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Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

The Pineapple Plant
My first week living in Hawaii someone told me that I could take the beautiful white pineapple that I had sitting on my counter and grow my own pineapple from it. What you do is take the top of the fruit, cut it, clean it of any left over fruit, let it dry for a couple days, stick it in water and the roots will start to grow from it in just a few days. Here I am 6 years later and my pineapple plant has given me several pineapples. It took about 3 years for it actually grow a pineapple. I will never forget checking on the plant and seeing a little pineapple deep inside. That pineapple grew, we ate it and planted another pineapple, which has just started it's first pineapple. Every time we get a pineapple, we plant another. One thing I learned was that if you want the white pineapples to stay white pineapples they cannot be planted near the "other kind" of pineapples there are. At this time, we have about 20 pineapple plants scattered throughout our property. Be fruitfull and multiply. Hawaii makes that easy.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

The Coconut Tree
The coconut tree has got to be the most popular and known fruit tree when one thinks of the tropics. In fact Hawaii and Florida are the only two places in the US that a coconut tree can grow outdoors. Texas is a another state in which they can grow but will not likely produce fruit because Texas still experiences cooler winter months. The coconut tree has many uses besides being used as a food source. There are many people who artfully design the coconut and use them as souveniers and decorations. There are many other uses for the coconut as well, according to Wikepedia ...
- Coconut water can be used as an intravenous fluid
- Coir(the fibre from the husk of the coconut) is used in ropes, mats, brushes, caulking boats and as stuffing fibre; it is also used extensively in for making potting compost.
- Coconut oil can be rapidly processed and extracted as a fully organic product from fresh coconut flesh and used in many ways including as a and in cosmetics, or as a direct replacement for diesel fuel is the dried meat of the seed and, after further processing, is a source of low grade coconut oil
- The leaves provide materials for baskets and roofing thatch.
- Palmwood comes from the trunk and is increasingly being used as an ecologically-sound substitute for endangered hardwoods. It has several applications, particularly in furniture and specialized construction (notably in Manila's Coconut Palace).
- Hawaiians hollowed the trunk to form drums, containers, or even small canoes.
- The husk and shells can be used for fuel and are a good source of charcoal.
- Dried half coconut shells with husks are used to buff floors. In the Philippines, it is known as "bunot", and in Jamaica it is simply called "coconut brush"
- In the Philippines, dried half shells are used as a music instrument in a folk dance called maglalatik, a traditional dance about the conflicts for coconut meat within the Spanish era
- Shirt buttons can be carved out of dried coconut shell. Coconut buttons are often used for Hawaiian Aloha shirts.
- The stiff leaflet midribs can be used to make cooking skewers, kindling arrows, or are bound into bundles, brooms and brushes.
- The roots are used as a dye, a mouthwash, and a medicine for dysentery. A frayed-out piece of root can also be used as a toothbrush.
- alf coconut shells are used in theatre Foley sound effects work, banged together to create the sound effect of a horse's hoofbeats. They were used in this way in the Monty Python film Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
- ome countries use the cococnut fibre for making a rug.
- The leaves can be woven to create effective roofing materials, or reed mats.
- Half coconut shells may be deployed as an improvised bra, especially for comedic effect or theatrical purposes. They were used in this way in the 1970s UK sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum for example.
- Drained coconuts can be filled with gunpowder and used as Improvised explosive devices.
- In fairgrounds, a coconut shy" is a popular target practice game, and coconuts are commonly given as prizes.
- A coconut can be hollowed out and used as a home for a rodent or small bird. Halved, drained coconuts can also be hung up as bird feeders, and after the flesh has gone, can be filled with fat in winter to attract tits.
- Fresh inner coconut husk can be rubbed on the lens of snorkelling goggles to prevent fogging during use.
- Dried coconut leaves can be burned to ash, which can be harvested for lime.
- Coconuts can be used as ammunition for homemade catapults.
- Dried half coconut shells are used as the bodies of musical instruments, including the Chinese yehu and banhu, and the Vietnamese đàn gáo.
- The "branches" (leaf petioles) are strong and flexible enough to make a switch. The use of coconut branches in corporal punishment was revived in the Gilbertese community on Choiseul in the Solomon Islands in 2005
- In World War II, coastwatcher scout Biuki Gasa was the first of two from the Solomon Islands to reach the shipwrecked, wounded, and exhausted crew of Motor Torpedo Boat PT-109 commanded by future U.S. president John F. Kennedy. Gasa suggested, for lack of paper, delivering by dugout canoe a message inscribed on a husked coconut shell. This coconut was later kept on the president's desk, and is now in the John F. Kennedy Library.
- Coconut trunks are used for building small bridges, preferred for their straightness, strength and salt resistance
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Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com
Home for sale in Ka'u on the Big Island of HawaiiP
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About this House
This home is located in Discovery Harbour's Golf course community. This home is only 2 years old and still have plenty of warranty time left. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2 car garage, nice sized kitchen and dining area, ceramic tile flooring, large master with huge closet, lots of storage space. Excellent Mauna Loa views and ocean views, too. This home is a short sale just waiting for you to make an offer.
Discovery Harbour
Imagine waking up to an incredible sunrise every day. You can do that in Discovery Harbour, a golf course community. Located just off mile marker 65, with about 1/3 acre lots, surrounded by a Trent Jones, Jr. designed golf course, all with sweeping views, Discovery Harbour offers views of Mauna Loa, of Kilauea and the volcano flume, views of the vast ocean, bays, whales. With a community association offering organized activities such as Holiday BBQ's & dinners, volunteer fire department, neighborhood watch, social gatherings & clubs, it's no wonder this is one of the fastest growing communities on the Big Island. Located just minutes from South Point where some of the best fishing in world is located & just minutes from the Sea Turtles at the famous Black Sand Beach of Punalu'u, voted one of the "World's Top Ten Beaches" by The Travel Channel.
About Ka'u Hawai'i
Ka'u (ka-oo) meaning: To be mine...
and it really can be yours. Ka'u is said to be the landing site of the first Polynesian settlers. Covering over 80 miles of coast south of Kailua-Kona and due west of Hawai'i Volcano's National Park, Ka'u is Hawaii's largest district in terms of land area. Ka'u is filled with history one can see in the many petroglyphs from Miloli'i to Volcano. In the 1960's astronauts trained for lunar missions on the lava fields of Mauna Loa and in the 1860's Mark Twain spent time in Waiohinu, right here in Ka'u, and planted a Monkey Pod tree. (In 1957 the original tree was blown down and a new tree grew from it's sprouts that still stands today). Ka'u today is home to some of nature's most precious gifts. One can almost always see an endangered sea turtle at Punalu'u Black Sand Beach or one can find a real olivine Gem by taking a hike to Green Sands Beach off South Point. For those of us who know better, we have already found our green Gem ... called Ka'u.
Na'alehu:
The town of Na'alehu is the center of Ka'u. It is a growing area with golf course communities, the world famous Punalu'u Bakery, dining at the Shaka and the Han Hou, shopping, an outdoor Market selling local fruits and veggies every Wednesday and Saturday, an old theater house and yet Na'alehu still maintains the old time charm of yesteryear that is Hawai'i.
Location: Between mile markers 63 & 65
Waiohinu: This is the place Mark Twain planted that famous Monkey Pod tree. Although the property, once called Mark Twain Square, is owned privately you can still feel the history when you stop to look at the tree grown from a sprout of the original destroyed in 1957.
Location: Between mile marker 65 & 66 ... next to Waiohinu Park
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Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

The Macadamia Nut
The state of Hawaii produces 90% of the worlds Macadamia nuts. The Big Island, produces most of those. Anyone coming to Hawaii has to notice for sale EVERYWHERE the Mauna Loa brand of chocolate covered Macadamia nuts. We have a Macadamia nut tree. There are several things I love about our tree. When it's about to produce nuts it puts off these dangling flowers that have an incredible scent that be smelled across the yard, into the house. The scent is so sweet smelling and so strong it's intoxicating at times.

The one thing I do not like about the Macadamia nut is that is has to be the toughest nut in existence to crack open. Practically impossible. In fact, I spent $40 on a Macadamia nut cracker. One day my wife made her own homemade chocolate covered Macadamia nuts and I have to say move over Mauna Loa brand! It truly is a lot of work to break open the nut, even with the special nutcracker. Maybe some day we will have gathered together enough nuts to take to the factory for processing. I heard that can be done. In the meantime, we will take what we can handle and enjoy.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

The Macadamia Nut
The state of Hawaii produces 90% of the worlds Macadamia nuts. The Big Island, produces most of those. Anyone coming to Hawaii has to notice for sale EVERYWHERE the Mauna Loa brand of chocolate covered Macadamia nuts. We have a Macadamia nut tree. There are several things I love about our tree. When it's about to produce nuts it puts off these dangling flowers that have an incredible scent that be smelled across the yard, into the house. The scent is so sweet smelling and so strong it's intoxicating at times.

The one thing I do not like about the Macadamia nut is that is has to be the toughest nut in existence to crack open. Practically impossible. In fact, I spent $40 on a Macadamia nut cracker. One day my wife made her own homemade chocolate covered Macadamia nuts and I have to say move over Mauna Loa brand! It truly is a lot of work to break open the nut, even with the special nutcracker. Maybe some day we will have gathered together enough nuts to take to the factory for processing. I heard that can be done. In the meantime, we will take what we can handle and enjoy.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com
The Mango Tree

A lush, juicy mango is just so sweet to eat. August is the season for mangos. The mango tree that I planted 6 years is finally giving us fruit this year. So, much fruit most is going to the birds. There have got to be at $1,000 mango on the tree. We were thinking of picking them off and putting them at our street with a "free mango's" sign so others could enjoy the mangos as well. My children have mango ball fights. I am glad we only have one tree, that's all we need.

The mango tree needs lots of water to grow and produce so much fruit. It does not like the wind. When choosing a mango tree I suggest the "dwarf mango" as the mango tree tends to grow 40 plus feet, making it quite difficult to pick the fruit. With the dward mango you can just go right up to the tree and pick a mid morning snack.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com
The Mango Tree

A lush, juicy mango is just so sweet to eat. August is the season for mangos. The mango tree that I planted 6 years is finally giving us fruit this year. So, much fruit most is going to the birds. There have got to be at $1,000 mango on the tree. We were thinking of picking them off and putting them at our street with a "free mango's" sign so others could enjoy the mangos as well. My children have mango ball fights. I am glad we only have one tree, that's all we need.

The mango tree needs lots of water to grow and produce so much fruit. It does not like the wind. When choosing a mango tree I suggest the "dwarf mango" as the mango tree tends to grow 40 plus feet, making it quite difficult to pick the fruit. With the dward mango you can just go right up to the tree and pick a mid morning snack.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

Growing Bananas in Hawaii
One of the most exciting things for this Born in New York, raised in Jersey boy is growing my own fruit and vegetables. What makes it more exciting is that I get to do so year round. Everything has it's season and everything I have learned over the past 6 years of living and growing here in this beautiful place I have learned by doing. A small banana grove can yield many bananas. Each tree seems to only grow one bunch of bananas at a time, but not like a bunch of bananas you would buy from the store. These bunches of bananas have 40 plus bananas on them. Some of the bunches growing clearly have more than that... probably 100 plus bananas. We picked a bunch last week and they slowly ripen. The bananas will not ripen until they are picked from the tree.
My wife has been living on banana smoothies, made a banana cream pie, banana bread with chocolate chips and there is still a whole bowl full of bananas left, still ripening.
Patrick J. Lambert Realtor/Salesperson Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com

Growing Bananas in Hawaii
One of the most exciting things for this Born in New York, raised in Jersey boy is growing my own fruit and vegetables. What makes it more exciting is that I get to do so year round. Everything has it's season and everything I have learned over the past 6 years of living and growing here in this beautiful place I have learned by doing. A small banana grove can yield many bananas. Each tree seems to only grow one bunch of bananas at a time, but not like a bunch of bananas you would buy from the store. These bunches of bananas have 40 plus bananas on them. Some of the bunches growing clearly have more than that... probably 100 plus bananas. We picked a bunch last week and they slowly ripen. The bananas will not ripen until they are picked from the tree.
My wife has been living on banana smoothies, made a banana cream pie, banana bread with chocolate chips and there is still a whole bowl full of bananas left, still ripening.
Patrick J. Lambert R/S Century 21 All Islands 808-937-1188
www.patrickjlambert.com
These homes are available in HOVR, also known as Hawaiian Ocean View Ranchos. These homes are over $469,000 to $895,000 and all lie on 3 acres of Hawaiian land.

|
 |
MLS # |
Tp |
St |
|
Taxkey |
Tnr |
Price |
Land Area |
Location |
Lv.Area Bd/Ba |
| 213694 |
Residential |
A |
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3-9-2-191-30 |
Fee simple |
$469,000 |
3.00 ac |
92-843 Alii Blvd |
3,200 4/4 |

|
 |
MLS # |
Tp |
St |
|
Taxkey |
Tnr |
Price |
Land Area |
Location |
Lv.Area Bd/Ba |
| 202902 |
Residential |
A |
|
3-9-2-185-55 |
Fee simple |
$616,000 |
3.00 ac |
Prince Kuhio Blvd |
3,206 4/3 |

|
 |
MLS # |
Tp |
St |
|
Taxkey |
Tnr |
Price |
Land Area |
Location |
Lv.Area Bd/Ba |
| 193790 |
Residential |
A |
|
3-9-2-189-12 |
Fee simple |
$635,000 |
3.00 ac |
Alii Blvd |
1,713 3/2 |

|
 |
MLS # |
Tp |
St |
|
Taxkey |
Tnr |
Price |
Land Area |
Location |
Lv.Area Bd/Ba |
| 209949 |
Residential |
A |
|
3-9-2-185-54 |
Fee simple |
$895,000 |
3.00 ac |
Bougainvillaea Dr |
3,180 3/3.5 |
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Patrick Lambert
Naalehu, HI
More about me
Century 21 All Islands
Office Phone: (808) 937-1188
Cell Phone: (808) 937-1188
Email Me
Ka'u District of the Big Island of Hawai'i
Kau District of the Big Island of Hawaii
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south end Big Island free maps, local points of interest, and mls search
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