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Hohoʻi ne

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Kaulana E Ka Holo Makani Olu ~ Aloha, E kalamai au, I have been on a long and tumultuous and beautiful huakaʻi. These past few months have baptized me into an entirely new pool of voyaging that I previously allotted no perspective. Let me first introduce this entry by regaling the recent events. I have been blessed with the opportunity to go out and experience the ocean in a more intimate and intense relationship. Exposing what profound solidarity voyaging truly encompasses of the conscious mind. Foremost, my biggest gratuity belongs to Marimed Careers Exploration program (MCE) in Kaneohe, Oʻahu, Hi. Their Captains and staff work tirelessly to provide this fast-paced, educational program to ALL ages at no cost to most Hawaiʻi residents. If you are interested or know of anyone looking for a place to belong, a new beginning, or something different; if you want and can commit to a program with substance, discipline, focus, and results, there is absolutely no

Knots on Knots on Knots on Knots...

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   What Knot to do On Wednesday, January 25, 2018, I visited Kānēhūnāmoku Voyaging Academy (KVA) in Kaʻalaea. It is a beautiful education center on everything waʻa related. We hosted a 9th grader group from H ā lau K ū M āna that day as well in preparation for their upcoming six-day huakaʻi on the sailing vessel Makaliʻi. I was fortunate enough to stay and volunteer and learn with the students as well as from them since they had all been coming to KVA for weeks. Thanks to my previous semester with Kumu Lei at WCC and the Polynesian Voyaging class, I was familiar with many of the lessons; but I was nowhere near as comfortable with them as these other students. I have much to learn before I do any REAL sailing and I am so grateful to KVA for their graciously accepting me into their ʻOhana and showing me the ropes (literally). So the first and foremost crucial lesson I repeatedly learn is: Knots is life. Seriously, so many things on the waʻa depend on you knowing how to tie a kno

Covering All The Bases (Pt.1)

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E H ō MAI E hō mai ka ʻike mai luna mai ē O nā mea hūnā nōʻeau o nā mele ē E hō mai E hō mai E hō mai ē (x3)

Goals for 2018

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" ʻO ke kahua ma mua, ma hope ke Kūkulu" (First comes the foundation before the building) Have you ever woken up one morning and decided you were going to be something or someone? You just decided in a split second, maybe you thought you put time into thinking about it, but did you? I happen to have this very excruciating handicap of biting off more than I can chew. When I think about all the projects Iʻve started but never finished I can see the failures pile up and tower over me. A delicate teetering monolith threatening to collapse. As if one more tossed plan or half-ass project or rogue feather landing will topple it. And itʻs become apparent to me that the inevitable is exactly what needs to happen. I have been brutally trying to build skyscrapers out of band-aids and sand; it is a childʻs optimism that has fueled me to try everything I have done and a childʻs attention-span that has kept me failing, but it is also a childʻs resiliency which I will use to w

Canoe Anatomy

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Canoe Anatomy To recap last weeks post: I joined a Polynesian Voyaging Class at Windward community college where we sail a 6-man outrigger canoe out of Kualoa. We learn everything instrumental to voyaging from a Polynesian perspective, meaning without any western instruments. Today we learned the names of the parts of the canoe and their function. I was particularly happy to get a more intimate scope on the waʻa. More than a vessel; it is a glue, a cement. The waʻa bonds us to each other as well as everything around us and everything before and after us. The parts of the canoe may as well be parts of yourself. Learning their functions is as imperative as learning who you are. As parts of the canoe are itʻs identity, the canoe becomes part of ours; such true understanding of each other is reflected in the voyager and the sail. Here is a general example of a waʻa kaukahi and the names of each main part in Hawaiian and English. I will briefly list what they are below the image. Anat

Come Sail Away

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Polynesian Voyaging Science 160 Lab Manu ihu 'O Ho'omana'o ka hulina alo i waho Kualoa Windward Community College offers a Polynesian voyaging class every other year in conjunction with a surf science class for Hawaiian Studies science credit.       This class began with an idea suggested by Pinky Thompson, Nainoa Thompsonʻs father, to the WCC Chancellor and board, which led to the first full fledged traditional Polynesian voyaging college course that produced many of the first Hokuleʻa crew members. The class was taught by Nainoa Thompson and it was considered a very rigorous and prestigious class at the time it was popular because of the resurgence of Hawaiian culture and practices, known as the Hawaiian renaissance. Students were required to swim 500 yards and tread 30 minutes off of Port Lock, they had to remember every star sign to itʻs degree and declination. WCC gave the class grant money to support the heavy class load and it was used to buy three sailing