Have ‘Coffee with a Cop’ Friday in Waikoloa

The Hawaii Police Department’s South Kohala Community Policing Section invites the public to join them for “Coffee with a Cop” from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Friday at Starbucks in the Queens Marketplace, 69-201 Waikoloa Beach Drive, in Waikoloa.

Volcano Watch: The most unusual Kilauea eruption…maybe 1823?

Last month a Volcano Watch article discussed the bicentennial of the first visit of westerners to Kilauea caldera, led by English missionary William Ellis, in 1823. Ellis did not just visit the summit region; he had approached from Ka‘u, traveling along what eventually became known as Kilauea’s Southwest Rift Zone (SWRZ). Ellis first witnessed evidence of Kilauea’s restlessness there, in the form of a vast, 4.8-square-mile (12.5 square-kilometer) lava flow that had erupted just a short time before.

Waimea Arts Council announces logo contest

All talented graphic designers, artists and creative residents of Hawaii, age 16 and up, are eligible to enter the free logo contest to help the Waimea Arts Council commemorate its 50th anniversary with a new logo.

Let’s Talk Food: CDC names watercress the perfect food

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has named watercress the world’s healthiest food! It received 100 out of 100, with Chinese cabbage just behind at 91.99, Swiss chard at 89.27, beetroot at 87.08, and spinach (sorry Popeye) at 86.43.

Free eye clinic this week in Kona

Hawaii County, in partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense, the state Department of Health and community partners, is hosting a free eye clinic today through Friday in Kailua-Kona.

Volcano Watch: Searching for tephra from one of Kilauea’s largest explosive eruptions

Understanding the eruptive history of volcanoes in Hawaii requires a tremendous amount of time and effort examining deposits. Typically, older eruptions have less material exposed at the surface because younger eruptions bury them, or wind and rain erode them. Such is the case for one of Kilauea’s largest explosive eruptions, which is not exposed near its source at the summit and must be studied further afield.

Tropical Gardening: Hawaii Island cloud forests are threatened

Cloud forests, like the Kona Cloud Forest on the west side of Hawaii Island, are in jeopardy. Global warming is one culprit, and another is land clearing for development by landowners unaware of the impact forest destruction has on the eco-system and water-supplying aquifers. Trees produce oxygen, they supply shade, and sequester carbon that would contribute to global warming.

HAPA awards 5 accounting scholarships

The Big Island Chapter of the Hawaii Association of Public Accountants recently awarded five scholarships totaling $3,500 to five students pursuing accounting degrees.