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The Kohala Center Receives $150,000 From the Office of Hawaiian Affairs


June 9, 2021 at 5:30 am
The Kohala Center received a $150,000 grant that will support the native Hawaiian community through the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ (OHA) ‘Ohana and Community Based Program Grant for Hawaiʻi Island.
The grant will enable the center to address the interrelated needs of ‘āina, kānaka (people), and mo‘omeheu in the ahupua‘a (traditional mountain-to-sea land division) of Kawaihae in leeward Kohala, which includes the Honokoa watershed. Through its “Ho‘olauna Kawaihae: Building pilina through respectful engagement” initiative, The Center will use the grant funds to research, learn, assess, and incorporate ancestral practices to engage respectfully in restoring dryland native forests in the ahupua‘a and strengthening reciprocal relationships between its people and the natural environment. ....

Hawaiian Islands , United States , Hoolauna Kawaihae , Cheryl Kauhane Lupenui , Kailapa Community Association , Kohala Center , Community Based Program Grant For Hawai , Office Of Hawaiian Affair , Hawaiian Affair , Community Based Program Grant , Kawaihae Hawaiian , Main Hawaiian Islands , Cheryl Ka Uhane Lupenui , Office Of Hawaiian Affairs , ஹவாய் தீவுகள் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , கோஹலா மையம் , அலுவலகம் ஆஃப் ஹவாய் செய்கை , ஹவாய் செய்கை , சமூக அடிப்படையிலானது ப்ரோக்ர்யாம் மானியம் , பிரதான ஹவாய் தீவுகள் , அலுவலகம் ஆஃப் ஹவாய் வாழ்க்கைத்தொழில்கள் ,

Kahaluʻu Beach Park in Kona Closed for Coral Spawning


Hawaii Magazine
Kahaluʻu Beach Park in Kona Closed for Coral Spawning
From May 28 to June 5, the popular bay on Hawaiʻi Island will be closed to help the vulnerable cauliflower coral.
May 18, 2021
Cauliflower coral (
Pocillopora meandrina) called
koʻa in Hawaiian is a surge-tolerant species of reef-building coral that you often find in exposed shorelines around the Islands. As its name indicates, this coral resembles the cruciferous vegetable, with a dense skeleton, sturdy branches and symmetrical head formation. It protects Hawaiʻi’s shorelines and provides habitat for fish and crabs. Early Hawaiians used koʻa like sand paper to file or sand wood objects. ....

United States , Beach Park , Cindi Punihaole , Brian Neilson , Eyes Of The Reef Network , Kohala Center Kahalu , Kohala Center , Bay Education Center , Department Of Land , Natural Resources Division Of Aquatic , Biological Diversity , Kona Hawaii , Bay Education , Natural Resources Division , Aquatic Resources , Reef Network , West Hawai , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , கடற்கரை பூங்கா , பிரையன் நீல்சன் , கண்கள் ஆஃப் தி ரீஃப் வலைப்பின்னல் , கோஹலா மையம் , வளைகுடா கல்வி மையம் , துறை ஆஃப் நில , இயற்கை வளங்கள் பிரிவு ஆஃப் நீர்வாழ் , உயிரியல் பன்முகத்தன்மை ,