Hāna Limu Festival Is Back – and in new location
August 1, 2022
CONTACT:
Claudia Kalaola, 808-269-2514, wehi@kalaola.com
Jan Elliott, 808-248-8458, jandelliott@gmail.com
Hāna Limu Festival Is Back – and in new location
Hāna, Maui ― Nā Mamo O Mū‘olea is excited to announce the much-anticipated post-pandemic reemergence of the annual Hāna Limu Festival! The 2022 Limu Festival – Hanana No Nā Limu on Saturday – will be held on August 13th, 2022 from 10 AM to 3 PM at Coconut Cove, 20 Uwala Drive in Hāna, Maui. Please note that this is a different location than previous festivals.
As we celebrate Hawaiʻiʻs Year of the Limu, the Festival will also pay tribute to John “Jackie Boy” Lind who recently passed. John was an aloha 'āina warrior, kalo farmer, lawai'a loea and Konohiki of Kīpahulu moku on Maui. Jackie Boy, known to some as Uncle John, was a mentor, dear friend, and kupuna to kindred spirits across our islands.
This year’s festival will feature live limu (seaweed) demonstrations , hands-on activities for youth, Hawaiian music, a silent auction, crafts, ‘ono food, and t-shirts that showcase the beautiful limu prints of Maui artist Gwen Arkin. Some Hāna residents and limu experts will conduct limu surveys at four locations along the Hāna Coast on the morning of the event and share their observations, manaʻo, and limu collections with Hanana No Nā Limu participants.
“We are grateful to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs and the County of Maui for supporting our community, as the funding they provide allows us to host this gathering dedicated to learning about, celebrating, and perpetuating our native Hawaiian limu and culture,” said Claudia Kalaola, Limu Festival Chair and co-founder of Nā Mamo O Mū‘olea.
Organized by Hāna residents, the Limu Festival – Hanana No Nā Limu – is designed to promote a deeper awareness of our native limu and to make people mindful of their kuleana and role in ensuring that ocean resources are here for generations to come. Collaborating partners and co-sponsors help with the event, including The Nature Conservancy, Kua ʻĀina Ulu ʻAuamo, and the Maui Nui Makai Network. The event focuses on how Hawai’i’s oceans and fresh water – and the health of limu, fish, plants, culture, and more – are inherently connected. Native limu is essential, not only as an ‘ono (delicious), nutritious part of the traditional Hawaiian diet but for its vital role in the health of the nearshore ecosystem, serving as the base of the food chain and providing food and shelter for herbivore fish and invertebrates.
Each year, funds raised through a silent auction at the Festival enable Nā Mamo O Mū‘olea to award the Isabelle Aiona Abbott Scholarship to Hāna students who follow in Dr. Abbottʻs footsteps by pursuing studies in marine biology, natural resource management, and Hawaiian studies.
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Nā Mamo O Mū‘olea is a non-profit group made up of residents and families of Mū‘olea whose mission is to perpetuate traditional management of the Mū‘olea ahupua‘a through a lease agreement with the County of Maui and to restore and maintain Mū‘olea’s natural, cultural, scenic, historic and marine resources for the benefit, education, and enjoyment of our community and future generations.
About the Office of Hawaiian Affairs; Established by the state Constitutional Convention in 1978, OHA is a semi- autonomous state agency mandated to better the conditions of Native Hawaiians. Guided by a board of nine publicly elected trustees, OHA fulfills its mandate through advocacy, research, community engagement, land management and the funding of community programs. Learn more at www.oha.org.
About OHA’s Community Grants Program OHA’s Community Grants Program supports non-profit organizations whose projects and programs serve the Native Hawaiian community and align with OHA’s Strategic Plan. https://www.oha.org/grants.