Posts Tagged ‘sale’

Hoohuihui Craft Show

by Sive Iver

On April 5, 2009 there will be a Hoohuihui Craft Fair Extravaganza at Hilo High School cafeteria, 556 Waianuenue Avenue, Hilo from 9:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. There will be all kinds of craft makers who will join the Craft Fair to showcase their handmade crafts. You can also enjoy their Ono Food that is for sale.

There will also be a Merrie Monarch Festival during the Hoohuihui Craft Fair Extravaganza. Besides form the handmade craft from the Hoohuihui Craft Fair Extravaganza. There will also be art exhibits, demonstrations, performance and a parade that emphasize the Hawaiian culture. This will be a good opportunity for you to start your business network, with all the customers around.

Forty-six years ago the Hawaii Island Chamber of Commerce had started this festival. The festival was then handled by the private Merrie Monarch Festival Community after a few years. Merrie Monarch Festival is a non-profit organization that is still registered under the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs.

This non-profit organization had a purpose to perpetuate, preserve and promote the art of hula and the Hawaiian culture by educating the local and visitors of Hawaii. This organization gave a venue for the people and the community as a whole to show and learn their traditional and modern art of hula.

Merrie Monarch Festival educated the local residence about their history and heritage; they were even given the chance to incorporate their modern art with the traditional art. When the residences were educated they were able to appreciate more unique harmony and balance that their ancestors have maintained with their island environment. For us visitor we got the chance to learn and see the rich culture that Hawaiian culture offered. It was a culture that we have been fascinated with.

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Spring on the Farm

by Sive Iver

The Spring on the Farm sponsored by Watkins Mill Association will be on April 18, 2009 from 11:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. This educational event will be held at the Watkins Woolen Mill State Park and State Historic Site. There will be different activities that visitors can learn from and enjoy at the same time.

Spring on the Farm will feature activities that you can learn from like the 1870s sheep shearing method. The American Livestock Breeds Conservatory is where the endangered livestock are kept. You can also watch the Heirloom Garden. It will have interpreters that wear 1870s customs and will raise the bed to plant last years Heirloom Garden seeds.

Watkins Woolen Mill State Park and State Historic Site was bought on 1964 and it was also the first time it was considered as a historic site. But the place was only declared as a National Historic Landmark on 1966. The Missouri community voted to give fund for the improvement of the Watkins Woolen Mill State Park and State Historic Site on 1981.

The original owner of the Watkins Woolen Mill State Park and State Historic Site was Waltus Lockett Watkins. Versailles, Kentucky was the birth place of Waltus. When he turned 18 he went to his uncle to learn how to weave and be a machinist. After a few years he moved to Liberty where he started his first successful business. On 1834 when Watkins went back to his home town he got married and had 4 kids.

After a while Waltus relocated again at an 80-acre farm 16 miles north of Liberty, a farm that he called the Bethany. Although the first few years were hard, he lost two of his sons in the first years. He was able make his farm successful by his success livestock, crops and orchards. With the success his farm was having he was able to purchase more land making it grow to 1,300 acres. With the success that he had help him to establish a community by assisting in making the community school and church.

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