14 cookbooks, several TV shows, a string of celebrity clients, and involvement with numerous restaurants, Chef Sam Choy is a culinary ambassador for Hawai‘i.…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Statewide Boat Mooring Program Boasts Kona Roots

    A diver drills a new mooring pin site.

    By Fern Gavelek From time to time, something is done purely because it is the pono (right) thing to do. How the statewide day-use mooring (DUM) system came to be is one of them. The strategically placed moorings protect marine…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers: Cultivating Successful Farmers to Feed Our Island

    By Fern Gavelek Growing fruit in Hawai‘i to feed our island is one thing. Growing farmers to do it successfully is another. The Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers (HTFG) does both. The statewide nonprofit was founded in 1989 and boasts more…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Ka‘ū Coffee Festival: Celebrating a Crop that Brought Hope and Success

    By Fern Gavelek Ten years ago, a group of folks were sitting on the lānai (porch) gazing out at healthy rows of Ka‘ū coffee trees laden with cherries. Beaming with pride and optimistic for the future, the neighboring Ka‘ū coffee…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • LEED-Certified: Pālamanui Offers 21st-Century Learning

    By Fern Gavelek Imagine going to college in a learning laboratory where sustainable building and design has earned the highest award in the green building industry. Residents of West Hawai‘i can do just that at Hawai‘i Community College, Pālamanui and…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • VASH Hawai‘i Island: Nonprofit Comes to the Rescue of Visitor Misfortune

    By Fern Gavelek Your friend vacationing from Minnesota loses her ID and worries how she will get on the plane to return home. After a day at the beach, a guest at your vacation rental is in a traffic accident…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Hands On History: Relive the Life of Kona’s Coffee Pioneers

    By Fern Gavelek Step back in time to the 1920s–40s and relive the simple, yet arduous, life of Kona’s Japanese immigrant farmers during Hands On History at the Kona Coffee Living History Farm. It was a time when Kona farmers…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Flower Power!

    By Fern Gavelek It all started more than a half century ago. The late Harold Tanouye Jr. was a college student in Iowa. In those days, Hawai‘i students attending mainland colleges stayed off island for the duration of their studies.…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • It’s Cherry Blossom Time!

    cherry-blossom

    The age-old tradition of hanami is celebrated on Hawai‘I Island every first Saturday in February during the annual Waimea Cherry Blossom Heritage Festival. It’s when cool-clime Waimea, often back-dropped by a wintery white summit atop Mauna Kea, boasts an eruption…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Home Grown to Fulfill a Need: Hawaii Community Federal Credit Union

    By Fern Gavelek Businesses come and businesses go, however, the Hawaii Community Federal Credit Union (HCFCU) endures after 80 years. With a charter membership of struggling coffee farmers, the credit union has evolved over eight decades to serve people from…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Sing-Song, Sing-Along! Celebrating 25 Years with the Kona Choral Society

    Susan Duprey conducting, Dec. 2013.

    By Fern Gavelek With one thing in common—the love to sing—Kona Choral Society’s 70-some members rehearse weekly to perform concerts for the enjoyment of the community. This year, KCS is marking its 25th year with a new name, additional performances,…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Success! Hakalau Forest Refuge: Scientists and Volunteers Partner to Save Forest Birds

    After planting Koa, Hakalau Ridge 2007. Inset: Before planting Koa, Hakalau Ridge 1993.

    By Fern Gavelek Hawai‘i’s geographical isolation means that the plants and animals found here have evolved unlike any other species found on earth. Human interaction and interference with once untouched habitats has rendered Hawai‘i the endangered species capital of the…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Uncle Billy Paris Talks Story

    Rancher Billy Paris in the Palika Ranch Saddle House, 1990s.

    By Fern Gavelek He makes the best guava jelly and can sing a mean rendition of “Kona Kai ‘Opua.” Uncle Billy Paris has done many things during his 90 years of life and easily recalls all of them with pinpoint…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • “Cowman A-Moo-Ha”: On the Run for World Peace

    By Fern Gavelek It’s easy to spot the Kailua-Kona resident known simply as “Cowman” running races and triathlons all over the world. Sporting his trademark, horn-topped helmet and hand-drawn t-shirts, Cowman has been competing in marathons and triathlons for over…

    By Fern Gavelek
  • Hands On, Minds Ahead! All Aboard Bluewater Exploration

    By Fern Gavelek “Throughout the course of human events, mankind’s impacts on the environment have stressed the carrying capacity of our ocean, thus ruining the essence of why we love and enjoy areas such as the Keauhou-Kona coast. Experience has…

    By Fern Gavelek
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