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Lanai

Lana'i (usually spelled outside Hawai'i as Lanai) is sixth largest of the Hawaiian Islands. It is also known as the "Pineapple Island" from its history as an island-wide pineapple plantation. The island is somewhat circular in shape with a width of 18 miles in the longest direction. The land area is 140 sq. miles (367 sq. km). It is separated from the island of Moloka'i by the Kalohi Channel to the north, and from Maui by the Au'au Channel to the east.

 

History

Lana'i was first seen by Europeans on 25 February
1779 by Captain Clerke, with HMS Resolution on the James Cook expedition. Clerke had taken command of the ship after Capt. Cook was killed at Kealakekua Bay on February 14, and was leaving the islands for the North Pacific.

In 1922, James Dole, the president of Hawaiian Pineapple Company, bought the island of Lana'i, and developed a large portion of it into the world's largest pineapple plantation.

 

Tourism

Tourism on Lana'i started more recently as the growing of pineapple has slowly been phased out in the Islands. On Lana'i, you can commune with nature and feel the mood of rural Hawai'i. Unlike nearby
O'ahu, the only town (Lana'i City) is small and lacking traffic and shopping centers. The main tourist activity is relaxation.

There are two resort hotels on Lana'i - the Manele Bay and the Lodge at Koele, the latter a rather unique resort in Hawai'i in that it is in the cool hills nowhere near the beach. There is also a small hotel in Lana'i City used primarily for people visiting Lana'i residents. Both resorts have world-class golf courses.

In 2004, travel to and from Lana'i became very difficult due to problems with inter-island airlines. With Hawaiian Airlines threatening to cease its daily jet service to the island, the smaller Island Air became set to control all flights to and from the island on small turbo-prop aircraft.

Retrieved from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanai



Molokai

 
Moloka'i (usually spelled outside Hawai'i as Molokai) is the fifth largest island of the Hawaiian archipelago. The island is 38 by 10 miles (61 by 16 km), with a land area of 261 mile (676 km). It lies east of O'ahu across the 25 mile (40 km) wide, Ka-iwi Channel and north of Lana'i, separated from it by the Kalohi Channel. The lights of Honolulu are visible at night from the west end of Moloka'i, while nearby Lana'i and Maui are clearly visible from anywhere along the south shore of the Island.

Moloka'i is built from two distinct volcanoes known as East Moloka'i and the much smaller West Moloka'i. The highest point is Kamakou on East Moloka'i, at 4,970 feet (1,515 m). East Moloka'i volcano, like Ko'olau on O'ahu is today only what remains standing of the southern half of the original mountain. The northern half suffered a catastrophic collapse and now lies as a debris field scattered northward across the Pacific Ocean bottom.

Moloka'i is part of the State of Hawai'i and located in Maui County, except for the Kalaupapa Peninsula, which is separately administered as Kalawao County. Maui County encompasses Maui, Lana'i, and Kaho'olawe in addition to Moloka'i. The only town of any size on the island is Kaunakakai, which is one of two small ports on the island. The airport is located on West Moloka'i.

Moloka'i is known as the "Friendly Isle" and is one of the least developed of the main Hawaiian islands. The island's population is diverse, with a high percentage of people of Hawaiian ancestry. Moloka'i is noted for the numerous Hawaiian fish ponds along its south shore. Some of these have been restored in recent years. Moloka'i contains the oldest asylum for people with leprosy in the United States (made famous by the work of Father Damien).

There are several small hotels in Kaunakakai and a resort located on the west end. Papohaku Beach on the western-facing shore is one of the largest and most spectacular beaches in the Hawaiian Islands.

Retrieved from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molokai




Kahoolawe

Kaho'olawe is the smallest of the 8 main volcanic islands in the Hawaiian Islands. It is located southwest of Maui and southeast of Lana'i and is 11 miles (18 km) long by 6 miles (10 km) across. Total area is 45 mile (117 km). The highest point, Lua Makika, is 450 m (1,477 ft) above sea level. The island is rather dry because the low elevation fails to generate much orographic precipitation from the northeastern Trade Winds and it is located in the rain shadow of 3055 m (10,023 ft) high Haleakala.

Kaho'olawe is part of Maui County. There are no permanent residents living on the island.

History


Sometime around 1000 A.D., Kaho'olawe was settled, and small, temporary fishing communities were established along the coast. Some inland areas were cultivated, and fine-grained basalt was quarried for stone tools. People built stone platforms for religious ceremonies, set rocks upright as shrines for successful fishing trips, and carved petroglyphs, or drawings, into the flat surfaces of rocks. These indicators of an earlier time can still be found on Kaho'olawe.

The islands lack of a freshwater source limited this ancient population to a few hundred. Violent wars among competing chiefs laid waste to the land and led to a decline in the population. From 1778 to the early 1800s, observers on passing ships reported that the island was uninhabited and barren, destitute of both water and wood. After the arrival of missionaries from New England, the Hawaiian government of King Kamehameha III replaced the death penalty with exile, and Kaho'olawe became a prison colony sometime around 1830. Food and water were scarce, some prisoners reportedly starved, and some swam across the channel to Maui to find food. The law making the island a penal colony was repealed in 1853.

An 1857 survey of Kaho'olawe reported about 50 residents, about 5,000 acres (20 km) of land covered with shrubs, and a patch of sugar cane. Along the shore, tobacco, pineapple, gourds, pili (pee-lee) grass and scrub trees grew. Beginning in 1858,the Hawaiian government leased Kaho'olawe to a sequence of ranching ventures. Some proved more successful than others, but the lack of freshwater was an unyielding enemy. Through the next 80 years, the landscape changed dramatically -- drought and uncontrolled overgrazing denuded much of the island, and strong trade winds blew away much of the topsoil leaving the red hard pan.

From 1910 to 1918 the Hawaiian Territorial government designated Kahoolawe as a forest reserve in hopes of restoring the island through a revegetation and livestock removal program. The program failed and leases again became available. In 1918, the skilled Wyoming rancher Angus MacPhee with the help of Maui landowner Harry Baldwin leased the island for 21 years, intending to build a cattle ranch. By 1932, the ranching operation was enjoying moderate success. After heavy rains, native grasses and flowering plants would sprout, but drought seemed to always return. In 1941, MacPhee subleased part of the island to the Army. Later that year, because of continuing drought, MacPhee removed his cattle from the island.

On Dec. 8, 1941, after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Army declared martial law throughout Hawaii and took control of Kahoolawe. Soon, Kahoolawe was being used as a place to train Americans headed to war across the Pacific. The use of Kahoolawe as a training range was critical to the lives of many young Americans. The United States was executing a new type of war in the Pacific islands. Success depended on accurate, heavy gunfire from ships suppressing enemy positions as Marines and soldiers struggled to get ashore. Thousands of soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen prepared on Kahoolawe for the brutal and costly assaults on islands such as the Gilberts, the Marianas and Iwo Jima.

Training on Kaho'olawe continued after World War II. During the Korean War, carrier-based aircraft played a critical role in attacking enemy airfields, convoys and troop staging areas. Mock-ups of airfields, vehicles and other camps were constructed on Kaho'olawe, and while pilots were undergoing readiness inspection at nearby Barbers Point Naval Air Station, they practiced spotting and hitting the mock-ups at Kaho'olawe. Similar training took place through the Cold War and during Vietnam, as mock-ups of aircraft, radar installations, gun mounts and surface-to-air missile sites were placed across the island for pilots and others to use for training.

In 1976, a group of individuals calling themselves the Protect Kaho'olawe Ohana (PKO) filed suit in federal court to stop the Navys use of Kaho'olawe for military training, to require compliance with a number of new environmental laws and to ensure protection of cultural resources on the island. In 1977, the Federal District Court for the District of Hawaii allowed the Navys use of the island to continue, but the Court directed the Navy to prepare an environmental impact statement and complete an inventory of historic sites on the island. In 1980, the Navy and the Protect Kaho'olawe Ohana entered into a Consent Decree which allowed continued military training on the island, monthly access to the island for the PKO, surface clearance of part of the island, soil conservation, goat eradication and an archeological survey.

On March 18, 1981, the entire island was added to the National Register for Historical Places. At that time, the Kaho`olawe Archaeological District was noted to contain 544 recorded archaeological or historic sites and over 2,000 individual features. As part of the soil conservation efforts, workers laid lines of explosive charges, detonating them to break the hardpan so that seedling trees could be planted. Used tires were taken to Kahoolawe and placed in miles (km) of deep gullies to slow the washing of red soil from the barren uplands to the surrounding shores. Ordnance and scrap metal was picked up by hand and transported by large trucks to a collection site.

In 1990, President George Bush ordered an end to live-fire training on the island. The Department of Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 1991 established the Kaho'olawe Island Conveyance Commission to recommend terms and conditions for the conveyance of Kaho'olawe by the United States government to the State of Hawaii.

In 1993, Senator Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii sponsored Title X of the Fiscal Year 1994 Department of Defense Appropriations Act, directing that the United States convey Kaho'olawe and its surrounding waters to the State of Hawaii. Title X also established the objective of a "clearance or removal of unexploded ordnance" and environmental restoration of the island, to provide "meaningful safe use of the island for appropriate cultural, historical, archaeological, and educational purposes, as determined by the State of Hawaii." In turn, the State created the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve Commission to exercise policy and management oversight of the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve. As directed by Title X and in accordance with a required Navy/ State of Hawaii Memorandum of Understanding, the Navy transferred title of Kaho`olawe to the State of Hawaii on May 9, 1994.

As required by Title X, the Navy retained access control to the island until clearance and environmental restoration activities were completed, or Nov. 11, 2003, whichever came first. The State agreed to prepare a Use Plan for Kahoolawe and the Navy agreed to develop a Cleanup Plan based on that use plan and to implement that plan to the extent Congress provided funds for that purpose.

In July 1997, the Navy awarded a contract to the Parsons/UXB Joint Venture to clear ordnance from the island to the extent funds were provided by Congress. After the State and public review of the Navy cleanup plan, Parsons/UXB began their work on the island in November 1998.

The Navy attempted a cleanup of the unexploded ordnance from the island, although much still remains buried or resting on the land surface. Other items have washed down gullies and still others lie beneath the waters offshore. The turnover was officially made on November 11, 2003, but the cleanup was not completed. Although the U.S. Navy was given $400 million and 10 years to complete the task, work progressed much slower than anticipated. As of the time of turnover, access to Kaho'olawe requires escort and careful attention within areas known to contain unexploded ordnance.

In 1993, the Hawai'i State Legislature established the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve, consisting of "the entire island and its surrounding ocean waters in a two mile (3 km) radius from the shore". By State Law, Kaho'olawe and its waters can only be used for Native Hawaiian cultural, spiritual and subsistence purposes; fishing; environmental restoration; historic preservation; and education. Commercial uses are prohibited.

The Legislature also created the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve Commission (KIRC) to manage the Reserve while it is held in trust for a future Native Hawaiian Sovereignty entity. The restoration of Kaho'olawe will require a strategy to control erosion, re-establish vegetation, recharge the water table, and gradually replace alien plants with native species. Plans will include methods for damming gullies and reducing rainwater runoff. In some areas, non-native plants will temporarily stabilize soils before planting of permanent native species.

Retrieved from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kahoolawe

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