Hawai‘i Island

kona ranching paniolo museum
Culture, Hawai‘i Island

Hawaii Island exhibit to share Kona’s little-known paniolo (Hawaiian cowboy) and ranching history

First time visitors probably don’t think of cattle ranching and cowboys when they envision tropical Hawaii, but on Hawaii Island in particular, the history of paniolo (Hawaiian cowboys) runs deep. Visitors to cool, northerly Waimea will soon see why so many say that Hawaii Island cattle are among the happiest in the world: They graze […]

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Food, Hawai‘i Island, In the Magazine, Kauaʻi, Maui, Oʻahu

Where to find Hawaii chocolate

These businesses are taking Hawaii-grown cacao from bean to bar and, in some cases, even grow the chocolate on-site.  HAWAII ISLAND Big Island Chocolate Co.The small family farm south of Hilo has about 300 trees and makes chocolate on-site for sale at area farmers markets. (808) 966-6693, bigislandchocolatecompany.com. Hawaiian Crown Plantation and Chocolate FactoryLook for its

puu waawaa hiking hawaii
Hawai‘i Island

Hiking Puu Waawaa, an ancient cinder cone on Hawaii Island

Tucked beyond an always-closed metal gate and cattle grate, the trails of Puu Waawaa Forest Reserve may be some of Kona’s best-kept secrets. The sleepy reserve (on my recent weekend visit I saw more sheep than people) transports visitors from the thoroughfare of Highway 190, into dryland groves of ohia, Hawaiian sandalwood and other important native plants. The

ohia lehua hawaii
Culture, Hawai‘i Island

The cultural significance of ohia lehua

At the 2016 Merrie Monarch Festival, for the first time in its more than half-a-century history, many hula halau (hula schools) opted to forgo traditional lei and adornments from the ohia lehua tree in order to stem the spread of a blight known as Rapid Ohia Death (ROD). The disease is ravaging populations of the

merrie monarch invitational hawaiian arts fair
Arts + Culture, Culture, Hawai‘i Island, Merrie Monarch, Shopping

5 Cool Things We Found at Merrie Monarch Festival’s Invitational Hawaiian Art Fair

Last week, while the Merrie Monarch Festival’s competitive hula dancers performed, the festival’s Invitational Hawaiian Arts Fair drew crowds into two buildings on Hilo’s Afook-Chinen Civic Auditorium grounds. Dozens of invited vendors offered uniquely Hawaiian products—teas and body tinctures of Hawaiian plants, abundant flower and shell lei, even copies of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, translated

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