Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 30, Number 7, 1 July 2013 — MEAOLOKO TABLE OF CONTENTS [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

MEAOLOKO TABLE OF CONTENTS

MO'OLELO Nlll I G0VER FEATURE Walking in the 'Valley of the Priests' page is , BY TREENA SHAPIR0 I Waimea Valley refocuses on culture, nature anel history - anel is operating in the black for the first time since 0HA acquired it in 2006 HO'OKIHIU WUWil I EGONOMIC SELF-SUFFIGIEHGY

Loan program buoys businesses hge 5 BY MARY ALICE KA'IULANI MILHAM The Hua Kanu Business Loan helps businesses thrive

iulai | july 2013 | Vol. 30, No. 7

'ĪINi I LiNO £ WiTER I A high-tech view of | land connections page 6 | BY TREENA SHAPIR0 I Kīpuka Database, a new online ' research tool, modernizes access to mapping, genealogy, historic sites and mueh more

MO'OMEHEU I GULTURE Shaping young lives through paddling page 23 BY SARAH PACHEC0

Larry "Unele Bo" Campos, advocates the paddling lifestyle. Part of that entails putting on the annual Queen Lili'uokalani Long Distance 0utrigger Canoe Races, coming to Kona in August

Published monthly by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, 711 Kapi'olani Boulevard, Ste. 500, Honolulu, Hawai'i 96813. Telephone: 594-1888 or 1-800-468-4644 ext. 41888. Fax: 594-1 865. Email: kwo@OHA.org. World Wide Web location: www.oha.org. Circulation: 60,000 copies, 53,000 of whieh are distributed by mail, and 7,000 through island offices, state and county offices, private and community agencies and target groups and individuals. Ka Wai Ola is printed by O'ahu Publications. Hawaiian fonts are provided by Coconut lnfo. Advertising in Ka Wai Ola does not constitute an endorsement of products or individuals by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. Ka Wai Ola is published by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs to help inform its Hawaiian beneficiaries and other interested parties about Hawaiian issues and activities and OHA programs and efforts. ©2013 Office of Hawaiian Affairs. All rights reserved.

Kamoa Quitevis. - Photo: LisaAsato