Hawaii

Delightful new videos shot in Lili`uokalani Gardens

Parker Ranch and UH-Hilo collaborated on this and produced a remake of the music video “Happy” by Pharrell Williams to showcase the uniqueness of Hilo and as a tribute to the university’s Spring 2014 graduating class.

As noted in the YouTube text, “Neil “Dutch” Kuyper, President and CEO of Parker Ranch, was the keynote speaker at the Spring 2014 commencement. The overarching theme of his speech—happiness—is a reminder for all to live a life rooted in happiness because life is too precious to live otherwise.

“A special mahalo to the wonderful people of Hilo for dancing with incredible enthusiasm and to the video crew—Brett Wagner of Wagnervision (Director), George Russell (Cameraman), Ashley Kierkiewicz of Hastings & Pleadwell (Executive Producer) and Shawn Pila of ENA Media Hawaii (Assistant Producer) for making production awesome.”

The song used in this music video is “Happy” by Pharrell Williams—Courtesy of Universal Pictures & Columbia Records.

Happy: Pharrell Williams
http://www.24hoursofhappy.com

Parker Ranch
http://www.parkerranch.com

University of Hawaii at Hilo
http://www.hilo.hawaii.edu

Wagnervision
http://www.wagnervision.com

Hastings & Pleadwell: A Communication Company
http://www.hastingsandpleadwell.com

ENA Media Hawaii
http://www.enamediahawaii.com

Mokuola, the bridge to “Coconut Island”, and Lili`uokalani Gardens are featured locations in and around town.

Another recent video is by Gabe Hanohano of Hawaii Drones and posted by Alistair Bostrom. Thanks to Galyn Williams for bringing it to our attention.

The nine+ minute video is shot from a DJI Phantom quad-copter, with a GoPro3 mounted on a ZenmuseH32D gimbal. Video feed is via a DJI58L 5.8GHz transmitter/receiver pair.

Categories: Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: , | Leave a comment

National Public Gardens Day in Hawai`i County

In 2009, National Public Gardens Day began as a way to celebrate the nation’s public gardens and  “to raise awareness of the important role botanical gardens and arboreta play in promoting environmental stewardship, plant and water conservation, green spaces, and education in communities nationwide,” according to the American Public Gardens Association.

This year, Lili`uokalani Gardens will participate in the national event for the first time with clean up activities and specialized tours organized by Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens. With the direction of the County Parks and Recreation Department, clean up and painting projects are planned for Friday May 9 from 8 a.m. to noon.

ParkVisitors-1-6136

Lili`uokalani Gardens is an ocean front public park begun in 1917 as a Japanese-style garden. It is popular with young and old, residents and visitors. photo by Bill F. Eger

The East Hawaii Master Gardeners Association is participating in the event along with Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens.

Other public gardens in Hawaii County include the Pana`ewa Rainforest Zoo, the Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden in Onomea, and the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook.

photo by Kenji Kuroshima

Mayor Billy Kenoi, K.T. Cannon-Eger and Clayton Honma are enthusiastic about public gardens. (photo by Kenji Kuroshima 2014)

Mayor Billy Kenoi declared Friday, May 9 as National Public Gardens Day in Hawaii County. National Public Garden Day

Mayor Billy Kenoi recognizes the importance of public gardens.

In Captain Cook, The Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden is joining in National Public Parks Day. According to manager Peter Van Dyke, “Mayor Kenoi’s proclamation urges us to celebrate and enjoy our public gardens. Mention National Public Gardens Day on May 9 at the garden and you will get in free! Come back on Saturday, May 10, and join community members and visitors in a Volunteer Garden Clean-Up work day. The work day lasts from 9:30 to noon. Bring a lunch and stay for the 1:00 pm tour.”

 

Categories: Captain Cook, Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: , , | Leave a comment

Successful Festival a MUST for family calendars

The Queen Lili`uokalani Festival — held annually on the occasion of her birthday — is a MUST for any family’s fun calendar. If you missed it this year (Saturday, September 7) be sure to watch for it next year.

There is hula, entertainment, craft booths, demonstrations, children’s games, and good food just to name a few of the activities available in Lili`uokalani Gardens on Waiakea Peninsula in Hilo free all day long.

The Royal Order, Ka`ahumanu Society, Hale O Na Ali`i and other dignitaries begin the ceremonies.

The Royal Order, Ka`ahumanu Society, Hale O Na Ali`i and other dignitaries begin the ceremonies.

flower drop during the mass hula courtesy of the Hawaii Tropical Flower Council and Blue Hawaiian Helicopters

flower drop during the mass hula courtesy of the Hawaii Tropical Flower Council and Blue Hawaiian Helicopters

Bill F. Eger photo -- mass hula at He Hali`a Aloha O Lili`uokalani

More than 400 hula dancers from several halau begin the day-long festivities with E Lili`u E and The Hilo Hula.
Bill F. Eger photo

Bill F. Eger photo

lots of activity in the Queen Lili`uokalani Children’s Center tent

Bill F. Eger photo

The big band stylings of Kahulanui closed the entertainment portion of the day around 4 p.m.
Bill F. Eger photo

The event is pulled together with a LOT of volunteer effort and the staunch support of The County of Hawaii Department of Parks and Recreation Division of Culture and Education and the Queen Lili`uokalani Children’s Center.

Land for the gardens was set aside in April of 1917 in honor of Hawaii’s most recent Queen. She passed away in November of that same year at the age of 79. Construction on the garden began before the end of the year.

Royal interest in Japanese garden design dates back to the era of King David Kalakaua. There were Japanese gardens in Honolulu on royal properties by 1885. Hilo’s unique and substantial 20-acre Japanese garden was inspired by a 1914 visit to Japan by people active in economic development and beautification of the area. Japanese gardens were a popular design in the Victorian era.

Photographs in this blog otherwise not credited to other photographers are by K.T. Cannon-Eger. If you borrow, be nice and give credit.

Comments on this and other posts in this blog are welcome.

Categories: Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: , | 2 Comments

Festival in Hilo celebrates Queen Lili`uokalani’s 175th birthday

The annual Queen Lili`uokalani Festival — He Hali`a Aloha no Lili`uokalani — will be held in Lili`uokalani Gardens Saturday, September 7, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Festival Poster 2013

Queen Lili`uokalani was born on September 2, 1838, installed as Queen Monarch on January 29, 1891, and entered into eternal sleep on November 11, 1917.

“The daylong festival includes music, hula, arts, crafts, food, demonstrations, children’s games and cultural activities,” according to Roxcie L. Waltjen, Culture Education Administrator for the County of Hawaii Department of Parks and Recreation.

Sponsored by the County of Hawai`i, Queen Lili`uokalani Children’s Center, and Hawai`i Tropical Flower Council, the free festival also will feature local entertainment, taiko and Urasenke tea ceremony.

“Entertainment throughout the day will include Darlene Ahuna, Kukulu Kumuhana O Puna, Taishoji Taiko, Komakakino, Ulu’au, Waiakea Ukulele Band, Mark Yamanaka and Kahulanui.”

“A bountiful variety of local foods such as Hawaiian plate, Portuguese bean soup, kalua pig with cabbage, hot dogs, bread pudding, smoked meat bentos, chili, saimin, fried poi balls, Spam musubi, smoothies, shave ice, cotton candy, malasadas, popcorn , baked goods along with other delicious, mouth watering specialties  will be included on the day’s menu,” said Waltjen.

“Hula is the major focus of the Festival and each year,” Waltjen said. “Festivities are kicked off with a mass hula featuring more than 400 hula dancers scattered throughout the Park performing “E Lili’u E” and the Aloha Week Hula.  Dancers from throughout the State and Japan dance together symbolizing the Queen’s vision to share the Hawaiian culture with the rest of the world.  During this performance, more than 50,000 orchid blossoms rain from the skies above the park.

Mass hula will involve the following halau: Na Po`e A`o Hiwa, Halau Na Pua Uluhaimalama, Kamehameha Schools Performing Arts — Elementary, Hula Halau O Hilo Hanakahi, Hula Halau O Kahikilaulani, Ka Hula O Nawahine Nohopuukapu, Kamehameha Schools Performing Arts — High School, Ke Ola Pono No Na Kupuna, Halau Ha`akea O Akala, Halau Hula O Kawananakoa, Hula Halau Lei Hiwahiwa O Kuu Aloha, and Halao O Kawaila`ahia.

Parking is at a premium in the Banyan Drive area. Additional parking and shuttle service is available at the Ahfook-Chinen Civic Auditorium a short distance away.

In addition to the County of Hawaii, Queen Lili’uokalani Children’s Center, and the Hawaii Tropical Flowers Council, other partners in the event include Pacific Radio Group, Hilo Fire Extinguishers, and Blue Hawaiian Helicopters.

“The Culture & Education Division of Hawaii County invites all to come and celebrate the birthday of our last reigning monarch,” Waltjen said. “Come experience the culture, pageantry, history, demonstrations, hands-on activities and the unique blending of our Island people. We promise fun for the whole family!”

For more information, contact the Hawai`i County Culture and Education Office at 961-8706.

Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens will be on hand to begin a survey of park users assisted by the East Hawaii Island Master Gardeners Association.

Categories: Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments

Enthusiastic Denver garden curator tours Hilo’s Lili`uokalani Gardens

On Saturday, May 18, the board of directors of Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens welcomed Ebi Kondo, curator of Sho-Fu-En the Japanese garden at Denver Botanic Gardens and a board member of the North American Japanese Garden Association (NAJGA), to Hilo’s bayfront park along with several Hilo community leaders with long-time ties to the garden.

Ebi Kondo, curator of Sho-Fu-En at the Denver Botanic Gardens
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Kondo was enthusiastic about Lili`uokalani Gardens. “This is an old-style pleasure garden,” he said. “You have so much history here. This is a great event  to be shared with all who visit.

“There is such a good feeling to this garden, both casual and elegant. I see a welcome, peaceful, casual, approachable, carefree environment. This is a great combination of American-Japanese garden with Hilo Hawaii flavor.”

Ebi Kondo of Sho-Fu-En Japanese Garden in Denver Colorado explains the benefits of membership in a public garden organization. Nearby are Friends of Lili`uokalani members Harvey Tajiri and K.T. Cannon-Eger.

Ebi Kondo of Sho-Fu-En Japanese Garden in Denver Colorado explains the benefits of membership in NAJGA a non-profit public garden organization. Nearby are Friends of Lili`uokalani members Harvey Tajiri and K.T. Cannon-Eger.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Kondo worked on the revitalization of the Japanese garden in Denver. “It takes everybody working together,” he said.

Sho-Fu-En now features a new roji (dewy garden path) to the tea house as well as a separate ADA compliant path. The tea house in Denver is like the one in Hilo in one respect: there are two areas for practitioners and participants — one more traditional with tatami floor and one Western with folding chairs.

Della Allison Yamashiro of Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens, listens to Hiroshi Suga, president of the Japanese Community Association of Hawaii, speak of cooperation to promote and preserve Japanese culture and foster harmony and fellowship in Hawaii County.

Della Allison Yamashiro of Friends of Lili`uokalani Gardens, listens to Hiroshi Suga, president of the Japanese Community Association of Hawaii, speak of cooperation to promote and preserve Japanese culture, and foster harmony and fellowship in Hawaii County.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Russ Oda speaks of Shoroan and the history of Urasenke in Hawaii.

Russ Oda speaks of Shoroan and the history of Urasenke in Hawaii.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Kondo also was enthusiastic about the role of public gardens in communities. “To me, garden is a place to make memories. Happy people come here and are more happy. Sad people who come here are lifted.”

The casual tour wandered over to shade by the bamboo grove..

The casual tour wandered over to shade by the bamboo grove.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Dwayne Mukai, president of Kumamoto Kenjin Kai, and Rev. Jeffrey Soga, Rimban for Hawaii Island's Hongwanji join in the conversation. (photo by Bill F. Eger)

Dwayne Mukai, president of Kumamoto Kenjin Kai, and Rev. Jeffrey Soga, Rimban for Hawaii Island’s Hongwanji join in the conversation.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

KT&Ebi-Basin-5577

K.T. Cannon-Eger, Ebi Kondo and Philippe Nault ponder an ancient stone basin.
(photo by Bill F. Eger)

Sho-Fu-En at Denver Botanic Gardens is one of the leadership gardens in the formation of the North American Japanese Garden Association (NAJGA). Kondo took time to emphasize to the group the importance of sharing information. “There will come a time when you have a question and you need to find resources. That is the reason we have this association of public gardens…to be of help to each other with workshops on horticulture, stonescaping, pond building, fund raising, message presentation and all of the things you will face.”

NAJGA offers two regional conferences later this year. Woodworking skills and traditional hand tools will be held August 13-16 in Oakland, California with site visits to several gardens in the area. Constructing Japanese water features and selection and care of koi will be held September 20-21 at Shofuso in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Registration is open now for the woodworking conference in Oakland. More details on the regional conference in Pennsylvania will be available in July. Go to the NAJGA web site for further information. http://www.najga.org

For additional stories in this blog on Denver or NAJGA, check the category and tag lists to the right side of the screen.

CCF05262013_0000

Categories: California, Colorado, Denver, Hawaii, Hilo, Oakland, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments

First NAJGA Journal published

The first issue of the Journal of the North American Japanese Garden Association

The first issue of the Journal of the North American Japanese Garden Association features a view of the tea deck at Sho-Fu-En in Denver Botanic Gardens.
photo by Bill F. Eger

The first issue of The Journal of the North American Japanese Garden Association arrived in our mailbox the other day and it’s gorgeous! Within heavy cover stock are more than 60 pages of well written, beautifully illustrated articles.

Topics in this inaugural edition include an extensive article by Robert Karr on The Garden of the Phoenix in Chicago — which article has been translated into Japanese. The story celebrates the 120-year history of the garden and looks toward the future with plans for mass plantings of cherry trees in the lagoon nearby.

It is followed by a detailed account of a garden now gone: Middlegate Japanese Gardens of Pass Christian, Mississippi by landscape architect Anne Legett.

As Journal editor Kendall Brown points out, “The former garden’s bright future and the latter’s forlorn state signal the fragility of gardens and the need for careful stewardship.”

Six regional gardens — Birmingham, Alabama; Huntington Botanical Gardens in San Marino, California; Kumamoto-en in San Antonio, Texas; Sho-Fu-En in Denver, Colorado, the Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden on the campus of California State University Long Beach and Portland Japanese Garden in Portland, Oregon — offer comparative and contrasting views on several questions surrounding the topic of master planning. NAJGA executive director Diana Lawroe analyzed results of questions, interviews and documents, pulling together a cogent and insightful article.

A Living Friendship of Flowers details horticultural challenges in observing the centennial of the Japan-U.S. Cherry Blossom Gift. Case studies include Chicago Botanic Garden, Fort Worth Botanic Garden, and Waimea Hawaii.

An article on interpretive education offers case studies on docent tours, ephemeral and permanent signs, and new technologies such as cell phone guides.

Jill Raggett, Ph.D., is a specialist in the emergence of Japanese style gardens in the British Isles, historic garden restoration, and biographies for the Japan Society. This distinguished speaker offers her view of the first conference of NAJGA — Connections — held October 2012 in Denver, Colorado.

Finally there is a book review of a reprint of the 1940 work by America’s first Japanese garden expert Loraine E. Kuck, well known to Hawaii garden folk for her books and garden designs here. Miyuki Katahita-Manabe, Ph.D., of Osaka notes in her review: “The reprinting in 2012 of Loraine Kuck’s The Art of Japanese Gardens, first published in 1940, provides an opportunity for reassessing this important book that introduced many English-language readers to the cultural history of Japanese gardens.”

The Journal is a benefit of NAJGA membership. It was made possible through the support of The Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership. Japanese language translation service were provided by Matsuda, Funai, Eifert & Mitchell, Ltd.

NAJGA is a professional non-profit membership organization dedicated to the advancement and sustainability of Japanese gardens throughout the United States and Canada. Founded in 2011 with input from more than 200 Japanese garden professionals, NAJGA focuses on the Horticulture, Human Culture, and Business Culture of Japanese gardens through a variety of programs and services. NAJGA membership is open to everyone.

For more information, go to http://www.najga.org

CCF05262013_0000

Cover photo for The Journal by Bill F. Eger. Comments on this and other articles in this blog are welcome.

Categories: Alabama, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Texas | Tags: , | 1 Comment

Plans under way for Lili‘uokalani centennial events | Hawaii Tribune Herald

The Hawaii Tribune-Herald published an article Tuesday, May 14, 2013 on plans underway for two related centennials in 2017: the passing of Queen Lili`uokalani and the dedication of land for a large oceanside park in her name in Hilo. Here is a link to that article with a photo by Bill F. Eger.

Plans under way for Lili‘uokalani centennial events | Hawaii Tribune Herald.

Categories: Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: | Leave a comment

Quiet Beauty: The Japanese Gardens of North America arrives on bookshelves worldwide

cover photo by David Cobb of the hexagonal yukimi style lantern at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle

cover photo by David Cobb of the hexagonal yukimi style lantern at the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle

A new look at Japanese gardens in North America — Quiet Beauty — provides the viewing public with detailed information and delightful photographs on 26 peaceful places across the continental United States and into Canada.

Author Kendall H. Brown is a professor of Asian art history at California State University Long Beach. Photographer David M. Cobb is a member of the North American Nature Photography Association, Garden Writers Association, and Professional Photographers of America.

Released by the esteemed publishing house Tuttle Publishing, this beautiful book offers history and invites thoughtfulness on how these gardens came to be and what they offer to us now. Insightful text is accompanied by more than 180 stunning color photographs and a few reproductions of antique postal cards.

In the introduction — Places to Dream — Dr. Brown notes, “Japanese gardens or, more accurately, Japanese-style gardens, in North America offer distinct pleasures. In contrast to the cacophony of cities, the anonymity of suburbs, and even the anxiety of deserts or forests, these gardens can provide beautifully controlled environments. In artful landscapes we lose ourselves in a path woven around a pond and a harmonious stone arrangement; we delight in the variegated colors of graceful koi and the bright hues of blossoming plums; and we are calmed by a stream’s gentle murmur and the dappled greens of moss. Another kind of pleasure is contextual and social rather than sensory and psychological. Japanese gardens in North America are often found where we least expect them, and in places unknown in pre-modern Japan. Thus we feel a special delight in discovering a ‘dry garden’ of stones and sand at a museum, a lush pond garden on a college campus, or a waterfall-fed stream garden in a hospital. Those familiar with gardens in Japan may also enjoy Japanese-style gardens intellectually, noting creative plant substitutions or thoughtful ways of interpreting Japanese design principles within distinctly North American spaces.”

Dr. Brown takes three eras posited by garden historian Makoto Suzuki of the Nodai Institute, professor at Tokyo University of Agriculture, and expands them to five: the age of world fairs and expositions, building bridges, innovation by adaptation, expansive visions and traditions transformed.

During the past ten years. I have read many articles by Ken Brown and have heard him speak at several conferences. I serve on the editorial board of the North American Japanese Garden Association (NAJGA) which editorial board he chairs. In person, I can verify that Dr. Brown delivers a substantial amount of information in a short amount of time — all of it masterfully accompanied by photographs, post cards, newspaper clippings and other visual aids along with a good sense of humor and split second timing. There are times I have felt he is delivering information faster than I can absorb it so I am delighted to have such a beautiful volume I can savor at leisure.

I have a special appreciation for David Cobb’s photographs. My husband and I have been to many of the places depicted and know what it takes to get the perfect image of that spot. So many of Cobb’s shots are truly breathtaking.

back cover photo by David Cobb of the Japanese garden at Fort Worth Botanic Garden in Texas

back cover photo by David Cobb of the Japanese garden at Fort Worth Botanic Garden in Texas

Gardens featured in Quiet Beauty: The Japanese Gardens of North America are:

the Japanese Tea Garden in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco California 1894;

Japanese Garden at the Huntington Botanic Garden, San Marino California 1911 (also 1968, 2011);

Maymont Japanese Garden, Richmond Virginia, 1911 (1977);

Japanese Hill and Pond Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, New York 1915;

Hakone Estate and Garden, Saratoga California 1918;

Shofuso Japanese House and Garden, Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1958;

Japanese Garden at the Washington Park Arboretum, Seattle Washington 1960;

Nitobe Memorial Garden at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver B.C. Canada 1960;

Japanese Garden at the Blodel Reserve, Bainbridge Island, Washington 1961 (1978, 1986);

Portland Japanese Garden, Portland Oregon 1963;

Japanese Garden in San Mateo Central Park, San Mateo California 1965;

Nikka-Yuko Japanese Garden, Lethbridge, Alberta 1966;

Nishinomiya Garden in Mani to Park, Spokane Washington 1974;

Japanese Garden in the Fort Worth Botanic Garden, Fort Worth Texas 1973;

Shomu’en at Cheekwood, Nashville Tennessee 1990;

Seiwa’en at the Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis Missouri 1977;

Sansho’en at Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe Illinois 1982;

Shofu’en at the Denver Botanic Gardens, Denver Colorado 1979;

Suiho’en at the Donald C. Tillman Water Reclamation Plant, Van Nuys California 1984;

Seisuitei at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, Chanhassen Minnesota 1985 (1996);

Anderson Japanese Gardens, Rockford Illinois 1978;

Japanese Garden at the Montreal Botanical Garden, Montreal Quebec 1988;

Tenshin’en at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Massachusetts 1988;

Roji’en in the Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach Florida 2001;

R0ho’en in Margaret T. Hance Park, Phoenix Arizona 2002; and

Garden of the Pine Wind at Garven Woodland Gardens, Hot Springs Arkansas 2001.

Marvelous additions in the appendices include garden contacts and a select bibliography including books, journals and websites plus a listing of 75 important Japanese gardens in North America, five of which are in the state of Hawaii.

The Hawaii gardens appearing in this list include:

the Cultural Gardens at Honolulu International Airport 1967;

Imin (East West) Center at the University of Hawaii-Manoa 1963 (teahouse 1972);

Byodo’in Gardens, Kaneohe Oahu 1968;

Japanese Garden and Teahouse at Kepaniwai Park, Wailuku Maui 1968 (teahouse 1972); and

Lili`uokalani Gardens, Hilo Hawai`i (1917).

December 17, 1944 from the library of the Hawaiian Historical Society

Lili`uokalani Gardens on December 17, 1944 from the library of the Hawaiian Historical Society in Honolulu

For more information on Quiet Beauty: The Japanese Gardens of North America and other books available from Tuttle Publishing, please consult the web site

http://wwwtuttlepublishing.com

DSCF4948

For more information on the North American Japanese Garden Association, please consult the web site:

http://www.najga.com

Categories: Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Missouri, Texas | Tags: , , , , | 5 Comments

AAA Hawaii features Lili`uokalani Gardens in “The best of Hawai`i Island’s biggest little town” cover story in the March/April issue

CCF02162013_0000-001

The new issue of AAA Hawaii: The Magazine for AAA Members arrived in our mailbox Friday. The cover photo features one view of Lili`uokalani Gardens on Banyan Drive in Hilo. The Japanese garden, formerly known as Nihon Koen, was dedicated in 1917.

The major reason my husband and I traveled across the U.S. visiting as many Japanese gardens as we could in late May and June, and October of 2012, was to gather information to benefit Lili`uokalani Gardens as our community moves toward a centennial celebration in a few years.

This lovely cover story by Bill Harby with photographs by Bob Brown does a very nice job of featuring so many of our town’s attractions from dining spots and art exhibition spaces to museums, events and shopping. Taking center stage in the recommended list is Lili`uokalani Gardens, which Harby described as “perfect for picnics and strolling.”

Thank you AAA Hawaii for such a lovely story on our home town and such beautiful photos of our crown jewel of a public park.

Categories: Hawaii, Hilo | Tags: , | Leave a comment

More photos from Lili`uokalani Gardens in Hilo, Hawaii

Dennis Makishima demonstration

Dennis Makishima demonstrated pine tree pruning at Liliuokalani Gardens in Hilo to County workers and Master Gardeners April 2011.

 

Still learning how to format and layout text and photos. Here are a couple of photos from Dennis Makishima’s visit to the Big Island in April 2011.

Photos not otherwise credited are by K.T. Cannon-Eger. Click on any image to see it full size.

Dennis Makishima demonstration

County workers and Master Gardeners listen to Dennis Makishima before beginning several projects. photo by Bill Eger

 

A recent sunny day in Hilo at the zig-zag path leading to the red bridge…
photo by Bill F. Eger 2012

UPDATE: This 2012 view by Bill F. Eger was the basis for graphic art used for the 2017 Priority Mail stamp. This was the first U.S. stamp to feature a Japanese garden. It was Hilo’s first time on a stamp.

Short N Sweet Bakery and Cafe on Kino`ole Street in Hilo created the tasty cake made to look like a first day of issue envelope [photo by K.T. Cannon-Eger]

Categories: California, Hawaii, Hilo, Oakland | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.