hano-hano: komo mai, anthony, come in brother. come into keawanui. my name is hano-hano. anthony: thank you so much. hano-hano: nice to meet you. anthony: thank you. hano-hano: please come inside. anthony: hello, hi, aloha. this is keawanui fishpond. a shared community space with a sacred history. hano-hano is the caretaker of the fishpond. he s a local community leader here in molokai. also here is the famous walter ritte. ritte: everybody knows how valuable all of this stuff is because we can see what happened to the rest of the islands. anthony: so essentially an old-school fish farm. hano-hano: eight-hundred years old. anthony: eight-hundred years old. hano-hano: modernizing one old idea. and an ancient idea is as simple as feeding your community. and this, the island you re on, this place could feed over a million people back in the day. anthony: you hear the word again and again on molokai. ina, which means land, and
We talk to Hatch Blue’s Crystal Johnson who grew up in a Maui family fish business. She sees the need for Hawaiʻi to invest in its future using new advances in science as we strive to become more self-sufficient and food secure.
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. There is power in that statement. Hawaiian activist and Molokaʻi resident Walter Ritte has worked for decades to restore ancient fishponds, or loko iʻa.
Proposed aquaculture farm sparks controversy kitv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kitv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.