Hawaiian farmers, traditional artists, and conservation professionals share their love for plants with the public through presentations, demonstrations, display tables, and hands-on activities at the 11th Annual Grow Hawaiian Festival at Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook on Saturday, February 28, from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The event is free and admission to the Garden is waived for the day.
At this event in the heart of the rural South Kona district of the Island of Hawaiʻi, festival goers walk through a lineup of cultural practioners working in tents scattered among a landscape of loulu palms, a‘ali‘i bushes, ‘awa plants, and other native plants and Polynesian crops. At some tents, woodworkers display of their art, at others, kapa makers are beating wauke, and those watching may be invited to sit at a kua and beat along with them. There is a booth where botanists and entomologists wait for people to bring plants or insects to be identified. There are information booths about health care programs and dry forest restoration. On stage, festival goers can watch a presentation on kalo growing in Kona, hear a short ‘ukulele concert, enjoy a lauhala hat show, and learn about native plant conservation programs in Kona. This year speakers include National Tropical Botanical Garden director Chipper Wichman, Kona taro farmer Clarence Medieros, Jr., and Bishop Museum archaeologist Mara Mulrooney. Hawaiian food will be available for purchase.