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Maui Attractions Newsletter July 2005 Featured PropertiesListing Search Results - 20 matches found. Showing listings 1 - 10 1 2 | | | | |
| MLS: 340653 |
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Pictures: 7 more. Price: $950,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Vacant Land
|  |  | | Top of the Hill in Phase 1 with sunset views, whale watching and can see both Lanai and Molokai Island. Very level lot easy to build. Create your dream home from one of 6 plans to begin your retirement on Maui and have the Kapalua lifestyle. Swimming pool area has been redone. Large recreation center. tennis courts, Barbecue areas. Only lot listed in Phase 1. Begin today designing your Maui home. |
| | MLS: 340657 |
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Pictures: 10 more. Price: $1,099,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Vacant Land
|  |  | | Excellent opportunity to begin the Maui lifestyle at the Plantation Estates Phase I in Kapalua. Lot 13 is very level for easy foundation work. The lot faces east for all of the early morning sunrises and the evening moon rise. On the right side sits a one story home on the gully between the lots for privacy on any home built on this lot. This lot is really a real gem for either a one or two story home. Close to restaurant and beach access and midst the Plantation Golf Course. This is a gem. This is the best priced lot in Phase I or II of Plantation Estates. See it today. |
| | MLS: 340661 |
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Pictures: 25 more. Price: $875,000 Fee Simple District: Wailuku Type: Single Family Beds: 3 Baths: 2.00
|  |  | | Bi-Coastal views of the harbor, Haleakala, Kahului lights at night. Spacious single level home that is being sold unfurnished. Enjoy the cool breeze and quiet cul -de-sac living in this newer subdivision above Wailluku. This home has many upgrades with solar hot water system, water softener with reverse osmosis purifier. GE Profile refrigerator and upgraded Microwave, new blinds throughout, designer colors on walls and trim, cherry wood flooring throughout. Total square footage = 2,770 with 1,887 interior space 482 Sq. ft garage 401 Sq. ft of covered lanais. Outside lanai has 3 glass doors for protection from wind. 40 yr. manufactuer's guarantee on roof and siding. Seller may consider some financing for 3 years with a good down payment. |
| | MLS: 340654 |
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Pictures: 14 more. Price: $148,000 Fee Simple District: Napili/Kahana/Honokowai Type: Condo Building: Honokowai East Unit: 303 Baths: 1.00
|  |  | | Excellent starter home. Unit has been upgraded and nice views from this unit. Up high to get some breeze also. A very good complex that is near the beach and shopping at the stores with sidewalks for walking. Complex has a pool and tennis courts for easy relaxing. Quiet complex. Tenant occupied so must have 48 hours notice to show. Electric included in maintenance fee. |
| | MLS: 340655 |
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Pictures: 12 more. Price: $290,000 Fee Simple District: Napili/Kahana/Honokowai Type: Condo Building: Honokowai East Unit: 112 Beds: 2 Baths: 1.00
|  |  | | Excellent home for first time buyers. Nice ground floor 2 bed 1 bath unit that is in very good condition with numerous upgrades. This is a nice quiet property with many home owners living here full time. Complex has a very nice pool and tennis courts and easy walk to shops and the beach is across the street. Tenant occupied so do need 48 hours to show. Electric is included in maintenance fees. |
| | MLS: 340647 |
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Pictures: 18 more. Price: $570,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Condo Building: Kapalua Golf Villas Unit: 12T2 Beds: 1 Baths: 1.50
|  |  | | Great Golf townhouse right on the golf course with mountain and sunset views. Excellent condition as not in rental. Easy to show. This unit is very close to pool, restaurant, beach across the street for an easy walk. End of cul de sac location for privacy. Unit has street access. for easy entry. |
| | MLS: 340794 |
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Pictures: 12 more. Price: $690,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Condo Building: Kapalua Golf Villas Unit: 16P3,4 Beds: 2 Baths: 2.00
|  |  | | Excellent Golf Villa right on the fairway. Great viewing for the LPGA game to be held next October. Lanai has been enclosed on dining side for more living area. Some oceanview. Unit has not been in rental pool. Golf Villas have 4 pools and easy walk to beach, tennis,restaurrants and all of the Kapalua amenities. Unit is in very good condition. |
| | MLS: 338995 - Potential Short Sale |
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Pictures: 7 more. Price: $700,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Condo Building: Kapalua Bay Villas I Unit: 17B-4 Beds: 1 Baths: 1.00 Potential Short Sale: Yes
|  |  | | OUTSTANDING VIEWS FROM THIS BRIDGE LEVEL UNIT. EXCELLENT RENTAL UNIT DUE TO LOCATION AND CENTRAL AC. SPECTACULAR LOCATION AND VERY COMFORTABLE LIVING. ANY OFFER AND SALE SUBJECT TO APPROVAL BY THE CURRENT LENDER. |
| | MLS: 340658 - Potential Short Sale |
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Pictures: 21 more. Price: $700,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Condo Building: Kapalua Golf Villas Unit: 26P1,2 Beds: 2 Baths: 2.00 Potential Short Sale: Yes
|  |  | | Great end unit at the top of the cul-de-sac for privacy. Four pools in Kapalua Golf Villas, short walk to tennis garden, restaurants, Kapalua Spa and beach. The unit is in good condition and in private rental program. Unit has central a/c and has some upgrades with the cabinets and tile. Fully furnished. Some view of the sunsets through the trees. Very nice for living as quiet and very private. Close walk to the new spa and shuttle will take you to all of the other Kapalua dining and beaches. |
| | MLS: 340660 |
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Pictures: 19 more. Price: $715,000 Fee Simple District: Kapalua Type: Condo Building: Kapalua Ridge Unit: 1012 Beds: 1 Baths: 2.00
|  |  | | Very good views from living and dining area and kitchen. The Ridge has two very well located pools and also the big recreation room with kitchen and enclosed party room. The unit is well located to pool and short walk to office and beach across the street. This is a very good price for this unit. New carpet and has been kept up. Appliances are all in good working order. This is well priced for the market and you must see to appreciate living at the Ridge. Unit is being sold furnished with a few exclusions. This is a unit to see. |
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Events
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Natural History
Kou
(Cordia Subcordata)
Kou is a quick-growing small, cultivated tree with shiny, heart-shaped leaves and pale gray bark that may grow to be 15 to 30 feet tall, with a spread of from 20 to 25 feet. The tree's wide-spreading crowns provided shade around homes -- especially in warm leeward areas. They were introduced to the islands by the first Hawaiians and were popular shade trees for villages along the leeward coasts of the islands. They are scattered in low elevation, dry coastal areas of all the main islands except Molokai and Kahoolawe.
The pumpkin-orange, scented blossoms were used to make a lei that is preferred for its color. The shallowly tubular flowers are up to two inches in diameter and are usually gathered in the evening when they fell off the tree. The plant makes green to yellow fruit that are about an inch long.
One legend associated with the lei kou regards a young chiefess of Ewa on Oahu. The girl was headed for a swim and saw an old woman stringing a lei out of kou. She arrogantly demanded the lei. The old woman angrily refused, telling her to get her own flowers and make her own lei. The chiefess could not stop thinking about the lei and she interrupted her swim to return to the old woman to demand the lei again, and then one more time. Each time the answer was an angry response.
The girl did not know that the old woman was a sorceress connected to the sharks. After the third time she tried to bully the old woman, the chiefess walked away and sat sulking close to the water's edge with her long, black hair hanging in the water. Meanwhile, sharks appeared to the old woman and asked her what they should do with the teasing girl. The old woman said they could do what they wished, and they attacked and ate the chiefess, scattering her blood over the rocks that remain red to this day. It is said that it is not the custom for the people of Ewa to wear a lei kou.
The plant is drought-resistant once established.
The beauty of the wood and the ease with which it can be cut makes kou one of the most highly prized of all woods for bowls and platters. Early woodworkers highly favored the strong, easy-to-work wood of the kou tree for carving cups, dishes and wooden idols. Bowls and dishes made of kou were used for serving and storing food because the wood did not impart a flavor.
The kou leaf gave a light-tan dye for kapa and fishing lines. The plant makes green to yellow fruit that are about an inch long.
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Arts & Culture
The Plague Outbreak
In 1900, the island of Maui had a population of about 25,300. More than half of the population was Chinese and Japanese nationals who had been imported as workers for the eleven active sugar plantations on the island. (Some of these plantations were among the largest and most productive in the Hawaiian Islands.)
By 1900, after a long, drawn-out corporate battle, in which the Maui-born titans of sugar, Alexander and Baldwin, and California sugar magnate Claus Spreckels, as well as the Wilder Steamship Company, fought over control of land holdings in Central Maui as well as the railroad system and port facilities, Alexander and Baldwin ended up with control of the sugar, the railroad and the port.
This was all well and good, but in the meantime, the port town of Kahului had developed into a squatter's town. Conditions were very unsanitary and there was a serious outbreak of the bubonic plague, which started in the area called "Chinatown," which had sprung up around the warehouses along the waterfront.
George B. Robertson, publisher of the newly launched "Maui News," quipped, "Hon. H. P. Baldwin, president of the Maui Sanitary Committee, advocates for the burning of the plague infected stores and warehouses in Kahului. Wonder if he knows who owns them?"
Robertson goes on to editorialize, "The unselfish and public-spirited position (Baldwin) takes in this matter should be a salutary lesson to some of the property owners in Honolulu."
In 1900 Lincoln M. Baldwin was sheriff for the islands of Maui, Molokai, Lanai and Kahoolawe. As the highest government official of the time, it was his job to carry out the directives of health officers from Honolulu for the containment of the plague.
A public notice, dated February 15, 1900 and signed by Dept. of Health agent Dr. C. L. Carvin, came out after the plague had struck the island killing several people. It said, "Strict quarantine regulations are now enforced and no traffic in or out of Kahului will be permitted except by authorized passes for individuals and approved permits for freight....No merchandise now in Kahului will be permitted to leave the town, excepting a limited number of articles capable of easy and absolute disinfection. All mail matter (local and foreign) leaving Kahului will be thoroughly fumigated. All dwellings, cesspools, closets and drains should be put into a sanitary condition, and cases of sickness be reported at once to the nearest physician."
Sheriff Baldwin helped to carry out the quarantine measures. Ultimately, he coordinated the burning of affected buildings in Kahului town, displacing Chinese, Japanese and Hawaiian residents. As an added measure, authorities encircled the entire port town with corrugated iron rat-proof fences, successfully ending the plague.
Ironically, in that same year, most of Honolulu's Chinatown burned in a fire purposely set by the authorities to stop the spread of bubonic plague to the rest of the community. A strong wind whipped the fire out of control, spreading the inferno from its intended confinement at Beretania Street and Nuuanu Avenue and razing three-quarters of Chinatown's 50 acres. Nearly 7,000 Chinese, Japanese and Hawaiians were ordered to quarantine camps for several months before they were permitted to return.
Meanwhile, on Maui, a group of 141 Japanese workers arrived unexpectedly during the plague quarantine. The irrepressible Robertson said,
"These men present a neat, tidy appearance, and are doubtless free from infectious disease. If they prove to be laborers and not the riff-raff of Honolulu, they can be utilized to good advantage."
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Braddah-Nics Lexicon
STANDARD: Perhaps it's time for a reality check.
BRADDAH-NICS: Braddah...what'chu talking? 'As how!....
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STANDARD: I'm not really interested in the gossip. I already know it.
BRADDAH-NICS: No need tell me somet'ing somebody wen' tell you. I already know already.
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STANDARD: All of this negativity is really unproductive.
BRADDAH-NICS: Some humbug, dis kine hakaka!
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Local Grinds
Pork n Tofu
Ingredients:
1 lb pork
1 medium sized onion
1 block of tofu
1 small piece of ginger root, crushed
12 green onions |
1 tablespoon salad oil
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup water |
Procedure:
Thinly slice pork into 2 by 1 inch pieces. Cut Green onions into 2 inch strips.
In a skillet, heat oil and brown pork. Add soy sauce, water, sugar, onion and ginger.
Bring to a boil and simmer for five minutes. Gently stir in tofu; simmer gently for a few minutes.
Add green onions just before serving.
Makes six servings.
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Spotlight On…
KULA
Think million-dollar panoramic views. Think of rich, red soil so fine that your feet send up puffs of dry dust as you walk in the bare dirt. Think of world-famous sweet Kula onions, and fascinating, magical-looking protea flowers. Think of tree-lined roads wending their way over the mountain slopes -- the smell of eucalyptus as you drive along the upper highway, the beauty of the blooming jacarandas and silk oak trees along the lower one. Think wide expanses of pasture land dotted with stands of opuntia cacti. (This is dry country, after all, tucked away in the wind-shadow of Haleakala mountain, on the leeward side of the island.
Think of small family farms and ranches with old wooden houses dating from great- grandpa's time. The diversity of crops harvested in this fertile place, trucked down the mountain to the Central Valley below, include a wide variety of flowers, cabbages, potatoes, onions, tomatoes, assorted fruits and even wine grapes.
Once upon a time Kula farms and ranches provisioned whaling ships, and Kula was called "Nu Kaleponi" (New California). Hungry miners during the California Gold Rush created such a demand for Kula's potatoes, onions and other vegetables and caused a major increase in the prices of the crops grown in the area. The population boomed in the area as farmers had their own rush for the gold, shipping off their produce to the Mainland. Population dwindled again when the gold frenzy died down and Californians settled in to farm their own lands.
Nowadays the fastest-growing "crops" are the homes in subdivisions built to accommodate folks looking for a quiet, country way of life.
The Kula area is divided into four communities: Omaopio, Pulehu, Waiakoa and Kula itself (which is sometimes further subdivided into upper and lower Kula). Currently, there are a few small stores in the area, but no real town center.
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