National Papaya Month

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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY - Mikana: Papaya

HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY 
“One who hears good counsel and heeds it will live to see many descendants.”

PapayaSeptember is National Papaya Month
The papaya, Carica papaya L., is a member of the small family Caricaceae allied to the Passifloraceae. Commonly and erroneously called a “tree”, the plant is actually a large herb growing at the rate of 6 to 10 ft ( the first year and reaching 20 or even 30 ft in height), with a hollow green or deep-purple stem becoming 12 to 16 inches or more thick at the base and roughened by leaf scars.  Both the stem and leaves contain copious white milky latex Papain, which produces allergies in some people.

Ripe papaya is usually consumed fresh as a breakfast or dessert fruit; it can also be processed and used in a variety of products such as jams, fruit juices, and ice cream. Papaya is also consumed as a dried fruit.  Papaya is an ingredient in a variety of cuisines throughout the world. Unripe fruits and leaves are consumed as vegetables. Papaya seeds are also used as an ingredient in salad dressings.

Papain is a milky latex collected by making incisions in unripe papayas. The latex is either sun-dried or oven-dried and sold in powdered form to be used in beer clarifiers, meat tenderizers, digestion aids, wound debridement aids, tooth-cleaning powders, and other products. Consumption of the fruit is reported to aid digestion due to the papain content.

The papaya fruit is about 88.8% water, 9.8 % carbohydrate, 0.8% fiber, 0.6% protein, 0.6% ash and 0.1% fat. A 100g (3.5 oz.) serving of papaya has 39 calories, compared to banana’s 92 calories. Papayas also contain 16% more vitamin C than oranges and are a good source of vitamin A (about half of that contained in mango).

The ‘Solo’ variety is valued for its productivity, uniform fruit shape and size, and excellent fruit quality. ‘Solo’ strains are predominantly self-pollinated and thus are highly inbred and uniform.  The ‘solo’ papaya is not a good variety for papain production due to its low yield of papain.

Three ‘Solo’-type varieties are grown commercially in Hawaii. The most important is ‘Kapoho’, which has yellow-orange flesh and fruits that weigh 12 to 22 oz, considered an ideal size for export. ‘Kapoho’ is adapted to the Puna district of the island of Hawaii, where approximately 90 percent of the state’s papayas are grown.

The ‘Sunrise’ variety, commercially grown primarily on Kauai, has reddish-orange flesh and larger fruit than ‘Kapoho’. ‘Sunrise’ is grown and marketed on a large scale overseas, but in Hawaii its production and export are small compared to those of ‘Kapoho’. The ‘Waimanalo’ variety, which has yellow-orange flesh and somewhat larger fruit than other ‘Solo’ papayas, is grown and marketed almost entirely on Oahu.

Papaya trees bear fruit throughout the year. “Skips” in the fruit column caused by temporary sterility may occur during hot, dry summer periods and may cause fruit shortages in winter. The plants will continue to bear for many years, but yields usually decline as the trees age, and picking becomes difficult. In commercial production, fields are usually replanted or abandoned after three years.

Studies in Hawaii have shown that papaya flavor is at its peak when the skin is 80% colored. For the local market, in winter months, papayas may be allowed to color fairly well before picking, but for local market in summer and for shipment, only the first indication of yellow is permissible. The fruits must be handled with great care to avoid scratching and leaking of latex which stains the fruit skin.

In tropical folk medicine, the fresh latex is smeared on boils, warts and freckles and given as a vermifuge. In India, it is applied on the uterus as an irritant to cause abortion. The unripe fruit is sometimes hazardously ingested to achieve abortion. Seeds, too, may bring on abortion. They are often taken as an emmenagogue and given as a vermifuge. The root is ground to a paste with salt, diluted with water and given as an enema to induce abortion. A root decoction is claimed to expel roundworms.

Getting Missionary Positioned

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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY - Mikinale: Missionary

HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY - “The missionaries came to Hawaii to do good, and ended up doing very, very well.” (Maui saying)

Kawaiaha‘o Church

September 15, 1821 - In Honolulu, the Kingdom of Hawaii’s first Christian house of worship opens its doors on what is now the site of the present Kawaiaha’o Church. It was fast work. Just two years earlier, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions prepared the brig Thaddeus, complete with missionaries, bibles, and diseases unknown to the Hawaiians, and very deadly.

According to the Star Bulletin, Dr. Samuel Worchester, secretary of the commissioners, told the missionaries,”You are to aim at nothing short of covering those islands with fruitful fields and pleasant dwellings, and schools and churches; of raising up the people to an elevated state of Christian civilization.” By 1867, When Mark Twain visited Hawaii, Worchester’s nightmare had come true. “The 3,000 whites in the islands handle all the money and carry on all the commerce and agriculture - and superintend the religion,” Twain wrote.

Maui was just a bit behind the curve. The local chiefs tried to prevent the missions from gaining much of a stronghold with the native population. But just ten years after the first house of worship opened in Hawaii, 1831, Lahainaluna Mission Seminary was founded.

Dennis Kucinich: “We must end war as an instrument of policy by the U.S. government.” (9/14/07, MCC Maui)

SUPERFERRY - Maui Circuit Judge Joseph Cardoza issues a preliminary injunction, extending the ban on the Superferry’s use of Kahului Harbor. Read more

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9/11 Omen

Raphael O'Suna No Comments

What was striking about the rubble at the feet of the collapsed twin towers, was the small amount of debris. Two gigantic structures, each more than one hundred stories high, had come down, and yet there was only a few stories of rubble. In fact, there was very little concrete, and not a great deal of steel either. I realize that there were tons and thousands of truckloads of debris, but the collapsed structures did not provide what an intelligent person would have expected in terms of wreckage. What one might have expected to find in terms of overwhelming presence, was found in dust, not haulable wreckage.

This observation reminded me of something someone said to me, as we huddled in a storeway many years ago. The twin towers were under construction, and from high above, boards of lumber were being blown down on this New York City street. Everyone was running for cover and the police had stopped all traffic. The explosions of the crashing wood on the pavement, at unpredictable intervals, as well as the sounds of immense boards smashing into parked cars, was riveting. In the storeway with me was an unknown older gentleman. After I commented that the scene before us was not a good omen for a construction project, he said: “The buildings are mostly air.” After the towers had collapsed, I understood what he meant. More than thirty years ago, he was saying that these buildings were not being built properly. That they were being built for maximum rental space, not for safety, permanence, beauty or strength. And so, the wreckage which remained was small in volume.

Old Maui High Reunion

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 HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY - Ho’i hou: Return

 HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY - “May yours return to you.”

Old Maui High September 14, 2007 - Old Maui High School holds its 2007 reunion of all surviving attendees to the Hamakuapoko-based school. The campus, which opened its doors in 1913, has the original C.W.Dickey building, which is being renovated by the Friends of Old Maui High School. Though it closed its doors in 1972, the school maintains an influence in today’s Maui, through such leaders as Councilman Mike Molina, who attended the school in the early 1970s.

Old Maui High’s most famous alumna is probably Patsy Mink, who graduated valedictorian in 1944. Born and raised in Paia, as a U.S. Congresswoman she was responsible for Title IX legislation, which revolutionized women’s sports in the U.S. The new Post Office in Paia - 96779 -  was named in her honor, after she died in 2002.

Old Maui High - 2007

   

 Dennis Kucinich on Maui tonight, September 14th, at MCC Pa’ina Food Court,  7pm.

 SUPERFERRY - Hawaii Superferry executives threaten to take their boat and go home if they don’t know within 6 weeks, whether they can operate in the state.  Read more

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Sit on It

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 HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY - Noho: Sit, chair

 HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY - “A fallen tree does not rise again.”

Maui Chair
September 13, 2005 - Maui’s influence extends half way around the world as the Kartell Maui chair is introduced and sold in Denmark. The chair, never sat upon here, looks hard and uncomfortable, and sells for 1910Kroner, or about $365. Deep and extensive research has failed to uncover why this chair is called the “Maui”, as Maui has no meaning in Danish. Visitors are invited to write in and speculate.

   

 SUPERFERRY - The company said yesterday that it will resume service to Kauai Sept. 26, while Teya Penniman, manager of the Maui Invasive Species Committee, testified on the third day of a Circuit Court hearing in Wailuku to determine if the Superferry should be allowed to use Kahului Harbor while preparing an environmental assessment.  Read more

 Dennis Kucinich on Maui September 14th. Read about it

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Thumbs Up 4 Thumbs Out

Haole Anna No Comments

Whenever anyone comes to the island, it doesn’t take them long to discover that Maui moves at its own pace, with its own attitude. Getting from one place to the other can be a real challenge at certain times, with a limited number of roads and a growing number of vehicles. Here’s where attitude comes in - just  stick out the thumb and hitch  a ride. Keep another vehicle off the road.

Yes, hitch hiking is illegal in most states and counties. But not here - Maui is one of the few places in the US where it’s legal to hitch hike. Some advise just standing by the road in a waiting mode until someone pulls over and offers a ride. Personally, I find it reassuring and in keeping with Maui’s laid-back character that the hitchers I see daily have that thumb out - no fear - no problem.   Keep it out, Maui.

- Haole Anna, Paia

Sugar’s Last Stand

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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY
Ko: Sugar cane
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
“The hand goes, the wink goes;
nothing is gained by just looking sweet.”
Maui TV News Maui Calendar

Sugar harvest for Puunene mill
September 12, 1999 - The last sugar cane harvest takes place in Lahaina. Maui’s Hana plant was the first to close, followed by Paia, and then Lahaina. Now, Maui (and Hawaii) has just one sugar processing plant remaining - Puunene. Most residents hate the noise, the filth, the extravagant waste of water, the draining of natural streams, the cane burning, and the plain roadside ugliness. But many fear the replacement - no more agriculture means parent company Alexander & Baldwin may try to create massive developments on the 37,000+ green acres of sugar cane under cultivation.

   

 SUPERFERRY UPDATE - Oahu rock thieves foiled - they abandon trucks in Maui Superferry parking lot, thanks to Judge Cardoza’s temporary restraining orderRead more

 Don’t forget Dennis, on Maui September 14th. Read about it

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9/11 Maui Style

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NEW MOON 09-11-07, 02:45am

HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY
Kumakaia: Betrayal, to betray
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
“The bones of an evil chief will not be
concealed, the bones of a good chief will.”
Maui TV News Maui Calendar

September 11, 2001: 19 Islamic fundamentalists make a surprise terrorist attack on the United States, bringing down the Trade Towers in New York City. Life is changed forever in the U.S. On Maui, most people hear about the news well after it happens (the first plane, American Flight 11, hits the North Tower at about 2:46:40 a.m. local time), and so they awake to see replays of crashes, towers coming down, and people running for their lives.

9/11/06 - NYC

Tourists and residential travelers are stranded for nearly three weeks, as all aircraft are grounded, including an approximate 35,000 people on Maui. Many accommodations make special deals with visitors to keep costs down. There is a run on supplies at stores. As usual, toilet paper becomes something of a rare commodity on store shelves, reducing, in a sense, the horrific to the mundane, as sometimes only island life can.

Meanwhile, the top U.S. officials whose criminal negligence and incompetence allowed this attack to occur, and who have yet failed to capture the primary perpetrator, remain at large … and in charge.

   

 SUPERFERRY UPDATE - Marine biologist Hannah Bernard, co-founder of the Hawai’i Wildlife Fund, testified for 6 hours in Judge Joseph Cardoza’ s Maui courtroom Monday. She  stated that  the Superferry’s policy of reducing speeds in shallow waters to 25 knots is “not enough” to prevent collisions with humpback whales. Read more

 Don’t forget Dennis, on Maui September 14th. Read about it

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By the Same Logic

Maui Curmudgeon No Comments

… Let’s Pay Maui Hospital More Money if They Reduce Services.

Am I the only person confused about why the Maui Planning Commission gave Maui Land & Pine a special management area permit in Kapalua if it cut back on affordable housing? What do the “neighbors” living at Kapalua Golf Villas have against affordable homes? They don’t sound very neighborly to me.

 - Maui Curmudgeon, somewhere on Maui

Maui Almanac posts perspectives on Maui that are likely not published elsewhere. Let the Maui Curmudgeon know what you think. S/he welcomes your comments.

Paradise Purloined

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NEW MOON 09-11-07, 02:45am

HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY
`Aieue: Thief, to steal
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
“A thief is also a liar.”
Maui TV News Maui Calendar

On September 10, 1897, Republic of Hawaii President Dole signed the annexation treaty and the Hawaiian Senate approved it, moving the Kingdom of Hawaii closer to becoming a part of the United States.

Overthrown Queen LiliukalaniSo many books have been written about this time in Hawaiian history, and yet they perhaps fail to fully explain the scope of injustice, from land grabbing in the name of American Commerce and Christian Fundamentalism, to the sheer audacity of the United States assumption that Hawaiians could not govern themselves.

The process itself was not long in culminating but was more difficult than the perpetrators had planned. In early 1893, a cabal of American-born planters, lead by Sanford Ballard Dole, overthrew Queen Liliukalani. At the time, one American Minister to Hawaii was quoted as saying, “The Hawaiian pear is now fully ripe, and this is the golden hour for the United States to pluck it.”

Chief thief Sanford Dole Funny enough, when it came time to sign the annexation into law, Democratic President Grover Cleveland refused on principle, saying, “I regarded and still regard the proposed annexation of Hawaii as not only opposed to our national policy but as a perversion of our national mission. The mission of our nation is to build up and make a great country out of what we have, instead of annexing islands.”

Stymied but not outdone, the country thieves refused to return what they had taken. Instead, they created the “Republic of Hawaii”, and sat on their ill-gotten gains until the next president, Republican William McKinley, gained office. He was glad to move annexation along and it was under his presidency that the disgusting deed was finally made law.  Read more

Lowering Kingdom flag upon theft of Hawaii

Sound familiar? It’s a good thing that the United States learned a valuable lesson, and since that time has not invaded or occupied other countries, nor taken over their governments, or avoided “nation building” or … oh that’s right -  we’re talking about the usual pack of liars and thieves. Never mind.

 Don’t forget Dennis, on Maui September 14th. Read about it

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