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Maui Attractions Newsletter
November 2006

[ Natural History ] [ Arts & Culture ]
[ Braddah-Nics ] [ Local Grinds ] [ Spotlight On ]

Special Announcement


Photo from L to R: Karen Fischer, President CEO of Maui Arts and
Cultural Center, Darius Taj, Clent, Advisor BMW of Maui, Tess
Cartwright and Bob Cartwright Whalers Realty Inc. Tess receiving keys
to 2006 BMW 3X SUV won at auction for Maui Arts and Cultural Center
Annual fundraiser, Maui Calls.

The Maui Arts & Cultural Center's annual Maui Calls fundraiser proved to be another resounding success, with a sell-out attendance enjoying fine food and wines, great fun dancing under the stars, and the excitement of fabulous live and silent auctions … all earning over $300,000 to benefit MACC's arts and education programs for the Maui Community.

Maui Calls always features some of the best auction items found in any Maui fundraiser. Highlights of some of the treasures won throughout the evening:

Bob and Tess Cartwright of Whalers Realty Inc. were the successful high bidders on a two-year lease for a new BMW. Bob Cartwright had this to say about their Maui Calls experience: "This year will mark the 30th anniversary of Whalers Realty; Tess and I decided to celebrate the occasion by contributing to a number of non-profit agencies. We weren't expecting anything in return, especially something as nice as a lease on new BMW X3. We wish the MACC continued success on providing so many incredible events to the people of Maui, including this year's Maui Calls."

Other big winners in the exciting live auction included Susan Landon with a beautiful Kamaka ukulele, David and Maggie Cole with a private luau for 20 from Old Lahaina Luau and June Wong with an NCL cruise to the destination of her choice.

"Maui Calls is such a wonderful event for so many reasons. Our largest fundraiser of the year, it celebrates the beginning of our new season," notes Karen Fischer, MACC's President & CEO. "One of the best things that happens is that Maui Calls, like the MACC, is a 'gathering place' - friends greeting each other under the stars for the benefit of our community. Mahalo nui loa!"

This year the MACC celebrated Maui Calls' with an 'ukulele theme, with the island instrument featured in the décor, with displays on 'ukulele history and crafting, as intriguing auction items, and in live music entertainment throughout the evening. Tastings of fine island cuisine were provided by a stellar lineup of some of the best Maui chefs and restaurants. Maui Calls is generously sponsored by Fine Wine Imports, as it has been since the event's inception in 1996.

Proceeds from Maui Calls support the arts, education and community programs at the Maui Arts & Cultural Center. The MACC has enriched the life of Maui residents for a dozen years, providing the venue for a wide variety of arts events and performances, from hula to popular entertainers, modern dance to salsa, art exhibits to rock-and-roll, symphony to student performances. The MACC is also host to films, community and business meetings, classes, education programs, and cultural workshops - over 1700 events annually, attended by 245,000 people each year.

For information on the next Maui Calls, please contact Lisa Varde, development director at lisa@mauiarts.org or 808-242-2887 x 236.

 


Pictured: Janet Grantham joins Seabury graduate Bart Mulvihill of Whalers Realty Inc, Bob Miller and Stanford President Dr. John Hennessey at Los Altos Golf and C.C.

Lahaina’s Janet Grantham joins Seabury graduate Bart Mulvihill of Whalers Realty Inc, Bob Miller and Stanford President Dr. John Hennessey at Los Altos Golf and C.C. following a round of golf benefiting the Seabury Hall Scholarship fund.  Seabury parent Bob Miller was the donor of the generous gift benefiting scholarship students attending Seabury Hall.

Bart Mulvihill and Janet Grantham were the successful bidders of a live auction item in the ’06 Seabury Hall Craft Fair that included a round of golf with Dr. Hennessey and laptop inventor Bob Miller on Bob’s home course just outside of Stanford.  The $2,000 winning bid was matched with an additional $1,000 donation from generous community contributors Bob and Tess Cartwright of Whalers Realty Inc.   

Featured Properties

The Mahana
This unique property, tucked away at the quiet end of Kaanapali Beach, features all oceanfront units with panoramic views of the Pacific and the outer islands of Moloka'i and Lana'i. Each studio, one- and two-bedroom floor plan comes with central A/C, complete kitchen, washer/dryer, cable TV, telephone and private lanai. It's the perfect location for visitors who desire quiet oceanfront accommodation, yet still want to be close to all the exciting activities Kaanapali Resort and historic Lahaina offer. Amenities include 2 tennis courts, oceanfront swimming pool, shuffleboard, and a barbecue area.

 

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Check out these wonderful properties and the photographs on our website.

Crafts & Special Productions

Meet Tess and Bud Burrid at Mewe Creations.

Tell Me The Story
(QuickTime Movie - 3829KB)

Need QuickTime? Download Here.

 

Don't forget to visit the

@
KapaluaArt.com

 

Check out Maui Community Television brought to you by:

http://www.akaku.org

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Events



Natural History

PALEPIWA, EUCALYPTUS
(Eucalyptus spp.)

Eucalyptus ForestThere are over 600 species of Eucalyptus. Native to Australia and Malaysia, about 50 species of “gum trees” have been introduced to Hawaii, but only about a fifth of these can be considered common. Most of them have been used in reforestation efforts or as shade and windbreaks. They are tough trees, able to withstand windy, dry conditions and have been recommended for use in xeriscaping.

Some species of the trees grow to heights of as much as 300 feet. Because of their rapid growth, they were often used to replace the indigenous giant koa and the ‘ohi’a trees that were logged out of the cooler upland native forest. With a few exceptions attempting to identify the different varieties growing in the wild would be a botanical nightmare. It is usually easiest just to call them all eucalyptus. The trees are commonly grown throughout Polynesia for this purpose as well as for ornamentation and some of the species planted in other parts of Polynesia are used for timber. During the late 1970’s and early 1980’s one local woodsman tried to mill the eucalyptus growing in the forests of Maui and several houses on Maui were built of the locally milled wood.

Young EucalyptusThe trees secrete resinous gums and often have flaky bark. The young shoots of palepiwa may have bluish leaves that are opposite, heart-shaped and stemless. These give way to the typical alternate, long, narrow, leathery leaves with a smooth margin as the trees age. The thick leaves tend to hang vertically or obliquely and some species have a distinctly citrus or peppermint odor. The feathery flowers look like puffballs and have numerous stamens which are often white, sometimes red. They form drooping clusters that eventually become woody bell-shaped capsules that hold many tiny seeds. Tree bark of the various species differs considerably. Some, like the swamp mahogany, are thick and grooved, some, like the blue gum, are rough, and some, like the rainbow eucalyptus, are very smooth with patches flaking off, presenting a mottled green, gray and brown appearance.

The only medicinal uses reported for these trees in Polynesia are from Hawaii. Its Hawaiian name, “palepiwa” means “to ward off fever.” The leaves of several species contain aromatic oils. In a well-known folk remedy, the leaves are boiled and administered as a sweat bath for aches and pains and a number of other ailments. The steam from the boiled leaves is inhaled for treating asthma, congestion and fever and for colds and sinus problems. Liquid in which the leaves have been boiled is applied to cuts, rashes and skin ulcers.

The leaves and the bark of various species have also been used in dyeing.

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Arts & Culture

SACRED HARBOR

Harbor

In Hawaiian, “Ke-awa-kapu” means “sacred (or forbidden) harbor.” It refers to the coastal area between Kihei and Makena. The reason the name was given to this area is no longer known, but in former times the area was often used as a landing and launching point by the canoes of the ali’i.

Keawakapu Beach is a half-mile long broad expanse of sand which straddles the border between the southernmost Kihei hotels and Mokapu Beach in Wailea. It is capped at both ends by lava points, as are the next four sandy beaches that front the Wailea Resort complex -- Mokapu, Ulua, Wailea and Polo -- that stretch away to the south of it. Access to Keawakapu beach is from the right-of-way off South Kihei Road or from Wailea Resort where public parking is provided.

There is no natural coral reef off Keawakapu, and no protection from the open ocean. It is the same story for most of the beaches along the Kihei and the Wailea shoreline. The force of heavy surf and severe southern (kona) storms periodically devastate the beaches on this side of Maui. Keawakapu has historically suffered the severest damage during these storms (mostly because the privately owned properties that line the beach are part of a large, long-established residential community.)

Beach In January, 1959, a tropical storm eroded the entire beach at Keawakapu, leaving only exposed beach rock in its wake. Thirty to forty feet of high ground and bluffs fronting the homes were lost to the ocean. Old high-tide stone walls that had been hidden for years were suddenly exposed. After the storm, the residents went to a great deal of expense to restore their properties. During the summer the sand that had been swept away slowly began to return. The sandy beach came back.

Almost four years later, in the winter of 1962 to 1963, the beach again was severely eroded by repeated storms from the south. There was considerable damage to the private beach homes on the low sandy terrace behind the beach when, during one of the worst and longest sieges of wind and surf occurring in February, 1963, storms and heavy surf pushed by strong southwesterly winds joined forces with the February high tides. Property losses were enormous.

It was ironic, in a way. The Department of Land and Natural Resources’ Division of Fish and Game had chosen Keawakapu as one of four sites in the state as part of an experiment in developing artificial reefs. (The other three sites were located on Oahu.) The experiment was part of a study on the effects of artificial reef shelters on standing crops of fish. Early attempts using specially fabricated boxlike concrete structures had proven successful in increasing fish populations in areas lacking in natural shelters. In August, 1962, 150 car bodies were transported from Oahu to the Keawakapu reef site, about 400 yards offshore from the beach at depths of 80 to 85 feet.

WavesWhile the artificial reef did little to stop the depredations of the high surf and storms, it has substantially increased the fish populations within the area. In recent years the state has switched to using “fish shelters” made of old tires embedded in concrete. About 1000 of these fish shelters have been dropped into the waters 500 yards offshore.

In 1983 the state dedicated a new launching ramp for Maui boaters on the shoreline between Keawakapu Beach and Kama’ole III Park. The old ramp at the south end of Kalama Beach Park was closed officially on July 1, 1983. Today the Kihei Boat Ramp is the major boat launching facility on Maui’s southeastern shore.

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Braddah-Nics Lexicon

STANDARD: What is the meaning of this, Kimberly?
BRADDAH-NICS: Eh, Kimmie....wha's up?

* * * * * * * *

STANDARD: What did I do?
BRADDAH-NICS: What I did?

* * * * * * * *

STANDARD: Do you want to go with us?
BRADDAH-NICS: What? Like go?

* * * * * * * *
 
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Local Grinds

BIBINKA (Coconut Rice Dessert)

Ingredients:

- 5 1/2 cups mochi rice
- 12 oz thawed frozen coconut milk
- 1 lb. dark brown sugar

Procedure:

Rinse rice and cook in rice cooker.

In saucepan combine coconut milk and 1 1/4 cups brown sugar.

Cook over medium heat stirring constantly until thickened for approximately 20 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Put cooked rice into large bowl. Put aside 1/2 cup of coconut mixture, and stir remaining mixture and
brown sugar evenly into hot rice.

Put into prepped pan.

Top with remaining 1/2 cup of coconut mixture.

Bake for 20 minutes then broil for 5 minutes to set topping.

Let stand then cut into small pieces.

Makes 45 servings.

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Spotlight On…


RUDOLPH W. MEYER SUGAR MILL, Molokai

Professor, Surveyor, Rancher, Sugar Mill operator. Diverse occupations all held by one man: Rudolph W. Meyer.

Originally from Germany, Rudolph is said to have been sidetracked to Molokai on his way to the California Gold Rush. Marrying the high Cheiftess of Molokai, Kalama, and settling down in the Kala'e region, Rudolph took up cattle ranching in the early 1850's. However, a large scale rustling operation ruined his business; and while the rustlers (an entire village of them) were caught and imprisoned in Honolulu, Rudolph decided a break from the cattle industry was in order.

During this time, Rudolph built a sugar mill on his land, and by 1878, the R.W. Meyer Sugar Mill was open for business. Utilizing then state of the art mule and steam powered mechanisms, much sugar was harvested from his tiny mill. By 1889 though, Rudolph decided it was time for a change once again, and closed the mill to return to his first Molokai passion: Cattle Ranching.

More than a century later, thanks to much restoration and care, the R.W. Meyer sugar mill is once again in operating condition; this time as a historical museum for all to enjoy . .

Meyer Sugar Mill Museum Sign

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Content of Maui Attractions Newsletter ©Copyright 2001-2010 Meyer Computer, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Original text and images used in this newsletter are protected under the copyright laws of the United States. Reproduction of all or any part of this website by any means whatsoever constitutes copyright infringement and is prohibited absent the express written permission of the copyright owner.

 

 


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