Request My Newsletter
****
Archives
Privacy Policy
Your email
Confirm email
Your name
Preferred format:
Text HTML
Maui Attractions Newsletter
July 2009
[Events] [Natural History] [Arts & Culture]
[Braddah-Nics] [Local Grinds] [Hawaiiana]
 

Featured Properties

Listing Search Results - 20 matches found.
Showing listings 1 - 10
1 2
Show Map
Save Search
Change Sort
MLS: 340653
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.
Events

Natural History

 

Silk, Silver Or He Oak
(Grevillea robusta))

The silk oak is a fast - growing tree from Australia that was purposely introduced into the Hawaiian forest as a potential timber resource. (The wood of the tree is similar to oak.) It is a cousin to the exotic bottle-brush proteas, and it eventually becomes a massive tree. They are often seen in large gardens, in parks, as street trees and growing wild in pastureland and in forests.

The tree was introduced about 1880. Over two million silk oaks were planted for timber in Hawaii between 1919 and 1959. While they will grow in dry areas, it does best in the moister, intermediate forest climates. Now naturalized in several forest areas, silk oak is adapted to semiarid as well as moderately moist mountain regions. Generally it grows straight and tall, up to 100 to 120 feet in ideal tall in ideal conditions. Although it is well-established, the trees do not seem to spread too aggressively or form dense stands that exclude other plants. In some dry areas, it will not even reproduce itself. The trees live to be about 60 or 70 years old.

The alternate, fern-like, silver-lined leaves of the silk oak are divided several times. The compound leaves alternate along the stems and are about six to 12 inches long. Each leaf has paired leaflets arranged along a central stem and the individual leaflets are deeply lobed with sharp points.

The feathery flowers, which bloom from April into the fall, are golden to orange fringed clusters of nectar-rich blooms. Japanese "white-eyes," mejiros, small green birds with bright white circles around their eyes and tubular tongues, often flock to these trees. Along the Kula Highway, when both the jacaranda trees and the silk oaks bloom, the combination is breathtaking.

Although the beautifully grained wood of the tree is popular in Australia for flooring and paneling, it never quite developed into an industry here. The wood has been used for furniture and cabinetmaking and as panels in Hawaii. It can also be used for paper pulp or veneer.

The fruits of the silk oak are brown leather-like capsules that split along one side to release winged seeds. The seeds germinate easily.

Creative lei makers have used the silk oak flowers in lei but it must be used carefully. Studies have found that the entire tree (including the sawdust from it) can cause a rash similar to poison ivy in certain sensitive people. In Australia, horses have died after eating parts of the plant. In Western Australia, people who are susceptible have asthma attacks when near these trees. These attacks occur year-round.

 

[ Top ]



Arts & Culture

 

Lower Paia Stores And Shops Pt.1

Old-timers still differentiate between Upper Paia (which is now mostly cane fields with remnants of the old sugar plantation camps up above the ruins of the old Paia sugar mill) and Lower Paia, where the modern town has developed around and spread out from a core group of renovated and refurbished old stores lining the Hana Highway and Baldwin Avenue.

The stores in Lower Paia are only half a mile down the road from the Paia Mill and the old site of the plantation-run Paia Store. At one time, the hills above the mill was the place where imported sugar plantation workers lived in plantation-built homes according to plantation-dictated schedules, educated their children in plantation-built schools, were cared for by plantation-paid doctors and medical professionals in a plantation-built hospital, traveled on plantation-built roads or caught a ride on the plantation railroad….well, you get the idea.

The stores in Lower Paia were not located on sugar plantation lands. They did provide the Paia Plantation residents with alternatives to the plantation-run stores during the years when the camps were still alive. Most of the shops in Lower Paia were family-owned and had a minimum of employees who were not relatives.

The stores depended heavily on the plantation residents for their business, however. (After all, sugar plantation workers were the majority of the population.) At least one fish-market owner made the rounds through the camps selling his surplus fish during the early 1930's and mid-1940's.

Some of the stores tried to provide services similar to those of the plantation stores, including taking orders and making deliveries. Most of the storekeepers tried to offer credit to their customers like the plantation-run stores, but without the advantage of a close relationship with the plantation payroll office, collection of the money owed was often a big problem. Few independent storekeepers offered credit after giving it a try. They couldn't afford the bad debts that went uncollected.

The independent stores tended to specialize. They sold groceries, clothing, fish, or drugs and provided goods and services not offered by the company-run stores. However, one independent store, Paia Mercantile, rivaled the plantation-run Paia Store in size and variety of goods. Because the plantation store was a perquisite provided by the company to its workers (in lieu of cash wages), the independent storekeepers had a hard time.

In the early 1900's the Paia merchants sold rice, taro and poi raised in Keanae and vegetables from Kula and from the plantation camp vegetable gardens. They made pies from coconuts that came in from Hana. Kula farmers drove horse-drawn wagons down to Paia to deliver their produce . They usually spent the night before heading back home the next day with purchases from the stores.

Among the early entrepreneurs was the Hew family, who ran Hew's restaurant. Their saimin was justly famous, it was said. Meanwhile, Satoki Ikeda was known for his innovative marketing. He nailed sample clothing up in the windows of his store on Baldwin Avenue as ads to lure people into the store. He posted English- and Japanese-language ads in community bathhouses and peddled clothes in the plantation camps while his wife sewed and worked in the store. Their store eventually grew into a full-service clothing factory and expanded, with branches in Wailuku and in Lahaina.

Then there was the Nashiwa family bakery, which introduced and popularized bread among the rice-loving camp folks. They invented and shared recipes that required using a lot of bread.

Nobuichi Kobayashi started one of the first Maui auto repair and parts businesses in Paia town in 1914. He was one of the sons of a Japanese family who ran a small inn and raised horses when Paia was a rest stop for people who were traveling to Hana on horseback, and went to Honolulu to learn about how to repair the new-fangled automobiles. He taught many youngsters about car repair and they went on to open their own repair businesses.

Kobayashi's success as a mechanic helped him explore other interests over the years, helping to start businesses that continue to this day. A successful businessman, Kobayashi helped organize both Haleakala Motors and Maui Finance Company. In 1940, he opened a Pepsi-Cola and Nehi soda bottling company, the American Soda and Ice Works, at the back of his Princess Theater, which was across the street from his auto shop. It was one of three theaters in Paia during the 1930's. The other two were the Lower Paia Theater (also known as the Narumaru Theater), which ran Japanese language films, and the plantation-owned Paia Theater in Upper Paia.

The Princess Theater is long-gone, but it went through several reincarnations. The building was a USO during World War II and then a place for servicemen on leave near the end of the war. In 1970, Jim Fuller moved his Charley's Fruit Stand there from Lahaina and it evolved into the now-famous Paia landmark: Charley's Restaurant and the Charley P. Woofer Saloon.

Of all the independently owned stores in Lower Paia, only Paia Mercantile, at the corner of Baldwin Avenue and the Hana Highway, rivaled the plantation-owned Paia Store in size and variety of goods. The store was stockholder-owned and managed in the 1920's by chief stockholder T. Hanzawa. About a dozen employees lived behind the store, each earning a dollar a day. It remained in business until the 1970's and was later subdivided into various retail spaces . . .

Next Month: Fire, Waves, and War!

 

[ Top ]



Hawaiiana

Lana'i

Now that we've taken the journey through Maui, let's move on to the island of Lana'i!


Lana'i:
Day [of] conquest

Out of eight major Hawaiian islands, Lana'i is the sixth largest and one of four islands in Maui County. The others in the county include Maui, Moloka'i, and Kaho'olawe. One of Lana'i's original nicknames is “The Pineapple Isle.”

Ko'ele:
Dark sugar cane

Lalakoa:
Koa tree branch

Kaumalapau:
unknown

Keomuku:
The shortened sand

Keomuku is now a deserted village that was only inhabited from 1899 – 1901 as part of an effort to form a sugar plantation in the area. In 1903 the Ka Lanakila o Ka Malamalama Church was built and today the church is the last of the intact structures there.

Manele:
Sedan chair

Polihua:
Eggs [in] bosom

Polihua is the longest and widest white sand beach on Lana'i. In the past, it was also the most famous green sea turtle nesting beach in Hawaii. It's name refers to the fact that they would lay their eggs on the beach. This is a good place to watch whales.

Lopa:
Tenant farmer

Kahemano:
School [of] sharks

Occasionally small groups of sharks appear here, and this inspired its name.

 

Naha:
Bent or curved

Naha is mentioned in one version of the story of Ka'ulula'au, one of the most famous legends of Lana'i. According to this tale, Ka'ulula'au, the son of Kaka'alaneo, a former chief on Maui, was known for playing pranks. As he grew older, his pranks grew progressively worse and finally his parents decided to abandon him on Lana'i. At the time Lana'i was inhabited only by ghosts who killed all human invaders. However, with the help of his guardian spirit, Ka'ulula'au found a cave to secretly sleep in at night while the ghosts hunted for him. Eventually he was able to rid the entire island of all its evil spirits. To communicate his success to the people of Maui, Ka'ulula'au built a huge signal fire on the beach at Naha. According to this legend, that is how Lana'i became safe for human habitation for the first time in history.

Keanapapa:
The flat cave

Ka'ena:
The heat

Awalua:
Double harbor

 

 

 

  [ Top ]



Braddah-Nics Lexicon


STANDARD: He's very thrifty, a very hard bargainer.
BRADDAH-NICS: Oh, him...he kinda manini, all-a-time playing some kine jiu-fut game.

* * * * * * * *

STANDARD: Gee, George! Why are you acting so obnoxiously?
BRADDAH-NICS: George...why you all-a-time ete?

 

 

 




[ Top ]



 

Local Grinds


 Macadamia Nut Mahimahi with Lemon Caper Sauce

 

Ingredients: 

    Mahimahi:

  • 4 mahimahi fillets
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup macadamia nuts
  • 1/2 cup panko (Japanese breadcrumbs)
  • olive oil
  •  

    Lemon Caper Sauce:

  • 1 stick of butter
  • 3 teaspoon capers, drained and rinsed
  • 1 small garlic clove
  • 5 teaspoon lemon juice

 

Procedure:

Mahimahi:

Ground the macadamia nuts until fine. Mix the panko and ground macedamia in a bowl and then spread mixture on a plate. Beat two eggs in a bowl. Take each fillet of mahimahi and dip in the eggs, coating thoroughly, then in the panko and macadamia nut mixture, coating thoroughly. Saute fish in skillet with olive oil. Cook for about 5 minutes on each side until golden brown.

Lemon Caper Sauce:

In a small skillet, melt butter. Add in the lemon juice, garlic, and capers. Simmer on low heat for about 30 seconds. Drizzle lemon caper sauce over the mahimahi and enjoy!

 

 

[ Top ]



 

Content of Maui Attractions Newsletter ©Copyright 2001-2010 Meyer Computer, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Original text and images used in this newsletter are protected under the copyright laws of the United States. Reproduction of all or any part of this website by any means whatsoever constitutes copyright infringement and is prohibited absent the express written permission of the copyright owner.
Lowson & Associates* P. O. Box 998 * Lahaina, HI 96767
Local: (808) 276 9015

e-Mail jo@jodorner.com

Kapalua Resort Real Estate Specialist - Sitemap

 

 

Resources
Report SPAM Abuse: abuse@jodorner.com

Meyer Computer, Inc.