A Bird's-Eye View

A new state-of-the-art TreeTracker technology takes a unique approach to tracking the reforestation of native and endemic trees in Hawai'i.

Each year, tens of thousands of Legacy Trees are planted for permanent reforestation in the Hawaiian Legacy Forest high on the slopes of Mauna Kea. Now, with the click of a button, it is possible to watch them grow.

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Joy Miyamoto
A Work of Heart

A new Hawai‘i website has shoppers seeing green.

The nonprofit Hawaiian Legacy Reforestation Initiative (HLRI) has planted nearly 400,000 endemic and native trees for permanent reforestation across 1,200 acres on Hawai‘i Island. Now, HLRI has launched legacyforestgifts.com, an online store offering artisan-made goods and one-of-a-kind words of art both for purchase and as gifts for the tax-deductible sponsorship of the organization’s koa Legacy Trees.

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Joy Miyamoto
A Matter Of Faith

Over the past year, Faith Elarionoff was joined by her friends and family on an unforgettable journey to reforest more than 1,000 endemic Hawaiian Legacy Trees.

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Joy Miyamoto
Green Gets An Upgrade

For nearly 20 years, Paradise Helicopters has provided a bird's-eye view of Hawai'i's natural wonders and access to its most remote landmarks. Now guests can have this experience for free just by sponsoring the planting of native Legacy Trees here in Hawai'i.

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Joy Miyamoto
The Power of One (Million)

The Hawaii Convention Center, Hawaii Tourism Authority and visitor industry leaders throughout the state are coming together to help grow the world's only Hawaiian Legacy Forest, one endemic tree at a time.

Last fall the Hawaii Convention Center and Hawaii Tourism Authority launched a historic effort to plant more than 1 million native trees for permanent reforestation across the state.

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Joy Miyamoto
Planting A Legacy

“If you think about it, planting trees is sustainable development in its simplest form. We are just creating innovative ways to let others participate.”
—Jeff Dunster

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Joy Miyamoto
Big Island Ranch Develops A Legacy

The Hawaiian Legacy Reforestation Initiative is launching a second "legacy forest" that will preserve 700 acres of land at the 8,500-acre Kahua Ranch on the slopes of the Big Island's Kohala volcano.

The forest will be home to about 250,000 newly-planted "legacy trees" for permanent reforestation, the head of the nonprofit confirmed to Pacific Business News this week.

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Before The Forest, Dreams

It’s noon on a Wednesday in November.

Jeff Dunster, CEO of Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods, sits cross-legged on the floor of his sprawling, gated mansion in Nu‘uanu Valley, leaning back on locked elbows.

“We’re down to about 10 percent of what we had with koa forests just a century ago,” he says. “I’ve been [in Hawai‘i] a few decades, long enough to see the change, and it’s really not that long as time goes. When you see how quickly [the forest] goes away, you realize that your grandkids may not see any of this, and it’s kind of sobering. I also was part of the problem because I love koa furniture.”

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Joy Miyamoto
Collective Efforts: Reforesting Hawaii

Getting dirt under your nails while on vacation is always a good sign that you’ve climbed a mountain, built a sandcastle, or scurried over a fallen log. During my family’s last trip to the big island of Hawai’i, we got dirty nails by planting koa trees in a large native forest restoration project. Little did I know, that bit of dirt would have a bigger story to tell.

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Joy Miyamoto
Loss of the Hawaiian Rain Forest

Since the arrival of man in the Hawaiian Islands, over half of the native forests have been lost.  Since its inception in 2014, The Hawaiian Legacy Reforestation Initiative (HLRI) has been working hard to reverse this trend and return these forests to the native landscape. Working together with community minded businesses, non-profits and individual Legacy Tree sponsors, more than 400,000 endemic trees now cover nearly 1200 acres in the state’s first Hawaiian Legacy Forest.

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