StarBulletin.com

Volunteers fight to restore Kauai valley


By

POSTED: Sunday, October 12, 2008

A war is raging in beautiful, peaceful Limahuli Garden and Preserve on Kauai's north coast.

Rather than guns and grenades, however, a small but determined group of conservationists is fighting fierce battles using trowels, rakes, hoes and weed whackers.

               

     

 

 

LIMAHULI GARDEN AND PRESERVE

        » Address: 5-8291 Kuhio Highway, Haena, Kauai (a quarter-mile before Kee Beach)

       

» Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays to Saturdays

       

» Admission: $15 per person, free for ages 12 and younger for the self-guided garden tour (allow at least 90 minutes). A two-and-a-half-hour guided tour, which requires reservations, runs $25 for adults, $15 for ages 13 through 18, and free for 12 and younger. Kamaaina admitted free on Saturdays.

       

» Call: (808) 826-1053

       

» E-mail: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

       

» Web site: limahuli.ntbg.org

       

» Notes: Tours follow a 3/4-mile loop trail. Wear a hat, comfortable clothes and walking shoes, and long pants and/or mosquito repellent. Bring bottled water. Umbrellas and walking sticks are provided upon request.

       

       

Their foes? Aggressive alien plants that are overwhelming maile, ohia lehua and other native species that once flourished in Limahuli Valley, where the 17-acre botanical garden and 985-acre wilderness preserve are located.

“;In the preserve are 12 plant species that are listed as threatened or endangered by the federal government, including mehamehame (Flueggea neowawraea), which, growing to 100 feet tall and 10 feet wide, rivaled koa to be the largest tree in the Hawaiian forest,”; said Kawika Winter, director of Limahuli Garden and Preserve. “;Nine others are 'Candidate' species, proposed for threatened or endangered status.”;

In 1998, the National Tropical Botanical Garden (http://www.ntbg.org), which owns and manages Limahuli, launched a campaign to uproot invasive species and re-establish a native ecosystem in the preserve.

“;The scope of the work is daunting, but we believe that success will come with perseverance and community involvement,”; Winter said.

  THIS ECOLOGICAL restoration program is based on the Hawaiians' ahupuaa system of resource management. Ahupuaa are vertical land divisions extending from the mountains to the sea that contain all the natural resources to sustain life.

Organizing the land into such vertical “;slices”; give the people living within them access to everything they require to survive while ensuring the precious resources are not depleted.

Archaeological evidence—including house sites, irrigation ditches, adzes and poi pounders—indicates Limahuli Valley was among Hawaii's earliest settlements; the ahupuaa system was in place there at least 1,000 years ago.

Limahuli translates as “;turning hands,”; referring to the Polynesian pioneers' agricultural accomplishments, including hundreds of lava rock terraces (loi) where they grew taro, their staple crop.

More than a dozen of these taro loi are thriving once again in Limahuli Garden, along with sweet potato, banana, sugar cane, turmeric, ti and other “;canoe plants”; that the voyagers brought with them for use as food, clothing, shelter and medicine.

The garden also showcases fruits and flowers that were introduced by Chinese, Japanese, Filipino and Portuguese immigrants during Hawaii's plantation era starting in the mid-1800s. These include papaya, pineapple, mango, heliconia, plumeria and gardenia.

At Limahuli, cultural perpetuation goes hand in hand with conservation efforts.

“;In addition to our horticultural work, we have programs that empower our community to strengthen its connection with the traditions of the kupuna (ancestors) for the benefit of both the land and the people,”; Winter said. “;Not many botanical gardens have these dual scientific and cultural foundations.”;

One of his most influential teachers was the late John Kaimikaua, a respected kumu hula who often talked about the ancients' wise stewardship of natural resources. A few years ago, Winter spoke to his beloved mentor about the magnitude of his new job at Limahuli.

“;I told him I felt I needed to learn more to accomplish the things that needed to be done here,”; Winter said. “;He gave me a quizzical look and said, 'All you have to do is listen to the aina (land). It will tell you what it needs.'

“;So that's what I'm doing now, especially when I'm alone in the forest or beside the loi. As our kupuna did, I'm trying my best to listen to the land.”;

               

     

 

 

LIMAHULI GARDEN AND PRESERVE HISTORY

        Mrs. Juliet Rice Wichman acquired this property in 1967. Through her foresight and hard work, along with that of her grandson, Charles “;Chipper”; Wichman, and his wife Hauoli, restoration of Limahuli Valley began.

       

The garden portion, 17 acres of Limahuli Valley closest to the ocean, was gifted by Mrs. Wichman to the nonprofit National Tropical Botanical Garden in 1976. In 1994, Chipper and Hauoli Wichman gave the remaining 985 acres of the valley to the NTBG, creating Limahuli Preserve. NTBG was chartered by the United States Congress in 1964. The mission of the organization is “;to enrich life through discovery, scientific research, conservation and cultural knowledge of tropical regions.”;

       

NTBG has grown to encompass nearly 1,800 acres in five gardens and three preserves in Hawaii and Florida.

       

  From “;Limahuli Garden: A Window to Ancient Hawaii”; by Nancy Merrill

       

 

       

VOLUNTEER PROGRAMS

        Limahuli Garden and Preserve welcomes volunteer participation. Brief descriptions of the opportunities are listed below. Call Public Outreach Specialist Phyllis Somers at (808) 826-1668 or e-mail her at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) for more information.

       

» Tour guide: Training sessions usually are held twice a year; the next one is scheduled for February 2009. You must attend five unpaid three-hour training sessions, during which you'll learn about the garden's history, conservation techniques and basic botany. You also must complete three half-day field trips to the National Tropical Botanical Garden's headquarters in Kalaheo, which involves hands-on instruction by NTBG scientists.

       

» Endangered species nursery volunteer: In one of two on-site nurseries, you'll pot and/or weed rare and endangered plants that are being readied for transplanting in the garden or preserve.

       

» Horticulture volunteers: You'll help with preservation and propagation efforts in the garden through weeding, transplanting, watering, and general maintenance of rare and endangered plant species.

       

» Forest restoration volunteers: Help weed, clear trails, plan native species and eradicate invasive species at the restoration project site in the lower part of the preserve, a 20-minute hike from the visitors center.

       

       

 

Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi is a Honolulu-based freelance writer whose travel features for the Star-Bulletin have won multiple Society of American Travel Writers awards.