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Ke Ola Magazine

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

  • Uncle Tilo Teaches Water is Life

    By Stefan Verbano “The quality of your water is a direct link to the quality of your health.” This is scribbled on a chalkboard hanging in the window of Todd and Archer’s shop in Pāhoa. It’s their business motto, and…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • For the Love of Hawai‘i Island Beekeepers

    By Stefan Verbano Since the dawn of agriculture, honeybee keepers have braved the swarm in search of that coveted golden nectar. The sound of an open hive is intimidating—a buzzing roar which connects with some ancient, instinctual human sense that…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Battered by Life, the Rescued Livestock at FPG Have Found Sanctuary

    By Stefan Verbano Eve the sheep lived an action-packed life before coming to the sanctuary. She spent her early years frolicking through green pastures of her lower Puna homestead, until her peaceful existence was shattered in 2018 by the massive…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Hawaiian Kingdom Lives on at Uncle Robert’s Awa Bar

    By Stefan Verbano Big Polynesian hands hoisted the massive tile “puzzlepiece” mural upright at last, and Rika Blue took a step back to admire her creation for the first time in its rightful place. This moment was the vindication of…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Makahiki at Mālamalama

    By Stefan Verbano Students at Mālamalama Waldorf School in Kea‘au will ring in the Makahiki season a little differently this year. Gone will be the crowds of spectators, the buffet tables groaning under the weight of steaming pots of taro…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Mikey “Redd” O’Shaughnessy: In Search of One Perfect Wave

    By Stefan Verbano “One wave will change your life.” This is the motto of big wave surfer Mikey “Redd” O’Shaughnessy, who throughout his 29 years of life in Hawai‘i has seen those words play out in the best and worst…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • The Night Lava Returned to Halema‘uma‘u Crater

    By Stefan Verbano Bruce Miller and Ed Clapp headed to the crater overlook that fateful December night to stargaze and celebrate the solstice. A cold, wet mist hung in the mountain air, surrounding them. They approached the volcano’s rim as…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • The Fate of Ahu‘ailā‘au ~ Shrine of the Forest Eater

    By Stefan Verbano Every footstep crunches on the way to the summit. A strange, brittle ash coats the land, heaped in golden hills in some places; in others cut away by rivulets of erosion from three years of tropical rainstorms.…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Through the Wide Lens of Kornelius Schorle

    By Stefan Verbano Kornelius Schorle deals in postcards from the past. Peering through his camera lens, working with the care and patience of a master craftsman, he has preserved forever—in saturated colors—beloved Hawai‘i Island places that will never be seen…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Seeger Institute at Eden Farms: Ecological Solutions to Make a Better World

    By Stefan Verbano There is a fierce urgency in Gary Rosenbergʻs eyes. Itʻs the look of a time traveler who, after witnessing some future calamity, is sent back to warn an incredulous public to change their ways, often with great…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Hobby Garden: A Happy, Sustainable Learning Center

    Inside a gallery in the main building that Johnson Lum calls “The Wow Room,” a scale model of a British Sunderland Flying Boat forms the room’s centerpiece.

    By Stefan Verbano Every other day, the big four-engine seaplanes would roar over Johnson Lum’s grandfather’s home on the main Fiji island of Viti Levu. The Sunderland Flying Boats were on rescue and reconnaissance missions over vast, isolated stretches of…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Corals: Living Rainforests of the Sea

    By Stefan Verbano Hanau ka ‘Uku-ko‘ako‘a, hanau kana, he ‘Ako‘ako‘a, puka “Born was the coral polyp, born was the coral, came forth” —Kumulipo, Hawaiian Chant of Creation, line 15 Surrounding the islands, inhabiting a narrow column of warm water—with destructive…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Rat Lungworm Disease: Optimism Comes with Education

    Stickers, posters and t-shirts created by 12th graders attending Kathleen Howe’s class help raise awareness about rat lungworm disease. photo courtesy of Kathleen Howe

    By Stefan Verbano Inside garden hoses, along the walls of rain catchment tanks, between the folds of lettuce leaves, the slugs and snails slither. Although they look just like their harmless mainland cousins, these Hawaiian gastropods harbor a strange and…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • The Road to Recovery Began with a Road

    By Stefan Verbano A side of the perched lava channel fed by Fissure Eight collapses, sending a river of pāhoehoe barreling northeast through Leilani Estates toward Puna Geothermal Venture (PGV). By the evening of May 29, 2018, the breakout flow…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Growing a Sustainable Future on Hawai‘i Island

    By Stefan Verbano David Reppun walks barefoot along the mounded rows of taro. He stops at a full-grown hedge of the broad-leafed Polynesian staple, announces its variety name, and leans into the mass of green, selecting a stem and bending…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Hawai‘i’s Endangered Birds

    Palila. photo © of Judd Patterson via birdsinbocus.comp

    By Stefan Verbano Hawai‘i’s islands were once tropical paradises for birds. Ten million years ago, the winged founders of Hawai‘i’s endemic bird populations touched down on a partially formed, mid-Pacific island chain markedly different than any humans have since “discovered.”…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Seeds of a New Industry: A History of Cannabis on Hawai‘i Island

    In addition to edibles, Cannabis Conference vendors sold ganja gear, too. Clothes, hats, tapestries, sun catchers, and other accessories, adorned with tie-dye, Rasta colors, and weed-leaf patterns, were all on display. photo by Stefan Verbano

    Editor’s Note: Our local agriculture feature story was originally planned to cover the production of Hawai‘i’s legal cannabis crop. However, due to circumstances beyond our control, we were unable to pursue it. Instead, here is an overview and history of…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • To Seek Far: ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center Reaches Out to Students of All Ages

    ‘Imiloa’s exhibit hall contains a number of exhibits teaching about astronomy, astrophysics, space exploration, traditional Polynesian navigation, and Hawaiian culture. photo by Stefan Verbano

    By Stefan Verbano “So, what’s one way we can tell the age of a volcano?” Punawai Rice asks the audience of fourth graders seated before him. No hands shoot up. “Well think about this: how can we tell one volcano…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Refuse–Reduce–Reuse–Recycle: Doing Our Part

    South Hilo Sanitary Landfill. photo by Stefan Verbano

    By Stefan Verbano The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Soiled plastic foam takeout containers fly out of a dumpster and whip through the streets on gusts from the tail end of a tropical storm. Some get caught in trees, on fences,…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • The ‘Alalā: Save the Crows, Save the Forest

    "Alala, The Hawaiian Crow." painting courtesy of Linda Rowell Stevens

    By Stefan Verbano Long ago — before the chirp of coqui frogs, before the buzz of mosquitoes, before the scuttle of mongooses—Hawai‘i Islandʻs mountain forests rang out with a different sound. Shrill and piercing, these shrieks rose above the understory…

    By Stefan Verbano
  • Then & Now: Kaimū Beach, Kalapana, Kapoho–The Only Constant is Change

    New Kaimū Black Sand Beach, July 2018. photo by Stefan Verbano

    By Stefan Verbano Through a break in the shrubbery beside Highway 130, the lava field reveals itself for the first time. After a long, gradual bend in the road heading downhill from the turn to ‘Opihikao, strawberry guava-laden jungle falls…

    By Stefan Verbano

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