Tropical Gardening: Trees need special love and attention
Trees, shrubs and other vegetation are the lungs of the planet, so the more the better, especially in urban and suburban settings. Some of our ancient historical trees like the banyan at Kona’s King Kamehameha Beach Hotel get so big we tend to over prune them to keep them in scale. This amazing tree is the first thing visitors see as they enter by ship at Kailua Bay so it is important that the tree is properly maintained. The spectacular banyans that frame Banyan Drive in Hilo are another example of unique trees needing love and attention. The East Hawaii Outdoor Circle has been instrumental in protecting them.
Mushroom cultivation workshop at Volcano Art Center
Instructor Zach Mermel will teach the basics of mushroom cultivation in the “Food From Wood: Growing Edible &Medicinal Mushrooms on Logs, Stumps, and Wood Chips” from 9 a.m.- 2 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22 at Volcano Art Center Niaulani Campus in Volcano Village.
HFS Federal Credit Union offers $25,000 in scholarships
The HFS Federal Credit Union Scholarship Program began 10 years ago and has awarded over $177,000 in scholarships that has helped over 70 student members with their college expenses.
UH-Hilo’s Wailau seeks storyteller applications for spring 2022
The University of Hawaii at Hilo invites the community to apply to be Wailau storytellers.
Let’s Talk Food: Vegan cookbooks
Chef Lillian Cumic has been creating plant-based recipes for over 20 years. She is a vegan chef and cooking instructor from Sydney, Australia, and lived in Sendai, Japan, for 30 years, working in the food industry and refining her love of vegan cooking.
Volcano Watch: HVO erupts with gratitude for University of Hawaii partners
The USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory is made up of experts with a wide variety of specializations. Seismologists, geodesists, geochemists, geologists, technicians, and support staff all work together to accomplish the same mission: to monitor, research, and assess hazards related to volcanoes and earthquakes in Hawaii.
Tropical Gardening: Staghorn ferns are the survivors of dinosaur days
Hawaiian gardens have long been famous for their vast array of orchids and other showy flowering plants. Ferns on the other hand don’t get top billing in most landscapes even though they were probably the first vascular plants to make Hawaii their home. In fact, ferns have been around long before flowering plants evolved.
Let’s Talk Food: A bumper crop of tangerines
If you have tangerine trees in your yard, you probably have fruit falling off the tree and are giving bags away to family and friends.
Volcano Watch: The legacy of Alexander Lancaster
Known to many as “Pele’s Grandson,” Alexander (“Alex” or “Alec”) Lancaster guided both tourists and scientists to Hawaii’s volcanoes for over forty years, from 1885 to 1928.
Tropical Gardening: Defoliation of avocado trees a concern in 2022
Avocado trees all over the island have been looking like they are dying.
EHCC exhibit explores themes of personal and collective grief
Through the exhibition “Grief” at the East Hawaii Cultural Center, now on display, international artist and educator Douglas Diaz examines his personal grieving process in a world overwhelmed by the global pandemic.
Mosaic workshop slated at Volcano Art Center
Volcano Art Center is hosting a ‘make your own mosaic’ three-session workshop starting this weekend.
Let’s Talk Food: Start the new year right
We always make New Year’s Resolutions and forget about them by February, But this year, we should just make some simple lifestyle changes that would affect our lives and our health.
Volcano Watch: Should old eruptions be forgot? Increase your volcano awareness this January
We traditionally spend the New Year singing “Auld Lang Syne,” a song that reminisces about times long past. For the first month of the New Year, staff at the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, and hopefully you too, will reflect on past and ongoing eruptions during the annual Volcano Awareness Month.
Tropical Gardening: A New Year’s Resolution
Observing the extreme polarization of folks who have different political, cultural or religious points of view over the last decade, we should recognize it is nothing new. We have had divisions throughout history and it makes us wonder if we will ever change for the better. The answer is yes if we are willing to focus on the real sources of our misery.
Rotary Club of Hilo awards $16,000 to two nonprofits
The Rotary Club of Hilo presented two checks of $8,000 each to their annual signature beneficiaries at the Nov. 19 club meeting.
Let’s Talk Food: Getting ready for the New Year
It’s hard to believe that the year is coming to a close and it certainly has been an interesting year. Just when we thought things were going to get back to normal, omicron has changed things for us.
Volcano Watch: Infrared measurements help HVO scientists unravel Kilauea’s gas chemistry
Most people in Hawaii know about sulfur dioxide (SO2) gas, the major component of vog. But, have you ever found yourself wanting to know the SO2/HCl (sulfur dioxide/hydrogen chloride) ratio in volcanic gas? Or the amount of CO2 (carbon dioxide) dissolved in volcanic glass?
Tropical Gardening: Christmas weekend an opportunity to share aloha
This is the perfect weekend with Friday being Christmas Eve, today Christmas and Sunday Boxing Day. Many Americans are not familiar with the history of the latter, but it is perhaps second only in importance to celebrating the birth of Jesus. The tradition of Boxing Day may be traced back to the early Christian era when the rich used to box up gifts to the poor. Today it is much more popular in the UK and Commonwealth Nations and is concurrent with the Christian holiday, Saint Stephan’s Day or Day of Goodwill.
Civil Air Patrol’s Lyman Squadron begins Great Start class
Imagine walking into an aircraft hanger for a leadership class unaware that this is the first step in achieving your life goals.