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Maui Attractions Newsletter March 2008 Featured PropertiesListing Search Results - 27 matches found. Showing listings 1 - 10 1 2 3 | | | | |
| MLS: 324222 |
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Pictures: 21 more. Price: $1,175,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 10 PIHAA STREET Beds: 4 Baths: 2.50 Living Area: 2,375 SF
|  |  | | This highly desirable home is located on a corner location on Kaanapali Hillside. Beautiful views of mountain, ocean and sunsets can be seen from many angles. Home is complemented with a large patio and yard area. This is a great buy for a 4 bedroom home with 3-car garage! |
| | MLS: 325433 |
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Pictures: 22 more. Price: $1,850,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 201 WAHI'OLE WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,035 SF
|  |  | | You'll enjoy fantastic views of the Pacific, neighbor islands, and year round sunsets from this residential condo in a dually gated community. The home is professionally decorated, completely funished and turnkey! This 3 Bedrooms, 3 Bath is a private free standing residential condo with nice furnishings, a cul-de-sac location, a 2 car garage, views, and a private lanai from which to enjoy year round gorgeous ocean sunsets. |
| | MLS: 331198 |
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Pictures: 29 more. Price: $1,880,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 86 S IWA PLACE Beds: 4 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,600 SF
|  |  | | Stylish front line 3 bedroom, 3 bath home with office that could be a 4th bedroom; remodeled in 2007 with amazing ocean views from virtually all the rooms in the home. Lush mature landscaping, large yard with a spa, pool and deck with great views make outdoor living a feature of this open, airy home. An open floor plan, granite, travertine, hardwood, plush carpet, skylight and a great master suite with views from every area make this home a must see. |
| | MLS: 331690 |
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Pictures: 10 more. Price: $1,950,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 346 A'ALII WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 2.50 Living Area: 2,192 SF
|  |  | | Immaculate, serene home; tiled great room, high vaulted ceilings with amazing ocean and island views. |
| | MLS: 326358 |
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Pictures: 22 more. Price: $2,000,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 20 N IWA PLACE Beds: 5 Baths: 5.50 Living Area: 4,233 SF
|  |  | | Located in the Kaanapali Hillside, this home has it all; beautiful landscaping, great views, lovely private pool, and a peaceful neighborhood. Vaulted ceilings and charming furnishings give this home a very open and relaxing environment, inside and out. Master bedroom and bathroom are beautifully designed and very spacious. |
| | MLS: 317519 |
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Pictures: 24 more. Price: $2,295,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 325 KAINOE STREET Beds: 3 Baths: 3.50 Living Area: 2,600 SF
|  |  | | Gorgeous new home located on the popular Kaanapali Hillside. This single-story home features 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths and 2,600 s.f. of living space. A beautiful pool adds to this home's great character, along with its stunning ocean and mountain views. Great detail includes granite, travertine, high-end appliances, imperial plaster, extended overhang and spa. This home is a MUST-SEE!! |
| | MLS: 322631 |
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Pictures: 16 more. Price: $2,395,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 229 AMAKIHI WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 4.00 Living Area: 3,498 SF
|  |  | | Completed in early 2000. Excellent ocean views. Casually elegant. Living room, dining room, master suite and office are located on the main upper level. Two guest suites and a large family room are located on the lower level, opening to large pool and deck. All cabinets by SieMatic "American Series", Corian counter tops throughout kitchen and all baths. Fourth bedroom has been converted into an office. |
| | MLS: 324430 |
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Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,395,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 38 N IWA PLACE Beds: 4 Baths: 4.50 Living Area: 3,427 SF
|  |  | | BRAND NEW home on the Kaanapali Hillside! Beautiful Views, Lovely Design, Great Location! The home has Brazilian cherry hardwood, Imperial plaster, mahogany doors and trim, travertine flooring, Dura Supreme kitchen cabinets, Wolf appliances, 30-inch oven, convection microwave, warming drawer, cook top, SubZero refrigerator, SubZero wine cooler, 3 Fisher & Paykel dishwashers, glass lanai rails, 2.5 stall garage, split level central air, formal dining room, kitchen nook with views, large lanai with pocket doors, and a Saline pool and hot tub with a large lanai and bar area for entertaining. 3,427 square feet of living space, with an approximate 1,100-square foot lanai. Must see this great value! |
| | MLS: 320640 |
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Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,475,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 32 N PIKI PLACE Beds: 3 Baths: 3.50 Living Area: 3,199 SF
|  |  | | This beautifully remodeled home has been completely redone and upgraded in every way, offering the look and feel of a brand new home. You will love the attention to detail, from the custom-designed entrance of koa and etched glass to the state-of-the-art kitchen with top of the line appliances and SieMatic cabinets. This spacious home offers an open floor plan with high ceilings and quality throughout, including granite countertops, travertine flooring and a custom koa staircase. Experience breathtaking sunsets and spectacular views of the ocean, Molokai and Lanai from the master bedroom, living room and dining room. Enjoy the outdoors under the large covered lanais, lush landscaping and relaxing in the beautiful pool. Perfect for entertaining. |
| | MLS: 324120 |
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Pictures: 30 more. Price: $2,499,000 Fee Simple District: Kaanapali Type: Single Family Address: 357 KULUI WAY Beds: 3 Baths: 3.00 Living Area: 2,513 SF
|  |  | | This elegant 3 bed/3 bath fully furnished home features finishes of travertine, cherrywood cabinetry, and granite tile countertops. Furnishings include 2 refrigerators, plasma TV, alarm system, and beautiful stainless steel kitchen appliances. Turnkey. Amazing ocean views complement the heated pool and lanai. |
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Events
Natural History
Bougainvillea
[Bougainvillea Glabra]
 The flamboyant bougainvillea was brought to Hawaii around 1827 and has flourished in the islands. It was named after the French navigator Louis de Bougainville (1729 – 1811), who came across the original dark purple variety during an 18th-century visit to Brazil. The showy vine quickly became a garden favorite and has since been extensively hybridized with forms and colors very different from those of the original plant.
It was called pukanawila in the Hawaiian way. On the Big Island, the intensity of its flaming reds, purples and oranges caused the islanders to name it pua kepalo, the devil’s flower. To them, the flowers were echoes of the fires of hell and of the devil. Paniolos, cowboys, on the Big Island recognized bougainvillea which came from their home in Mexico.
By nature, Bougainvillea is a climber or sprawling shurb with stems that can reach several feet in length, usually clinging with the aid of curved spines. It can be clipped to form hedges or trained into tree-like and topiary shapes with sizeable trunks. It really does best with an annual severe pruning. Most varieties have pale green ovate leaves in pairs, but there is also a form with variegated, green-and-white leaves.
The plants are tough and, once established in full sun, can survive poor, tight soil, neglect and drought conditions handily. A symbol of tropical brilliance, the plant grows most prolifically in the hot sunny lowlands, but they are very adaptable and will also do well in shaded areas or in areas with abundant moisture. They are popular plantings for roadsides, parks and back yards. In their native Brazil they can cover a whole hillside and choke out weed growth. The thorns make them an effective barrier hedge as well.
The bracts of the plants are a riot of fiery colors – orange, peach, pink, fuschia, lavender and purple – that bloom year-round, peaking in the summer. The white flowers are so tiny they are difficult to see so it is the colorful, papery bracts that attract the birds and bees. The most common colors are purple or magenta, but cultivated forms are available in all hues, from pure white to orange, pink, and crimson. There are also varieties on which two colors appear on the same plants and others with large double bracts. The bracts usually fall of their own accord, but those on the double-bract form remain after turning brown.
For lei, the bracts are tied in bunches and mounted in a braid or pierced through the flat surface of the bracts and fashioned into lei that are two or three inches in diameter.
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Arts & Culture
Maui During The American Civil War
Between 1861 and 1865, people in Hawaii paid close attention to the internal conflict between the American Northern states (the Union) and eleven Southern seceded states (the Confederacy). This was not surprising. Americans were major players in Hawaiian national politics and were often leaders in developing the economic well-being of the islands. Whatever affected America had repercussions for Hawaii.
For one thing, practically every missionary in Hawaii was from New England and had close friends and relatives in the Union army, so their prayers were with the Northern army. Meanwhile, the court of Kamehameha IV was pro-British and joined with the upper British classes in their outspoken Southern sympathies during the early years of the war when the South scored several quick victories and the permanent dissolution of the Union was freely predicted in the Islands.
Speculation ran high about the effects of the American war on Hawaii. One rumor had it that California planned to become a separate nation and that it would try to force annexation of Hawaii. Another rumor circulated through Lahaina that a Confederate privateer was operating in the Pacific with orders to sink every Yankee whaling ship on sight. People worried that the whalers who made Lahaina their winter headquarters would come under fire.
The first big problem presented by the Civil War was establishing the official neutrality of the Hawaiian Kingdom as a protection against raids by Confederate ships. The trouble was that an official declaration of neutrality would imply that the Kingdom recognized the Confederate States as a legitimate government. After a great deal of vacillation, Kamehameha IV finally declared the neutrality of his kingdom. Although his proclamation went to great lengths to avoid naming the Confederate States of America, he technically recognized the rebels.
The war cut off Louisiana’s sugar plantations from the markets north of the Mason-Dixon Line and the market price for Hawaiian sugar started soaring upwards. The fledgling Hawaiian sugar industry got its first real boost. Hawaiian sugar that was once shipped only to San Francisco was sent off around the Horn by every available vessel to New York and Boston.
Many new plantations, sugar mills, and supporting businesses were established at this time. Among them was a sugar plantation started by a shipwrecked seaman, James Campbell, at Lahaina in 1861. In the early 1870s, in partnership with Harry Turton, Campbell founded the Pioneer Mill, forerunner of a greater operation that was later sold to H. Hackfield & Company (which later morphed into American Factors). Campbell eventually owned much of the area where the town of Lahaina now stands. His nickname became “Kimo-ona-milliona,” James-of-the-millions, as, over the years, he amassed an impressive fortune that is still administered today under the Estate of James Campbell.
In 1861, Lahaina was still the capital of the Kingdom and Maui’s population was principally Hawaiian, with relatively few Caucasians and Chinese immigrants. Individual towns and plantations were not connected by roads. A foot trail called the King’s Road circled the island, but the usual method of travel from place to place was by sea. There were no paved streets anywhere. Wagons and carriages were driven along the beach. The commonest structures were still thatched houses.
One of the wonders in 1861 was the first inter-island steamer, “Kilauea”. It had been in operation for about a year. Passengers could take the steamer to Maalaea and from there, travel along a fairly good road to Wailuku. In addition o Lahaina, Maalaea and Kahakuloa, the other ports on Maui were Makena, Nahiku, Huelo, Maliko and Waihee.
Small unirrigated sugar plantations were in operation at Lahaina, Waikapu, Wailuku, Waihee, Ulupalakua, Kipahulu, Hana, Keanae, Nahiku, Huelo, Maliko, Haliimaile, and Waihee. The land around Puunene was a great, barren stretch of sand and dust spread from Wailuku to Paia except for a little bit of pastureland around the present location of Spreckelsville. (Until the advent of the sugar industry’s irrigation and pumping projects in the 1870’s, this land was too dry for growing sugar cane.)
There were fewer whaling ships wintering at Lahaina in 1861 than there were in the 1850’s. Petroleum had been discovered in Pennsylvania and the cleaner-burning kerosene lamps were replacing the smelly whale-oil lamps. The demand for whale oil was diminishing. Also, during the early years of the Civil War, a number of whalers were recalled to New Bedford. Very likely, it was more profitable to carry cargo (and maybe run the Union blockade of Confederate ports) than to hunt whales.
The Lahaina-based whaling fleet was down to about 100 vessels by 1865 when the long-rumored Confederate privateer appeared at Bonobe in the Caroline Islands and sank five whaling ships. The privateer ship, “Shenandoah,” was a light, combination sail-and-steamship carrying six guns. She was supposedly outfitted in New Zealand by a British group that sympathized with the Southern cause. Her master was a Captain Waddell.
Following the sinking of the ships at Bonobe, the Shenandoah reappeared in June in the Arctic Ocean and set fire to 20 more Lahaina-based whalers. Five ships were spared by Waddell to carry the crews, including several hundred Hawaiian sailors, to San Francisco. Ironically, the war had already ended with the surrender of the Confederate commander Robert E. Lee to the Union general Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865 at Appomattox. Waddell refused to believe that the Confederate cause was lost.
At the start of the war, outfitting whaling ships was Lahaina’s principal industry. By its end, sugar had come into its own and was on its way to becoming King Sugar.
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| Hawaiiana |
Counting numbers / Days of the month
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Braddah-Nics Lexicon
STANDARD: He tried but was unsuccessful.
BRADDAH-NICS: He went chance 'em but no can.
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STANDARD: What can be done about it?
BRADDAH-NICS: Wotchu goin' do li' dat?
* * * * * *
STANDARD: She doesn't go there any more.
BRADDAH-NICS: Her, she no go no mo'.
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Local Grinds
Pansit
Ingredients:
- 7 1/2oz. long rice
- 8 oz. fried egg noodles
- 1/2 lb. lean pork
- 1/4 lb. shrimp
- 4 large mushrooms, dried
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 2 tbls. salad oil
- 30oz. chicken broth
- 2 tbls. patis
- 1/4 t. pepper
Procedure:
Place mushrooms and long rice in bowlful of warm water for 30 minutes and drain.
Remove long rice, lay out, and cut into 3 in. strips.
Remove stems from mushrooms and dice mushroom caps.
Shell and slice shrimp into small pieces, thinly slice pork into small strips.
Place oil in a large skillet. Once heated, add garlic and pork. Let saute/brown respectively. Stir in diced mushrooms and sliced shrimp, saute all for approximately 1 minute. Add patis, broth, and pepper to mixture and bring to a boil. Once boiling, add egg noodles and long rice until noodles are fully cooked.
Makes approximately 6 servings.
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