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Newsletter 52 - June 2013

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Aloha!

Recently, scientists identified the specific pathogen that caused crop failure leading to the Irish Potato Famine during the mid-1800s. This is a good reminder that large-scale monocultures - mass plantings of a single variety of a single species - are vulnerable to a wide range of pests and diseases that usually prevail unless extreme measures are taken to combat them.

A recent local example of a monoculture that has suffered large losses due to a pest is Kona coffee (Coffea arabica "Kona Typica"). The coffee berry borer (Hypothenemus hampei) arrived in Kona a few years ago and is now damaging a significant portion of the crop, as well as requiring farmers to add a new range of time consuming and expensive tasks to their coffee management.

The Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders have agricultural systems that are highly diversified in terms of crop species and varieties. Time tested over hundreds of years, it is a good time to look at those systems as models for developing ecologically sustainable agricultural systems.

Craig Elevitch and Pedro Tama
for the Hawai'i Homegrown Food Network
http://hawaiihomegrown.net
visit us on Facebook

Breadfruit tree in South Kona.


Events

Every Tuesday. 09:00am - 12:00pm, Puna
Hands in the Earth Practicum

Every Thursday. 09:00am - 12:00pm, Puna
Permaculture Classroom & Field Studies     

Saturday, June 01, 2013, 09:00am - 01:00pm, Hamakua
Sheep & Goat Beginners Clinic

Sunday, June 02, 2013, 12:30pm - 03:00pm, South Kohala
Mala'ai Annual Art & Sol Celebration & Auction

Friday, June 07, 2013, 07:30am, South Kohala
Annual School Garden Network (HISGN) Summer Symposium

Friday, June 07, 2013, 07:00pm, South Kohala
Free Showing of "Seeds of Hope"

Saturday, June 08, 2013, 09:00am - 10:00am, North Kona
Coffee Talk: Vertical Selection Workshop

Saturday, June 08, 2013, 01:00pm - 04:00pm, South Kohala
Victory Gardening with Containers-1

Tuesday, June 11, 2013, 06:00pm - 08:00pm, Hilo
Hilo Natural Farmers Monthly Meeting

Saturday, June 15, 2013, 10:00am - 12:00pm, Hamakua
Composting Workshop

Saturday, June 15, 2013, 01:00pm - 04:00pm, South Kohala
Victory Gardening with Containers-2

Saturday, June 15, 2013, 02:00pm - 04:00pm, Puna
Composting Workshop

Monday, June 17, 2013, 07:00pm - 09:00pm, North Kona
Hawai'i Tropical Fruit Growers Meeting

Saturday, June 22, 2013, 12:00pm - 03:30pm, South Kona
Seed Exchange

Saturday, June 22, 2013, 01:00pm - 04:00pm, South Kohala
Victory Gardening with Containers-3

Sunday, June 23 - Saturday, July 27, 2013, Puna
Permaculture Design Course

Saturday, June 29, 2013, 06:00pm, South Kohala
Slow Food Hawai'i Fundraiser Dinner

View events calendar


Reports

Many Ways to Grow: Waimea Garden Tour

 S7B4110-CElevitch2Waimea, known for ranching and farming, is an upland community poised on the saddle between the Kohala Mountains to the north and Mauna Kea to the south. Wind is a constant companion in the Waimea area, but rainfall, elevation and soils are quite varied.On Saturday May 18, Māla'ai: The Culinary Garden of Waimea Middle School hosted "Home Garden Tour of Waimea from the Wet Side to the Dry Side." The aim was to show people good examples of the diverse ways we can grow food in our home gardens in the distinctly different environments around Waimea. Our group met up at the Waimea Middle School garden and got examples of critical factors to look for in any garden. Folks on the tour were encouraged to look for several things besides elevation and annual rainfall, including inherent strengths and challenges at each site, as well as soil fertility strategies and how much care each garden requires on a daily basis. We then visited three gardens, examples of interspecies systems, intensive food growing, and permaculture techniques for gardening on very dry land.


Hilo Grown Tours

HATA-HSCF-Tomatoesintrays2-beefsteaks4XTray of tomatoes packed and ready for shipping from Hamakua Springs.Earlier this month I was fortunate to be able to participate in a "preview" of an agricultural adventure tour on the Hilo side of Hawai'i Island. The Hilo Grown Tours, which start in June, are supported by the Hawai'i AgriTourism Association (HATA), the County of Hawai'i and the Hawai'i Tourism Authority.

Our group met in the lobby of the Hilo Hawaiian Hotel where we were greeted by Lani Weigert, HATA Executive Director, and Benson Medina, who served as our guides for the day.


Award winning chocolate by Madre Chocolate

NDchocMaking7enhancedcopyMadre Chocolate cofounders Nat Bletter (left) and David Elliot (right) demonstrate the art of chocolate making in one of their classes.With several national and international awards won in 2012, Madre Chocolate has earned its self-ascribed tagline, “Hawai‘i’s best bean-to-bar chocolate.” Cofounder Nat Bletter sums up the company’s business philosophy as, “Hawai‘i-made chocolate will never be competitive on quantity or price, so our primary focus is on quality and originality.” As an ethnobotanist (one who studies the complex relationships between plants and people), Bletter first started making chocolate on a dare from a friend to put his academic knowledge into practice. His initial experiments were enthusiastically received by friends, family and colleagues, inspiring him to continue professionally. Now Nat’s official title is “Chocolate Flavormeister” for the company, with cofounder David Elliot taking on the role of production manager. Both Bletter and Elliot had long experience in Mexico and Central America before putting down roots in Hawai‘i. This bicultural context explains the company’s two distinct lines of bar chocolate, “Xocolatl,” incorporating Mexican flavors and inspired by traditional chocolates of Central and South America, and “Kokoleka,” made from Hawai‘i grown cacao and incorporating a distinctly Hawaiian flavor palette. In addition to these two regular lines, the company makes limited edition flavors, as ingredient availability and creative whim allow.


Farmers' Markets and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)

Visit our comprehensive directory of Hawai'i Island farmers' markets and Community Supported Agricuture.

Announcements

Honoka'a Ag Program Needs Fruit Trees

Our ag program at Honokaa HS would like to start an orchard production component of our program. Please contact me let me know if you can assist in getting some donation of fruit trees. Thanks, Manuel Jadulang, Honokaa HS Ag Teacher, http://www.kohalacenter.org/HISGN/honokaa.html. 775-8800, ext. 289.

"Plant Doctor" App Available Free-- includes free diagnosis!

The original "The Plant Doctor" app for Android devices and iPhone is available for free download.

Download it at iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/app/the-plant-doctor/id349613537?mt=8
Download it at the Google store (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ca.adelante.theplantdoctor

This popular app allows users to take photographs of sick plants anywhere in the world; enter descriptive text information about the problem; and request a free diagnosis of the problem and effective management recommendations. The diagnoses and recommendations are provided at no cost to users by e-mail from Dr. Scot Nelson at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa.

Mahi'ai Match-up: Make your agricultural dreams a reality!

Mahi‘ai Match-up is a statewide agricultural business plan contest for farmers and entrepreneurs looking to establish an agricultural business in Hawai‘i. Winners will get an agricultural lease from Kamehameha Schools (rent waived up to five years*) and a cash prize from Ke Ali‘i Pauahi Foundation to help make their winning agricultural business plan a reality.

Hawai'i Ag plan contest, Click Here

For detais and full Application information, Click Here

Free Value-Added Guide for Hawai'i producers

craigkenA free 58-page guide entitled, Adding Value to Locally Grown Crops in Hawai'i: A Guide for Small Farm Enterprise Innovation is now available. Because of the high cost of labor, land, and materials in Hawai'i, family farms are only economically sustainable if they can produce high-quality products that are valued above cheap imports. This guide helps growers add value to all aspects of their farm enterprise and offers resources for further developing their strategies. "If you cherish the farming lifestyle and want to keep farming, you have to make your farm profitable. This guide goes a long way towards showing how to escape from the fatal trap of commoditization by adding value for the consumer," observes Dr. Kent Fleming, an extension economist who has developed numerous cost-of-production spreadsheets for the University of Hawai'i and other organizations worldwide.

New Hawai'i Agribusiness Guide Published

CTAHR and the Oahu Resource Conservation and Development Council have just published a basic guidebook for starting or improving your small farm business.  Called the Hawai'i Agribusiness Guidebook, it provides an overview of fundamental tasks for small farm businesses, especially in the area of finances, marketing and regulations.  For a free downloadable copy of the 94- page guidebook, Click Here.


Web Resources

This month's web site listings

Other web resources

Supporting Organizations


Sponsors

Hawai'i People's Fund and the Hawai'i Community Foundation

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Founding sponsors

Hawai'i County Resource Center, a program of the County of Hawai'i Department of Research and Development. Hawaii Agricultural Development Program in partnership with the Big Island RC&D Council.

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Agroforestry Net

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Subscriptions

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This newsletter is published by:

Hawai'i Homegrown Food Network
PO Box 5
Holualoa, Hawaii  96725  USA
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Web: http://hawaiihomegrown.net

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