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Maui Attractions Newsletter May 2007
Don't forget to check out Debra's
Current Maui MLS real estate property listings!
Hi!
Just a reminder that May Day is Lei Day in Hawaii!
I have added a new link to my Maui Links section - A Happy Maui Wedding. My friends, Jeff & Fuji Bond, help plan beautiful weddings on Maui. Check them out at www.aHappyMauiWedding.com .
We have two new listings to share with you. One is a beautiful estate property in lower Kula in Kula View Estates. It is a 4-bedroom, 2.5-bath home on 2-acres of beautifully landscaped grounds. The quality of construction and attention to detail really make this home stand out - as do the panoramic views! Our other new listing is in Pukalani's newest neighborhood, Kulamalu. It is a 3-bedroom, 3-bath, single-level home on the 6th fairway of Pukalani Golf Course. It has great ocean and Haleakala views. Please scroll down to view more details of both of these properties.
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; and my direct toll free number is (888) 212-4626. I look forward to hearing from you!
Aloha,
deb
Featured Maui Real Estate Property Listings
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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 |
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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
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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 |
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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 |
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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
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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 |
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Olinda – Upcountry Real Estate
2188 Pi’iholo Road
Great cottage on a .5-acre in Olinda! Check it out!
$598,000 - SOLD
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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 |
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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
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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 |
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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 |
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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
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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 |
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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
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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
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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
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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
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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 |
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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
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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
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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
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Events
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Natural History
THE NOBLE MACADAMIA NUT
(Macadamia integrifolia)
One of the treats Mainland folks enjoy receiving from Hawaii relatives is the succulent macadamia – whole, pieces, bits, roasted, unroasted, salted, unsalted, covered in chocolate, herbed or honeyed, incorporated in cookies, cakes, candies, and other sweets...the variations keep morphing into one more irresistible pupu. (Best of all, they’re good for you. They are high in fat, protein and carbohydrates and a good source of calcium, phosphorous, iron, thiamine, riboflavin and niacin.) The oil extracted from the nut is excellent as a cooking oil, and is good for your skin too.
The first macadamia trees, it is said, were planted in Honokaa on the Big Island in 1881 by William Purvis, a sugar plantation manager who brought the seedlings from Australia, where it flourished in the coastal rain forest regions of southern Queensland and northern South Wales. Over the years many trees were planted in private gardens, but for 40 years, the trees were grown in Hawaii (as in Australia) mainly for ornamental purposes. Its full, deeply green form, composed of wavery-edged, long leaves, dangling clusters of hundreds of tiny, fragrant white flowers followed by the smooth-skinned green husks covering the brown nuts were a beautiful adjunct to any garden large enough to accommodate the trees which can grow to 40 feet or more. The nickel-sized nuts were considered just too hard to crack. A standard nutcracker was not the answer.
Some old-timers remember putting the nuts under boards and then driving a car over the boards as the most efficient way to crack the shells. Island kids knew that you had to find THE special crack in a concrete sidewalk or an asphalt driveway that could hold the nut just so as you tapped it delicately or whopped it soundly with a hammer (depending on how good you were at hitting the seam just right). The trick was to get the nutmeat out whole without squashing it all flat or having half get stuck in a stubborn shell.
Now, of course, there are portable gadgets built like a squeezing vise that can take on the mighty mac and crunch that tough shell until the luscious nutmeat plops out. Since not even experts can tell when a nut is ripe on the tree, those lucky enough to still have a tree in their yard just wait for the nuts to fall to the ground. (Country folks often have to beat the rats to the nuts. Even those tough shells are not strong enough to keep the rodents from partying.)
The research and experimentation necessary to make the commercially viable as a crop began as early as 1892. In 1916, the Honokaa Sugar Company on the Big Island planted the trees as a reforestation project and, as their value became apparent, developed these plantings into a major orchard. Another company, established in 1922, planted one orchard on the slopes of Tantalus overlooking Honolulu, and another in the Kona District of Hawaii. During the 1930’s there was enough production for small commercial sale of the nuts in the islands.
The first grafted orchards were planted between 1938 and 1941 and by 1947 the Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station had developed superior varieties of the tree which produced higher quality nuts larger quantities. After World War II, in 1948, Castle and Cooke planted an enormous, 1,000 acre orchard in the middle of an old lava flow at Keaau, near Hilo on the Big Island. Island agricultural research had found that lava, because of its porous nature and resulting good drainage makes an excellent vehicle for growing some crops provided there was adequate water. Castle and Cook also built the first nut-cracking and processing plant for Hawaii’s largest macadamia nut orchard. New plantings in other areas continued at a steady rate during the 1960’s and 1970’s. At first, it didn’t look like the trees were going to be worth much. They took so long to produce nuts. Some begin bearing when they are five years old, reaching good production at age 7 and full production at age 14. In time, the macadamia nut emerged as a major agricultural industry in Hawaii. Machinery was developed to suck up the nuts that fall to the ground, to husk them, and to remove the shells without crushing the meat inside.
In the 1980’s increasing numbers of trees were planted around Wailuku-Waiehu as unprofitable former sugar cane land became a macadamia nut forest. Unfortunately, the great Maui macadamia movement never quite got off the ground.
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Arts & Culture
THE STREETS OF LAHAINA TOWN
During the time of the first Kamehamehas, and at the time of the arrival of the missionaries on Maui in 1823, the streets in Lahaina had Hawaiian names. Present-day names came into effect at about the time the royal capital was being shifted to Honolulu, during the reign of Kamehameha III, King Kauikeaouli. The move was officially made in 1850.
The word for street is “alanui.” “Ala” means “path” or “way” and “alanui” means “big path” or “big way.” Front Street was known as Alanui Moi, or the King’s Road or Government Road. At that time, Lahaina was a village of some 2,400 persons who lived in a series of grass houses along Alanui Moi. It stretched from Mokuhinia Pond north to the neighborhood known today as Mala.
William Ellis, a missionary who arrived in 1823, wrote, “The appearance of Lahaina from the anchorage is singularly romantic and beautiful. A fine sandy beach stretches along the margin of the sea, lined for a considerable distance with houses, and adorned with shady clumps of kou trees, or waving groves of cocoa-nuts....
“The level land of the whole district for about three miles, is one continued garden, laid out in beds of taro, potatoes, yams, sugar cane or cloth plant. The lowly cottage of the farmer is seen peeping through the leaves of the luxurious plantain and banana tree, and in every direction white columns of smoke ascend, curling up among the wide-spreading branches of the breadfruit tree...”
Where the Pioneer Inn is located today in downtown Lahaina, there was once a large taro patch. This was King Kamehameha III’s personal taro patch which he daily tended himself to show the commoners “that common work has dignity.” It grew a few steps away from his father’s house in Lahaina.
Next to the royal house, was a brick “palace,” a modest two-story European-style structure made of bricks of Maui earth, fired in Lahaina. It was the first European style building in all of the islands, erected by order of King Kamehameha I in the early 1800’s, when he learned from his European and American visitors that Western buildings were not made of grass. The foundations of the structure are still visible today, a rectangular clearing in the grassy park in front of the Lahaina Library.
The building stood long enough to be used as a storehouse well into the 19th century. It had apparently been constructed by two ex-convicts from Botany Bay, Australia. Nonetheless, according to one source, the palace stood for 70 years despite many years of neglect.
When the palace was excavated in 1968, it was found that the weight of the upper building had long ago cracked the bricks in the lower part. The bricks in the foundations which are exposed to view today are fragments.
The structure was two stories tall and apparently divided into two rooms on each floor. Queen Kaahumanu, the King’s favorite wife, refused to live in this house because it was so confining and stuffy. They both lived in a grass house erected directly beside the brick one. The King used the building mostly to keep watch on the arriving ships.
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Braddah-Nics Lexicon
STANDARD:Would you please look at this?
BRADDAH-NICS: Try look.....
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STANDARD:That made us laugh a lot!
BRADDAH-NICS: Only bus' laugh, da kine!
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STANDARD: We had a nice conversation.
BRADDAH-NICS: Us guys was talking story. Was cool.
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Local Grinds
GUAVA BANANA PIE
Ingredients:
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- 1 1/2 cups sliced bananas
- 1 1/4 cups guava nectar
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
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- 3 tablespoons cornstarch
- 3 tablespoons cold water
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 baked pie shell
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Procedure:
- Combine guava nectar, lemon juice, sugar and salt in pot.
- Boil combination over low heat.
- Combine water and cornstarch into a smooth paste, and stir into boiled mixture.
- Stir mixture until thick and clear.
- Let cool.
- Add bananas to mix; pour into baked pie shell.
- Top off with whipped cream.
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Spotlight On….. Legend of Molokini
2 1/2 miles off the southern coast of Maui, the extinct volcano of Molokini sits peacefully in the pacific. Known worldwide as a prime destination for diving, with hundreds of species of marine life (some endemic to this spot) and clear calm waters, Molokini is one of the most beautiful places on the planet. But before the crater, there came the legend of Molokini . . .
Many moons ago, the Hawaiian warrior Lohi'au came to the attention of the fire goddess Pele. Through time, Pele fell in love with Lohi'au. But Lohi'au could not return her affections, for he himself had already fallen in love, and wed, the giant lizard Mo'o. Intensely jealous of Mo'o, Pele flew into a rage. If she could not have Lohi'au, nor could Mo'o. Pele attacked Mo'o, and in one swift blow, killed her. Pele subsequently tossed Mo'o's tail into the ocean, landing in and creating the place we now know as Molokini.
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