and if the storm keeps coming you gotta stand up, it s just what you gotta do. and it s this zone where you learn to make fear your best friend. you hold it really close to you, and you open up that door to believing that you can make it. i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha, la, la, la, la sha, la, la, la, la, la, sha, la, la, la, la sha, la, la, la, la, la, la anthony: hawaii is america, as american as anything could possibly be. yet it also never shed what was there before and the layers and layers that have come since. it s a wonderful, tricky, conflicted, mutant hell broth. in what, for lack of a better word, you d have to call paradise. paul: nowhere s paradise. paradises don t exist. paradise is, kind of, in your head. anthony: wait, wait a minute. you look out your window here and you look at those hills, tho
After consulting with science and weather experts, community partners and voyaging leadership, PVS has decided to keep the canoes primarily in Hawaiian waters until next year when severe El Niño weather conditions settle down.
A $500,000 federal earmark has been secured to support collaboration between the Polynesian Voyaging Society and indigenous communities to share traditional ecological knowledge and scientific information during Hōkūle‘a’s Moananuiākea Voyage via the digital Wa‘a Honua platform, US Sen. Brian Schatz announced.
Kamehameha Schools Maui’s Hālau ʻo Kapikohānaiāmālama will host an official screening for the new film, “Hōkūleʻa: Finding the Language of the Navigator,” on Thursday, March 14, at the school’s Keōpūolani Hale.