Aloha!
Whether we want to raise our own vegetables, fruits, poultry, or fish, many of us are starting from the beginning in terms of knowledge and experience. Two of this monthʻs articles share experiences of starting new endeavors (raising chickens and pigs). Although the tendency is to start big and bold, that approach often results in very expensive lessons or even failure. Starting small and building upon success is a winning strategy.
Learning from others and sharing important lessons learned is essential to strengthening our local food system. If you have learned an important lesson in your local food adventures that you would like to share with our community through the Hawaiʻi Homegrown Food Network newsletter, please let us know.
Craig Elevitch and Pedro Tama for the Hawai'i Homegrown Food Network http://hawaiihomegrown.net visit us on Facebook

Events
Saturday, September 7 to Saturday, October 5, 2013, 01:00 pm - 05:00 pm, Hamakua Beginning Organic Beekeeping
Sunday, September 15, 2013, 09:00am - 03:00pm, Kaua’i Breadfruit Festival Takes Root
Monday, September 16 to Tuesday, September 17, 2013, 07:30am - 5:00pm, North Kona Principles of Food Protection
Saturday, September 21, 2013, 09:00am - 2:00pm, Puna East Side Seed Exchange and Harvest Festival
Friday, September 27 to Friday, October 04, 2013, All Islands 23rd Annual Hawaii Tropical Fruit Growers Conference
Sunday, September 29, 2013, 02:00-05:00pm, Hilo Let’s Grow Hilo Edible Landscaping Beautification Day
Friday, October 04, 2013, 06:00pm - 08:00pm, South Kohala Mealani's Taste of the Hawaiian Range
From Saturday, October 12 to Sunday, December 15, 2013, Puna Permaculture Design Course: Designing For Sustainability and Food Security
Saturday, November 9, 2013, 08:30am - 12:00pm, South Kona Breadfruit—from Tree to Table Workshop
Saturday, November 23, 2013, 11:00am – 05:00pm, Hilo 3rd Annual Honey Festival and Honey Challenge
Every Tuesday. 09:00am - 12:00pm, Puna Hands in the Earth Practicum
Every Thursday. 09:00am - 12:00pm, Puna Permaculture Classroom & Field Studies
Reports
Ken and Roen Hufford at their farm in Waimea.Honopua Farm was started as a commercial flower farm more than 30 years ago by Bill and Marie McDonald. Marie, who has been recognized by the Smithsonian Institution as a living treasure, is an outstanding authority on Hawaiian flowers and lei making and has authored several books on the subject. The name of the farm, Honopua, means "a gathering of flowers."
Continue Reading
Chickens on the run at Maui chicken farm.Homesteading is overwhelming, and all the more so if you have high ideals about living lightly and are trying to do things in new ways. Let's see, since coming to Hawai'i we have studied up on and/or are trying to: make fish fertilizer and vermicompost, raise soldier fly larvae, make biochar and Natural Farming amendments, start up aquaponics for fish and greens, install solar and hydropower, create forest gardens and permaculture, grow chicken forage, raise rabbits without purchased feed, and raise as much of our own fruits and vegetables as possible. Maybe we are doing too much at once? Two lessons I have recently learned from other small farmers have reinforced the importance of taking small steps.
Continue Reading
Hubbell's Hog Heaven & Liz's Happy Hens: A Farm Tour by Elizabeth Cannon, self-published in July of this year, is a book about an innovative one-and-a-half acre Natural Farming project near Pāhoa, Puna on Hawai'i Island. Liz and her husband Mike Hubbell had farmed organically on the mainland for over 30 years. But when they retired to Puna six years ago they decided to farm their mostly lava-covered land using Dr. Cho's Korean Natural Farming Method. They attended several Natural Farming presentations and even took a trip to Korea to experience well-established Natural Farming methods first-hand. This gives an idea of how serious they have been about their project.
In addition, Liz and Mike were assisted and encouraged by UH CTAHR Hilo Ag Extension Agent and Hawai'i piggery expert, Mike Dupont. Mike wrote a grant for Liz and Mike's initial piggery and has been instrumental in promoting their pig and chicken projects.
Continue Reading
Aquaponics operation at Kunia Country Farms, Kunia, Oʻahu.Kunia Country Farms started operations in 2010, transforming former pineapple land in Kunia into a lettuce farm. The farm utilizes an aquaponics system, where crops are grown in containers that float on water. Fish (which are excluded from the crop area) provide a source of fertilizer. “Aquaponics is 6–8 times more productive than ground cropping,” estimates co-owner Jason Brand, “which can save costs on land, materials, and labor, allowing us to be competitive with mainland lettuce while delivering a product with a much longer shelf life.” The company’s growing, harvesting, and packaging operations are continually being refined. “Our number one cost is labor. Mainland producers achieve a cost-effective economy of scale due to large land areas and mechanization. With our relatively small-scale operation, we have to develop other efficiencies in our growing, harvesting, and packaging methods, which we have done.”
Continue Reading
Farmers' Markets and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
Visit our comprehensive directory of Hawai'i Island farmers' markets and Community Supported Agricuture.
Web Resources
This month's web site listings
Other web resources
Supporting Organizations
Sponsors
New subscribers: Subscriptions to this newsletter are free and welcome from the general public. You can unsubscribe at any time. We will not share your name with anyone without your prior permission. Click here to subscribe
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
|