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Maui Cultural Lands: World's Greatest Places 2024

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Maui Cultural Lands: World's Greatest Places 2024


When wildfires tore through Maui’s west side in August 2023, killing 102 people, destroying 1400 homes, and incinerating over 200,000 trees, the future of tourism to the Valley Isle was thrown into question.

With over 50% of the island’s budget still reliant on the tourism industry, and floundering, Maui is at a crossroads. While Lahaina and Kaanapali resorts supported the community by housing 8,000 displaced residents in 40 hotels for months, many blame the fire’s quick spread on the calculus of clear-cutting for sugarcane farms and resorts, non-native resort landscaping, and a multi-year drought. Short term rentals continue to escalate the already limited real estate and rental markets. Local activist group Lahaina Strong has gained traction this year on legislation banning short term rentals, and, hoping to secure more resident housing, Maui’s mayor is trying to eliminate 7,000 short-term rentals by 2026, a bill which is currently being contested. In many ways, the sense locally now is that economic dependency on visitors must cease. But people the world over will always want to visit this slice of paradise.

So when Maui officially reopened to tourism in November, it leaned more heavily into a new type of travel that encourages visitors to support the islands: regenerative tourism. The idea is that visitors steward the destination through volunteering and making conscious choices to support locally-owned and environmentally sound businesses, with the aim of leaving the islands better because of their visit. Yet many visitors remain unsure of the best ways to help the island and its residents.

Maui Cultural Lands, one of the longest running indigenous-owned nonprofits in the Lahaina area, provides visitors hands-on ways to give back on their vacations. Since 1999, Maui Cultural Lands has been taking volunteers out to steward the largest concentration of archaeological sites in West Maui, not to mention tending to the forests and watersheds in Lahaina’s neighboring communities, Honokowai and Olowalu. MCL’s director Ekolu Lindsey, whose Lahaina house was destroyed, has been pleased to see that since Maui reopened to tourists, he’s had hundreds of volunteers. “The fires impacted the world–even if you’ve never been here–because everybody loves Maui,” he says.

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On volunteer days at their two locations Mālama Honokowai (Saturdays at 9am) and Kipuka Olowalu (Wednesdays and Thursdays at 7:30am) people might pull invasive plants, extract and replant baby trees to reforest Lahaina, or plant native seedlings along the watershed. 

“This is not eco-tourism. We are going to work,” says Lindsey. “We are opening people’s eyes to what they can do to make their communities more resilient. And it’s fun.” 

Lindsey, a native Hawaiian, teaches volunteers about Hawaiian culture, where aloha means adding value to your presence. “We help people think of Hawaii as home,” Lindsey says, “Not your home, but someone’s home.” 

After the fires, one of Lindsey’s board members, Duane Sparkman, approached him with an idea – he wanted to reforest Lahaina and Kula with native trees. Lindsey jumped into a partnership with Sparkman’s newly created nonprofit Treecovery. 

Sparkman, chief engineer at Royal Lahaina Resort, founded Treecovery after colleagues talked about beloved ancestral trees lost in the fire. Sparkman started cataloging the thousands of trees lost that fateful August day, then marched into disaster recovery meetings and announced his plan to reforest Lahaina. 

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He didn’t take no for an answer – not from FEMA, not from the state government, not from naysayers who said he’d never be able to replicate beloved trees (like mountain apple or specific tasting mango species) growing in Lahaina backyards. 

He plans to replicate precolonial Lahaina, when the town wasn’t (as its name informs) the land of the unrelenting sun, but shaded by native ulu and kukui nut trees. And he’s doing it all at no cost to residents.  

“We’re bringing tourists in to help rebuild,” Sparkman says. Today, visitors plant baby trees (many sourced from Maui Cultural Lands’ work in the Honokowai region) in nurseries across the island – you’ll even see them growing in many Kaanapali resort lobbies. By 2025, visitors will be replanting on people’s property.  

Other resorts have partnered with similar projects, like Fairmont Kea Lani’s partnership with Skyline Conservation, which visitors can donate to or volunteer with to restore native forests on the island. After a morning of physical labor, locals will tell you to bolster recovery further by dining at locally-owned restaurants like Lahaina’s recently reopened Māla Ocean Tavern and Aloha Mixed Plate, or Moku Roots (which relocated to Upcountry after the fires). Also reopened are Old Lahaina Luau, considered the state’s most authentic tourist-facing cultural performance, and Maui Ku’ia Cacao Farm tours and tastings. In June, the venerable Kapalua Food and Wine festival returned, showcasing heavy hitters in the foodie scene like chefs Charlie Palmer and Maneet Chauhan. In October, the state’s largest celebration of food, Hawai’i Food and Wine, returns to Ka’anapali. 

Still, tourism on Maui remains fraught. While touristy areas like Wailea appear untouched, over 1700 Lahaina residents are still displaced, many of them residing in hotels while still paying hefty mortgages and home insurance. Signs in restaurant windows urge visitors to not ask workers about their experience with the fires.

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How Maui rebounds might just depend on having a different, more sustainable, maybe more regenerative relationship with tourism. For now, visitors can do our small part by getting our hands dirty, then savoring loco moco whipped up with aloha.

Buy your copy of the World’s Greatest Places issue here





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Hawaii County Weather Forecast for March 02, 2026 | Big Island Now

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Hawaii County Weather Forecast for March 02, 2026 | Big Island Now


Photo Credit: James Grenz

Hilo

Tonight: Cloudy. Scattered showers in the evening, then isolated showers after midnight. Lows 59 to 66 near the shore to 48 to 54 at 4000 feet. Southeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Monday: Cloudy with isolated showers. Highs 75 to 80 near the shore to around 65 at 4000 feet. East winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday Night: Cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 59 to 65 near the shore to 48 to 54 at 4000 feet. East winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Kona

Tonight: Cloudy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows around 69 near the shore to 45 to 52 near 5000 feet. Light winds. Chance of rain 20 percent.

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Monday: Cloudy. Highs 81 to 86 near the shore to around 67 near 5000 feet. Light winds becoming west up to 10 mph in the afternoon.

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Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. Lows around 69 near the shore to 44 to 51 near 5000 feet. Northwest winds around 10 mph in the evening becoming light.

Waimea

Tonight: Cloudy and breezy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows 59 to 68 near the shore to 53 to 59 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 10 mph increasing to up to 20 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday: Cloudy and breezy. Isolated showers in the morning. Highs 72 to 78 near the shore to 67 to 75 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. Breezy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows 59 to 67 near the shore to 52 to 58 near 3000 feet. East winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

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Kohala

Tonight: Cloudy and breezy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows 59 to 68 near the shore to 53 to 59 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 10 mph increasing to up to 20 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 20 percent.

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Monday: Cloudy and breezy. Isolated showers in the morning. Highs 72 to 78 near the shore to 67 to 75 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. Breezy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows 59 to 67 near the shore to 52 to 58 near 3000 feet. East winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

South Big Island

Tonight: Cloudy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows around 71 near the shore to around 51 near 5000 feet. Northeast winds up to 15 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday: Cloudy and breezy. Highs around 83 near the shore to around 64 near 5000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph.

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Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. Breezy. Lows around 70 near the shore to around 50 near 5000 feet. East winds 10 to 20 mph.

Puna

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Tonight: Cloudy. Scattered showers in the evening, then isolated showers after midnight. Lows 59 to 66 near the shore to 48 to 54 at 4000 feet. Southeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Monday: Cloudy with isolated showers. Highs 75 to 80 near the shore to around 65 at 4000 feet. East winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Monday Night: Cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 59 to 65 near the shore to 48 to 54 at 4000 feet. East winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Waikoloa

Tonight: Cloudy. Lows around 70 near the shore to 48 to 54 above 4000 feet. Light winds.

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Monday: Cloudy. Highs around 83 near the shore to 65 to 71 above 4000 feet. Light winds becoming northwest up to 15 mph in the afternoon.

Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. Lows around 70 near the shore to 47 to 54 above 4000 feet. North winds 10 to 15 mph shifting to the east after midnight.

Synopsis

The cold front has dissipated into a trough and remains northwest of the Hawaiian Islands this evening. High pressure will build in from the north and allow the trade winds to strengthen from Monday through Wednesday. Brief passing showers will favor windward and mountain areas in the overnight to early morning hours through Wednesday and then over southeastern slopes and island interior sections from Thursday onward. Winds will weaken and veer slightly from a more east-southeast direction from Thursday on into the weekend. Shower activity will remain limited during this time period.

Short term update

The large band of high level cirrus clouds and mid level alto stratus clouds currently over the islands will continue to slowly diminish through Monday. The cold front approaching the islands has stalled and diminished into a trough just northwest of the island of Kauai.
Trade winds blow into the region and strengthen into the moderate to locally breezy range from Monday through Wednesday. A slight decrease in wind speeds and a shift from a more east- southeast direction remains in the forecast from Thursday onward as another cold front approaches the islands from the northwest, weakening and lifting the ridge north of the state. Local scale sea breeze winds will develop along terrain sheltered slopes of each island as the large scale winds weaken. Limited shower activity will prevail into next weekend with only brief showers possible.
The afternoon forecast looks good. No evening updates.

Previous discussion

Issued at 302 PM HST Sun Mar 1 2026.
Expectations for this afternoon remain on track. The boundary upstream of Kauai has made little to no forward progress today, sea breezes have struggled to establish owing to abundant high clouds, and showers southwest of Kauai and Oahu have essentially remained in place while stratiform elements peel off to the northeast. In addition, regenerating showers over Windward Oahu have dissipated in response to backing low-level flow. All told, an uneventful, cloudy, and mostly dry day across the state. Going forward, building heights over the N Central Pacific will maintain strengthening, but progressive high pressure at the surface. This in turn ensures the return of trades tonight which then become breezy during mid-week. Winds diminish slightly by late week as trades veer to ESE in advance of another round of upstream height falls. Typical trade wind weather anticipated throughout this time with showers focused windward and mauka. High clouds gradually clear from west to east Monday into Tuesday before exiting the area altogether by Wednesday.

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Aviation

A weakening stationary boundary will allow for abundant high clouds and relatively light land/sea breezes to prevail across most TAF sites. This front will also allow for disorganized showers across Kauai and Oahu tonight, however confidence was on the lower end based on weather model guidance, so made use of VCSH and PROB30 where rain chances were felt to be the highest. MVFR conditions may prevail under shower activity, otherwise VFR is expected across most sites for the period.
AIRMET Tango remains in effect across the islands due to upper- level turbulence from FL200-400 due to this front, with conditions expected to improve into tomorrow as this system continues to weaken. Patchy mountain obscuration may occur due to the presence of this front, however observations and webcams suggest that the threat is not widespread enough to warrant an AIRMET at this time. Light icing is also possible in cloud layer 120-180.

Marine

Issued at 302 PM HST Sun Mar 1 2026.
A dissipated front will linger into Monday just northwest of the area. Fresh to locally strong easterly trades will build in by Tuesday as surface ridge strengthens to the north. Winds will maintain strength but veer east southeast towards the end of the week as another system approaches from the west.
Surf along north and west-facing shores will be above seasonal average as a northwest swell (310 degrees) is expected to impact through Monday. Surf should remain small though the week with a small northwest bump expected next weekend.
Surf along exposed east-facing shores will be a bit elevated due to a short-to medium-period northeast (40 degrees) swell, then decline Tuesday. However, period and choppy conditions are expected to return by Tuesday as fresh trade winds redevelop and expand upstream of the state.
Surf along south-facing shores will remain near the seasonal average into March.

HFO Watches/Warnings/Advisories

None.

Big Island Now Weather is brought to you by Blue Hawaiian Helicopters.

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Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov



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YAS Fest Returns To Kalākaua Park, March 14th

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(BIVN) – YAS Fest, aka the Youth Art Series Festival, is returning to Kalākaua Park in Downtown Hilo.

The East Hawaiʻi Cultural Center is hosting the event on Saturday, March 14th from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. “Keiki and their families will be treated to an exciting array of performances, craft and information booths, and art activities,” a press release promoted.

From event organizers:

YAS Fest brings together local organizations dedicated to providing arts opportunities to keiki and teens from around Hawaiʻi Island. By spotlighting their activities, YAS Fest celebrates the importance of arts education for everyone.

Booths include the Hilo High School Art Club, Hawaiʻi Handweavers’ Hui, Friends of the Palace Theatre, and over a dozen more.

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Headlining the performers is HAAStile (a teen rock band from Hawaiʻi Academy of Arts and Sciences, directed by Trever Veilleux). Audiences will also enjoy performances by Big Wave Dance Academy, Aloha Teen Theatre, N2 Dance, Hawaii’s Volcano Circus, Prince Dance Institute, and Kona Dance and Performing Arts.

YAS Fest is made possible by support from County Council District 2 and Coldwell Banker Island Properties. EHCC also thanks KTA Super Stores, Kelsey Ito, and Lō‘ihi Studios for their contributions.

Says YAS Fest organizer Kellie Miyazu, who is EHCC’s Youth Education Director, “Last year we had around 300 visitors to the first YAS Fest. There was a lot of nice feedback from visitors, and also from the organizations who were able to network with each other and the community. We’re expecting an even more successful festival this year.”

Visitors are also encouraged to stop by the EHCC patio across the street to learn more about EHCC’s vision for the year and how community support helps keep EHCC’s unique gallery and keiki programs accessible to all.

For more information, visit EHCC online at ehcc.org, call 961-5711, or visit EHCC at 141 Kalakaua Street. Current gallery and office hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, and Friday noon to 6 p.m.





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Boy dies after being struck by vehicle in Hawaii Kai | Honolulu Star-Advertiser

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Boy dies after being struck by vehicle in Hawaii Kai | Honolulu Star-Advertiser


A boy was killed after being struck by a vehicle today in Hawaii Kai, police said.

At about 11:02 a.m., a 37-year-old woman “was attempting to travel northbound” on Kukuau Place when the vehicle hit a boy who was in the road in front of the vehicle, according to a Honolulu Police Department’s Traffic Division news release. The child was taken to a hospital in critical conition where he was pronounced dead.

The driver remained at the scene and was uninjured, police said.

HPD did not release the boy’s age or say whether speed, drugs or alcohol were possible factors in the collision.

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This was Oahu’s ninth fatality in 2026, compared with 15 at the same time last year.




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