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Maui Attractions Newsletter
January 2007

[ Natural History ]  [ Arts & Culture ]
[ Braddah-Nics ] [ Local Grinds ] [ Spotlight On ]


Don't forget to check out Debra's
Current Maui MLS real estate property listings!
 

 

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

There is so much going on this month!  To get inspired for the ski/snowboarding season go see Warren Miller’s Off The Grid at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center on 12th  (I love his movies!).  There are also some great concerts going on at the MACC this month…Willie K and Eric Gilliom (aka: Barefoot Natives) on the 13th; Kris Kristofferson on the 20th; the Temptations (!) on the 21st; and Jake Shimabukuro 25 – 28. 

Check out my “Maui Links” section – I have added a new activity – my friends’ horseback riding tour in Hana.

We have a new listing in Kula.  A 2-acre parcel zoned rural half-acre with a cute little 1-bedroom, 1-bath cottage on it for $953,000 (check it out below).

Please remember, if you or anyone you know are looking to buy or sell real estate - or if you have any questions regarding real estate - please feel free to contact me. My e-mail address is deb@HomeOnMaui.com; my direct local number is 283-0049; my direct toll free number is (888) 212-4626. I look forward to hearing from you.

With aloha,
deb


Featured Maui Real Estate Property Listings


     
     
     

Haiku – North Shore Real Estate
241 Waiama Way – click here for more information
Haiku Hill at its best! 3-bedroom, 3.5-bath, 4,500 square foot
home. Amazing attention to detail. Sweeping ocean views.
$3,100,000

     

     
     

Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
15325 Haleakala Hwy – Click Here For More Information
This 1.5-acre property has great views of the north and south shores AND an extra large (3/4”) water meter!
$869,000

     

     
     

Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
295 Pulehu Road – click here for more information
Architecturally-designed home in desirable Lower Kula, surrounded by
multi-million dollar homes on 2- to 20-acre parcels.
$2,995,000

     

     
     
Kahului – Central Maui Real Estate
13 Ho’owehi Place – click here for more information
Like-new 3-bedroom, 3-bath home in a great new neighborhood!
$665,000
     

 
 
     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
0 Kula Highway – click here for more information
7.9-acres with coast to coast views! New gated large lot subdivision with only 5 lots. Spectacular!
$1,600,000
     

 
 
     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
15800 Haleakala Hwy – click here for more information
This 2-acre property is zoned rural .5 acre with a 1-bedroom, 1-bath cedar home.
$899,000
     

 
     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
65 Maud’s Place – click here for more information
This is a beautiful 5-bedroom home with a wonderful floor plan! Located in the Keokea area on a 2-acre view lot – this is one of the nicest homes on the market in Kula.
$1,750,000
     

 
     
     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
2936 Lower Kula Road – click here for more info
This 4-bedroom, 2.5-bath home in lower Kula has a detached cottage and sits on a level, half-acre lot. GREAT views!
$890,000
 

 
     
     

Haiku – North Shore Real Estate
2080 Lilikoi Rd.
This C.W. Dickey-designed home and detached art studio was built in 1930 for Ethel and Harry Baldwin and moved to its present site in 1997. A “must see” if you are looking for views and privacy!
$1,225,000 - SOLD

     

     
     
Makawao - Upcountry Real Estate
670 Hoene St., Maui Uplands
Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with ocean views and detached 1 bedroom, 1 bath cottage on a half-acre.
$985,000 - SOLD
     

 
     
Olinda – Upcountry Real Estate
2188 Pi’iholo Road
Great cottage on a .5-acre in Olinda! Check it out!
$598,000 - SOLD
 

 
     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
28 Ka Drive
Located in one of my favorite neighborhoods, Kula Kai, this single-level home sits on a private 14,255 sq. ft. lot with ocean view.
$698,000 - SOLD
 

     
     
     

Makawao - Upcountry Real Estate
111 Keleawe Street

This 4-bedroom, 2-bath home has a flexible floor plan, a detached 2-bedroom
cottage and a large workshop/storage building. It's a great value at
$779,000 - SOLD

 

     
     
     
Kahului - Central Maui Real Estate
Kahului Ikena #40-221

1 bedroom, 1 bath condo with NEW: carpet, tile, paint, faucets, blinds refrigerator and closet built-ins!
Convenient location.
$239,000 - SOLD
     

     
     
     
Makawao - Upcountry Real Estate
50 Ahuwale Place

3 bedroom, 2 bath home plus detached studio/workshop with bathroom on 2 level, useable acres only 15 minutes to town.
$885,000 - SOLD
     

     
     
     

Pukalani - Upcountry Real Estate
320 Hololani Street

Impeccably maintained, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on the 11th fairway of the Pukalani Golf Course.
$819,000 - SOLD

     
 

     
     
     
Haiku - North Shore Real Estate
373 Ulumalu Road

Tucked back from the road among beautiful big trees is this 3-bedroom, 2.5-bath home with 3 large bonus rooms.
$750,000 - SOLD
 

 
     

Makawao – Upcountry Real Estate
1000 Ukiu Rd.
Classic 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath ‘plantation’ home in perfect condition on a 10,000+ sq. ft. lot.  Large kitchen and bedrooms; private backyard.
Perfectly priced at $550,000 - SOLD

     

     
     
     
Kula - Upcountry Real Estate
11 Welina Place

This is a beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 4,364 square foot home on 2 acres in Kula 200. It is all on one level with the exception of the 816 square foot master bedroom suite which has a bi-coastal view. Fabulous!
$1,685,000 - SOLD
     

 
     
     
Kula - Upcountry Real Estate
297 Kulamanu Circle

This like-new home has great curb appeal. Very nice landscaping and sideyard. Private and tranquil inside the home. Upper and lower decks overlook ranchland and Maalaea. Beautiful ocean view from living room and master BR. 9' ceilings upstairs. Fireplace (with blower) in living room. Double-pane windows throuighout. Built-in Bose sound system. Stainless steel appliances and Corian countertops. Walk-in closet in master BR. Whirlpool tub in master BA. Big family room with half-BA (and closet )downstairs. Easy to show.
$860,000 - SOLD
     

 
     
     
Pukalani - Upcountry Real Estate
157 Pi'imauna Street

Kua'Aina Ridge: This gorgeous 3-bedroom, 2-bath home has amazing attention to detail (crown molding, plantation shuttered windows, bead-board wainscoting, etc.), a gourmet kitchen, perfect landscaping and nice north shore ocean views.
$760,000 - SOLD
 

 
 
 
 
 

Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
1576 Lower Kimo Drive
Immaculate 4-bedroom, 3-bath (OR: 3-bedroom, 2-bath with attached 1-bedroom, 1-bath ohana). Newly painted inside and out, brand new flooring and new appliances. Nothing left to do but move in and enjoy the great south shore ocean view and the fabulous Kula climate!
$715,000 - SOLD



   
 
Pukalani - Upcountry Real Estate
256 Hololani St.
Beautiful 3-bedroom, 2-bath home with 1-bedroom, 1-bath ohana on the 12th fairway of the Pukalani Golf Course.
$929,000 - SOLD

 


     
 
Kihei - South Maui Real Estate
Menehune Shores #416
Oh what a view! Walk in the front door and all you see are islands and ocean! This 1-bedroom, 1-bath, 4th floor, ‘front & center’ unit was completely renovated in 2001 – new EVERYTHING!
$650,000 - SOLD

 


 
Haiku - Upcountry Real Estate
2080 Lilikoi Road
This is the classic C.W. Dickey-designed home on 2-acres with an amazing view!
$1,550,000 - SOLD
 

     
Kula – Upcountry Real Estate
28 Mano Drive, Kula Kai
Nice, big, comfortable 4-bedroom, 3-bath home in Kula Kai with a very flexible floor plan. This would be a great house for a large or extended family as the downstairs offers independence from the rest of the house.
$825,000 - SOLD

 


     
   
Pukalani - Upcountry Real Estate
350 Lokelani house
A cute 3-bedroom, 2-bath home with 2-car garage and panoramic north to south shore views!
$700,000 - SOLD

 


   
Makawao - Upcountry Real Estate

This is the classic “old plantation house” that everyone wants! Complete with glass door knobs, French doors, a big porch and an old “wash house” out back! Located across from pineapple fields this is a great buy at
$495,000 - SOLD

 


 
           
Events



Natural History

HAWAIIAN COTTON, MA’O
(Gossypium spp.)

Ma’o or huluhulu is the endemic, native cotton. The two- to five-foot shrubs are usually as wide as they are tall. Hawaiian cotton appears to be a close relative of “cotton” species found in the Galapagos Islands and Australia. Once more common in many arid coastal areas of the major islands (except the Big Island), it has become rare in areas where the impact of urban and suburban development has disturbed its natural habitat.

The leaves of the plant are 1-1/2 to 2 inches long. They are wider than they are long and are usually three-lobed. The stems and leaves have soft white hairs that give the plant a grayish tinge and velvety feel.

The flowers are usually solitary with bright yellow petals and are two to three inches in diameter. Their form shows the close relation of the plant to the hibiscus family. Like the fowers of the hibiscus, ma’o flowers wilt after a day. They are, nonetheless, sometimes used in lei. The flowers become woody, three-celled capsules that have three or four small seeds per cell.

Each seed is covered with short, fuzzy, brown lint. There was hope at one time for using the fibers of the plant commercially, but they were too short. However, the plants’ genes have been used in cotton breeding programs in attempts to improve disease resistance and drought tolerance in commercial plants.

In ancient times, the leaves produced a greenish dye and the flower petals, a yellow-green dye. (The Hawaiian word for green, ‘oma’oma’o, comes from this use.) However, it is interesting to note that modern kapa makers have been unsuccessful in reproducing the subtle green color of the ancient ‘oma’o dye. The missing ingredient or dyeing technique has apparently been lost.

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Arts & Culture

KEAWALA’I CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

Just south of Makena Bay landing is one of the island’s earliest churches, Keawala’i Congregational Church. Its name means “peaceful harbor” or “tranquil haven.” The small pebbly cove in front of the church is formed by two points of lava. The points shelter the cove’s inner waters during the most adverse ocean conditions. The north point of the cove is actually a small rock islet with three kiawe trees growing on it. To the east of the cove is Maluaka Beach.

Keawala'i Congregational ChurchThe area was apparently a sacred place in ancient times. In the kiawe and cactus on the hillside “not far from the church at Makena,” archaeologist Winslow M. Walker from the Bishop Museum noted a large heiau, “said to be of sacrificial class but now reduced largely to a shapeless pile of rocks.” Walker conducted an all-isalnd survey in 1931. Walker said the ancient site was called the Kalani Heiau, measured 126 feet across the front and had a width of 98 feet. It was apparently an open platform eight feet above the surrounding countryside and was built of rough aa blocks with some coral and pebbles on top. Its interior structure had largely been demolished by cattle, he said.

Historian Inez Ashdown, whose stories came from living with and talking to Hawaiian old-timers, said that the heiau that stood a few yards above Keawalai Church was named One’uli (land of mystery) or Onelau’ena (land of plenty). There was once a sacred coconut grove there called Nahawale in reference, she said, to the sacred lineage of the Maui chiefs. According to Ashdown, the heiau was a place of healing. She says the land around Nahawale was a pu’uhonua, a place of refuge.“

In later times, although the area remained part of a large village in the Honua’ula district, the ancient chiefs and customes were forgotten or discarded for a new order and today the land is graced only by the beauty of Faith at Keawalai Church, and a few new homes,” she wrote in her book KE ALALOA O MAUI, which was published in 1970.

During the 19th century, Makena was the busiest settlement in South Maui. Cattle from Ulupalakua Ranch and the other pastures in the Upcountry area were taken down the mountain to Makena Landing and shipped to the market in Honolulu. Up until 1912, barrels of sugar, pineapples, eggs, poultry and vegetables packed the holds of every nterisland steamer that plied the waters between Honolulu and Hilo. The port was second only to Lahaina in economic importance on Maui. By the 1920s inter-island boat traffic had shifted to other ports on the island and Makena withered.

Forty years after the French explorer La Perouse visited Maui in 1786, Protestant missionaries began their work on Maui. Because of the importance of the port at Makena, they began a mission there shortly after their arrival. There were over one hundred families living in the area at the time. The establishment of that mission was soon followed by others at Kanaio, Keawakapu and Kalepolepo.

The first Keawalai church was a pili grass structure erected in 1832. In 1855 parishioners gathered wood as well as stone and coral for lime from the nearby reefs and built a small, but more substantial church that lasted until today. The stone walls of the church are three feet thick.

In the churchyard there is an old graveyard, the resting place for members of the old Makena families. A number of the tombstones have cameo photographs.

When the steamers stopped coming to Makena the population declined. For a variety of reasons, the church lost its worshippers and was virtually abandoned. However, it has come back and is as strong and active today as it ever was.

In 1996, artist Dale Zarrella carved petroglyph designs of a family of four plus the other generations within a family on two rocks. The designs were incorporated into the church’s annual luau theme for that year and the following year. Today the stones are included in the sanctuary of the church.

In the summer of 1998, Sam Lu’uloa, a stonemason, was commissioned to restore a section of the stone wall surrounding the church. The 100-foot section of the wall is located between the sidewalk and gated entrances to the church. One day the entire wall surrounding the church will be restored.

In the winter of that same year, Charlie Noland, a craftsman, fashioned five stone lamps for the church’s celebration of the season of Advent. Although the stone lamps incorporate modern materials (a wick made of synthetic fiber and pure liquid paraffin) the design of the lamps are based on early Hawaiian stone lamps that used wicks of olona fibers or kapa (bark cloth) strips and oil expressed from kukui nuts.

In 2000, a columbarium (vault for urns) was erected in the cemetary. The design included the use of small pebbles, ili’ilii, and several sleeping mats that were used for the church’s annual Christmas Eve Candlelight Service. The design intended to reflect the interior of a hale noa,, sleeping house. A stone lamp representing the Christ Candle was also included. Regular services are held every Sunday and the church is a popular choice for weddings.

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Braddah-Nics Lexicon

STANDARD: Didn't I tell you about Florence?
BRADDAH-NICS: I nevah tell you about Florence? You know....about da dakine?

* * * * * *

STANDARD: Why are you being so nice to me?
BRADDAH-NICS: How come you stay all nice li' dat?

* * * * * *

STANDARD: Joe's mother refused to let him go to the party.
BRADDAH-NICS: Joe maddah wen' tell him he no can go pah-ty.

* * * * * *

[ Top ]



 

Local Grinds

Carmel Melts

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 2 cups brown sugar
  • dash vanilla extract
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups flour

Procedure:

In a medium to large sized bowl:
  • Melt butter and blend with brown sugar.
  • Mix eggs, vanilla, and flour into butter mixture.
  • Pour into greased 8" square pan and bake at 350 degrees for 35-40 minutes..

[ Top ]



 

Spotlight On…..

Upcountry Maui

View

On the western slopes of Haleakala, "Upcountry" is a loosely defined agricultural and residential area that takes advantage of the the fertile volcanic soil and the cool, temperate climate a couple of thousand feet above the isthmus. Stretching from the wet orchards and rainforests around Makawao to the arid, parched cattle country of Ulupalakua, it reaches up past the cloud cover to the chilly 4,000-foot elevation and down towards the family farms in Lower Kula and Pukalani and the tail ends of the pineapple and sugar plantations down around Haliimaile that are getting crowded out by burgeoning subdivisions. It is one of the most popular residential districts on the island.

Upcountry folks have the best views of the sun setting over the West Maui mountains and, on certain stretches of the mountain roads, the whole isthmus -- north to south -- lies at your feet, stretching all the way to the western mountains and the highest peak, Puu Kukui. When the clouds are high and the sky and sea are the bluest blue, the crystal air makes you feel like you're flying.

 

CowsUpcountry is more than an area; it really is a frame of mind. One long-time upcountry resident, a painting contractor, states flatly, "You have to know how to live easy when you live upcountry. If you rush-rush-rush, you miss the best parts of being here." For him, the best parts included noticing which trees are in bloom, talking story with neighbors and friends, enjoying watching his active kids growing up and throwing great barbecues and garage parties for family and friends.

For others, the best might include art shows, gardens, garage sales, rainbows, horses -- rodeo, polo, or equestrian show - or community events like public meetings, church bazaars and the annual Upcountry Fair. Whatever best is, upcountry people tend to take their time to savor it.

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Maui Real Estate by Area
North Shore Maui Real Estate:
  Spreckelsville Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Paia Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Kuau Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Haiku Real Estate - Homes - Land
Upcountry Maui Real Estate:
  Makawao Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Olinda Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Haliimaile Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Pukalani Real Estate - Homes - Condos - Land
  Kula Real Estate - Homes - Land
  Ulupalakua Real Estate - Homes - Land
  Kanaio Real Estate - Homes - Land

 

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