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AMAZING THINGS
Revitalizing Breadfruit

Revitalizing Breadfruit

"The Ho'oulu ka 'Ulu Project.“

Ho'oulu ka 'Ulu is a project to revitalize 'ulu (breadfruit) as an attractive, delicious, nutritious, abundant, affordable, and culturally appropriate food which addresses Hawai'i's food security issues. It is well known that Hawai'i imports about 90% of its food, making it one of the most food insecure states in the nation. Additionally, since the economic downturn of 2008, many families lack access to affordable and nutritious food. We believe that breadfruit is a key to solving Hawaii's food security problems.

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TheGardenTalks: Soul Food

Church of the Pacific Food Pantry Gives Away More Than Food (Part II)

"The first thing we give away is aloha, then love, then food." John Burkhouse, Po’oku Community Garden Coordinator.

Farmers from the north shore of Kauai bring food and plants for the Church of the Pacific food pantry. ©2011HappyHourDesign
Farmers from the north shore of Kauai bring food and plants for the Church of the Pacific food pantry. © 2011 HappyHourDesign
For one day every week an incredible abundance of food and good people come together to be sure that their community on the north shore of Kaua‘i is fed. For this group it’s not important who you are, how much or how little money you have. No one is standing there to check your credentials and decide if you need food. All you need to do is show up and share in the generosity and hospitality of the Church of the PacificFood Pantry.

It’s been just six months since I last visited Po‘oku Community Garden (see story here) and the garden has grown up to match the vision of its hardest workers, Gabrielle Pla and John Burkhouse. Several fantastic boons have fallen in the path of the garden -– garden angels they might be called. The first is Kevin, a former participant in the pantry who now dedicates his time to creating an organic garden filled with abundant, sustainable produce. Kevin takes the Kaua‘i Community College Growing Food Seminar Series and uses the Po‘oku Community Garden to employ new ideas from the class topped with his own gardening know-how. He is a big advocate of companion planting and uses plants that help each other out to get the nutrition they need. For example, he grew corn for the pantry and planted pole beans at the end of the season allowing them to ramble over the dying stalks and use the old corn as a prop while they decompose. Corn is a heavy nitrogen user and beans will put nitrogen right back in the soil.

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Beginning Organic Beekeeping Begins!

Jenny Bach of Bee Love Apiaries co-taught the class with Richard Spiegel of Volcano Island Honey Co.
Jenny Bach of Bee Love Apiaries co-taught the class with Richard Spiegel of Volcano Island Honey Co.

The Beginning Organic Beekeeping class taught by Richard Spiegel and Jenny Bach started on Saturday, July 9, 2011, with a new crop of 17 people—all enthusiastic about learning to work with the bees. The class meets every Saturday afternoon from 1 to 5 pm in July.

Class attendees are backyard gardeners and small farmers, most of whom are interested in keeping bees for pollination of trees and vegetables. Many people on Hawai‘i Island have reported noticing a decline in macadamia nut and fruit tree production that is attributed by horticulturists to  the loss of wild beehives. Wild hives have begun to decline as a result of the varroa mite bee parasite and other bee pathogens.

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Adaptations -- Featured CSA

Overview of Adaptations raised beds.
Overview of Adaptations raised beds.
The Adaptations CSA operation has been farming and providing locally grown organic produce to chefs and families since 1984. Owners Tane and Maureen Datta’s operation combines produce grown on their Adaptations Farm while also acting as a distribution center for produce and fruits grown by over 100 other organic farms all around Hawai’i Island. The 7.5 acre certified organic farm at 1,500 foot elevation in Honaunau, South Kona, has been in operation for 15 years growing micro mix, edible flowers, herbs, salad greens, avocadoes and medicinal plants -- and experimenting with crops not usually seen on the island.
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TheGardenTalks: Putting the Community First

Church of the Pacific Po‘oku Community Garden (Part 1)

Gabrielle & John work diligently on Kauai to see that no one goes hungry.
Gabrielle & John work diligently on Kauai to see that no one goes hungry.

"The first thing we give away is aloha, then love, then food." John Burkhouse, Garden Coordinator

Quietly and steadily the Church of the Pacific Food Pantry, in Po‘oku, Kaua’i, fed over 8000 people last year and fed them well. Fresh basil, kale, green beans, chard, sweet potatoes, papayas and citrus are just some of the food items offered at this food pantry. It doesn’t sound like what you’d expect from a typical food pantry and, well, that’s because it’s not. The goal is to provide balanced and nutritious food for families in need.

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The Hawai‘i Farm Bureau Federation Organic Symposium

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The organic movement is a confluence of environmental protection, ecological growing, and consumer health concerns. The May 27 Organic Symposium was organized by the HFBF Organic Committee, which is This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. within Hawai'i.

HFBF Organic Symposium was held at the Ag Sciences Building, UH Manoa on May 27, 2011. The featured speakers included Sylvia Yuen, the UH CTHAR Interim Dean; Russell Kokubun Hawai‘i Dept of Ag Chair; and Jim Hollyer Food Safety Coach, as well as several prominent organic growers. Puanani Burgess (Oahu conflict-transformation facilitator) provided the Keynote address, and Myrone Murakami (Hawai‘i Farm Bureau president) provided the welcome.

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Neem!

Neem trees growing within a Kona coffee orchard for shade, insecticidal properties, timber, and medicine.
Neem trees (center) growing within a Kona coffee orchard for shade, insecticidal properties, timber, and medicine.

It’s great that so many people are jumping on the homegrown food bandwagon. There is nothing more delicious and healthful than your own fresh fruit and vegetables grown with love without pesticides, herbicides or chemical fertilizers.

But for me, homegrown also means making my own medicines from plants in my garden, from the wild and from friends’ yards. And also using locally sourced materials -- like neem -- to improve soil fertility and food production. Recently I was brought into a discussion about a number of neem trees growing on the Hamakua Coast. The property owner had wanted to tear out his 70 or so trees in favor of fruit such as lychee and longan. Although I wasn’t directly involved in convincing him of their value, I am very happy that this valuable resource is now being preserved.

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