Live healthy, live Aloha! Blue Hawaii LifeStyle Ala Moana Center BHL Café 1111

Live healthy, live Aloha! Blue Hawaii LifeStyle Ala Moana Center BHL Café 1111 Bishop Street ` ` tel. 949.0808 fax 949.3838 tel. 566.0088 fax 566.0089 www.BlueHawaiiLifeStyle.com Congratulations! You are a part of the solution. You have joined 10,000 people who are using the HonuGuide to help build a local-living economy and a sustainable future that will secure prosperity for all of Hawaii. Resources Savings Ideas 000 honuguide.com What's inside the 2010 HonuGuide? The HonuGuide is published yearly by The Honu Guide, LLC (PO Box 11084 Honolulu, HI 96828). Printed by Hagadone Printing Co. All right reserved . Reproduction in whole or part without written permission is prohibited. FUNDRAISING fundraising@honuguide.com ADVERTISING ads@honuguide.com EDITORIAL turtle@honuguide.com GENERAL INQUIRY info@honuguide.com Publisher, Editor & Designer TylerMongan tmongan@honuguide.com Publisher & Advertising Director TarolynRobinson trobinson@honuguide.com Marketing Director JasonCutinella jason@nellamediagroup.com Assistant Editor ChantalPeterson Art Director LaurenGerstle Design Consultant BlaineTolentino Writer/Researcher ChelseaChong 2010 HonuGuide Sponsors: Printing local, choosing recycled paper & eco-friendly inks helped the 2010 HonuGuide save: 43trees 19,628gal water 14BTUs energy 4,075lbs emissions 1,192lbs solid waste The HonuGuide is a Coupon Book, a Resources Guide & a Fundraising Tool Setting the Context Aina To Table Zero Waste Natural Resources Living Economy Healthy Island, Healthy Body Take Action Community Coupons COVER ARTIST: SOLOMON ENOS Born and raised in Makaha on the west coast of O´ahu, Solomon Enos grew up in a very creative and nurturing environment. He spent much of his time drawing and making things in his grandfather’s workshop, or reading books from the fl oor-to-ceiling bookshelves in his home. Solomon also went with his father, Eric Enos, on Saturday morn- ings to the back of Wai´anae Valley to work in the kalo fi elds. Solomon learned about who he is as a native Hawaiian during the Hawaiian Renaissance, and all of those experiences are expressed through his artwork today. Solomon’s fi rst commission was as a 6th grader at Makaha Elementary School for a 5th grade curriculum project. After that, he continued to do small commissions, and had his fi rst exhibit at a Wai´anae community festival when he was 21. In 2001, Solomon received his fi rst opportunity to do book illustration for a project with authors Kimo Armitage and Tutu Hale. He has gone on to illustrate four more books, most prominently Awaiaulu Press’ translation of the Hi´iakaikapoliopele epic, for which Solomon won a Ka Palapala Po´okela Award. He has also won a Na Hoku Hanohano Award for the cover art he created for Hapa’s Maui CD. Solomon has created over a dozen murals from Makaha to Waikiki, and has lead twice as many school and community art projects, including a 4x24 foot mural at Kamakau Charter School’s new campus in the back of Ha´iku. Other than a handful of art classes at Kapiolani Community College, Solomon has no formal training. His main concern is the perfect execution of an idea, and as a result, Solomon has developed several styles and works in many different media. Solomon currently resides in Nu`uanu with his family. Solomon draws much of his inspiration from both his ´ohana and the land around him, as he hopes to translate the deeper meanings of his culture to the world. 003 honuguide.com All materials published by HonuGuide, LLC, including the information on our company web site, undergoes review to ensure acurracy. The editors of the material have consulted sources believed to be reliable in their efforts to provide information that is complete and accurate. In view of the possibility of human error by the authors, editors or publishers of the material contained herein, neither The HonuGuide, LLC. nor any other party involved in the preparation of this material warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of such. Readers are encouraged to confi rm the informa- tion contained with othersources. [007—014] [015—024] [025—036] [037—044] [045—056] [057—074] [075—086] [087—End] CONTENTS 2010 Message of the 2010 HonuGuide... Did you know that Hawaii imports about 90% of what it consumes, and if the ships stop coming tomorrow fi ve days from now you will have no food to eat, no gas for your car, and no power for your city. Now imagine what Hawaii would look like if we had a local living economy that fostered fi nan- cial, spiritual, emotional, intellectual, and physical prosperity not only for you and your business, but also for your community and all of Hawaii. You are a part of this prosperous future and we want to recruit you to help build a healthy and sustainable Hawaii. The mission of the HonuGuide is to create tools that provide education, incentives and connec- tions that infl uence consumer behavior and business practices to encourage the development of thriving local economies. The 2010 HonuGuide has built on the success of the 2009 edition by adding more resources, more ideas, and more community coupons. But the HonuGuide is much more than just another coupon book. It's a tool for change. The HonuGuide makes it easy to choose local and green business that value a sustaianble future for Hawaii. HonuGuide coupons encourage us to shop with a conscience, and our dollars incentivize businesses to choose more sustainable business practices, goods and services. The 2010 HonuGuide is also full of information and resources that many local leaders have taken the time to share with our island community. Take their words to heart and then act on them. You will realize that island sustainability goes beyond putting solar panels on your roof or recycling your trash (although both of those are good things). True sustainability comes about by reframing our moral compass so that it aligns with ideas and actions that produce fi nancial, spiritual, emotional, intellectual, and physical prosperity, for you, your buisness, your community, all of Hawaii, and the world. You really are a part of the solution and my prayer is that the HonuGuide helps you on your journey. Aloha, Tyler Tyler Mongan publisher, editor, & designer Papa and Wakea This was an image commissioned by Ka- mehameha Schools for a curriculum book called “Haloa”. Papa is often referred to as the “Earth Mother and Wakea the “Sky Father”. In this piece they come together with the traditional “Honi” or kiss, nose to nose, sharing the breath of the land with the breath of the heavens. Important Note: The HonuGuide makes a great fundraising tool. Your school, non-profi t or club can sell the HonuGuide to help raise funds & awareness. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS PonoShim: CEO of Enterprise Honolulu RamsayTaum: President of LEI of the Pacifi c RobinCampaniano & KyleDatta: Ulupono Initiative PaulHawken: Environmentalist and author AndreaDevonBertoli: Farmer and Baker JulieMitchel: Writer and Consultant JennaKing: Pacifi c Biodiesel JeffMikulina: Executive Director, Blue Planet Foundation MaxineBurkett: Center for Island Climate Adaptation & Policy DonovanDelaCruz: Honolulu City Council Member: Distric 2 AndreaBrower & JessicaKrull: Malama Kauai MichaelSaiz: Hawaii Health Guide MichaelKramer: Managing Partner of Natural Investments AlexanderdeRoode: Sustainable Living Institute of Maui MiwaTamanaha: Executive Director of KAHEA JoshStanbro: Hawaii Community Foundation ShanahTrevena: Director of Sustainable UH GailSuzuki-Jones & BrennaSt-Onge: DBEDT JohnCusick: UHM Environmental Center AndreaDean: Business coach and consultant LaurenRoth-Venu: Roth Ecological Design Int. LizMakarra: Feng Shui Consultant KristaSteinFeld: 'Ahahui La'au Lapa'au IkaikaHussey: Publisher, The Hawaii Independent KoryPayne: Voter Owned Hawaii MelisaMedalle: Founder/designer Messah GayeChan: Chair of the Dept. of Art & Art History, UH JennaIshii: Malma Hawaii & Hokule'a Crew member TimReith: Natural builder MattJohnson: Founder of Sustain Pro Managemenent ORGANIZATIONS HaleiwaFarmer'sMarket KanuHawaii BoardofWaterSupply SustainHawaii NorthshoreSoapFactory KamehamehaPublishing KokuaHawaiiFoundation HawaiiEco-tourismAssociation SolarGuyRadio Styrophobia WaikikiWorm PHOTOGRPAHY LaurenGerstle JamesHadde MarthaChen aspect of our lives in a positive way. Like people around the world we can fi nd solutions by looking to our past, so let’s truly look at how peo- ple in the most isolated place in the Pacifi c could live without importing and exporting anything for genera- tions. Today, we don’t have enough food to feed everyone. In this pub- lication are thoughts, hopes, and values that can help us prosper spiritually, physically, intellectually, and emotionally. Let’s not sustain our children let’s prosper them or might I say, aloha them. re-framing the context Not Sustainability... Prosperity by PonoShim I wish for you a life that is based upon the ahupua’a, but I don’t wish for you a life that is sustainable. Is this a cruel statement or is it a statement of great aloha? Please allow me to explain: I was watch- ing a woman pushing 3 shopping carts in downtown Honolulu with all of her earthly treasures. She was sustaining herself. Is that what sustainability is when we speak of it as a preferred model for the future? I don’t think so - and the problem isn’t in the term, the problem lies in the interpretation. 007 honuguide.com bio: Pono Shim is the Executive Director & Kahu for Enterprise Honolulu (Oahu's Economic Development Board: Supporting a prosperous, diversifi ed economy in Hawai'i for current and future generations. Ahupua’a was the com- uploads/Industriel/ 2010-honu-guide.pdf

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