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PVS
Readying for Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Voyage

In
the Fall of 2003, Hokule`a will travel to the remote
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Here, in a nearly pristine
environment, are found 80% of our nation's coral reefs and over
7,000 marine species - half of which exist nowhere else.
Hokule`a’s mission is to restore an ancient wisdom, the
Hawaiian concept of Malama - of caring for our land and sea to
ensure a balance among all forms of life.
Hokule`a
is a natural vehicle for carrying this message. For the last 27
years, she has sailed more than 90,000 miles, always guided by
navigators who steered without instruments or charts - sailing
instead as their ancestors did - by using a world of natural
signs revealed in the wind, waves and stars. Voyaging under an
immense sky dome in an empty sea has inspired humility among
Hokule`a's crewmembers - an understanding of their place in the
natural world. “When you voyage, you see the canoe as a tiny
island surrounded by the sea,” says captain and navigator
Nainoa Thompson. “We have everything aboard that we need to
survive as long as we marshal those resources well. Now we must
look at our islands, and eventually the planet, in the same way.
We must learn to be good stewards.”
Ancient
Polynesians fashioned canoes like Hokule`a with stone tools.
They used koa wood for the hulls, breadfruit sap and coconut
husks for caulking, and coconut fiber rope for lashings. With
materials from the land they fashioned a vessel to blend with
the sea.
“When
our ancestors went to the mountains to cut down trees they did
not think they were taking the tree’s life,” explains
navigator Bruce Blankenfeld. “They were just altering its
essence, taking it from the forest and putting it into the sea,
and in Hawaii the sea and the land are tied together. Everything
in the sea has a counterpart on the land because on an island
the land and the sea rely on each other for life.” In our
rituals today we often recognize a particular kind of reef fish
- life from the ocean - as equivalent to a particular taro plant
- life from the land. Polynesians have always understood the
inherent “oneness” of our natural world because islands are
fragile places where the interaction of man and nature is
clearly seen.
Many
Hawaiians see the string of reefs, atolls and islands to the
northwest of Kauai as the kupuna - the ancestors - of our home
islands. Uninhabited today, these were once the abode of both
humans and spirits. Necker Island, for example, is known as
Mokumanamana. Mana - the Hawaiian word for spiritual power -
hints at the island’s special meaning among ancient
Polynesians, as do the 33 shrines that dot the island.
These
remote islands are also breeding grounds for over 80% of all
rare Hawaiian green sea turtles - once an important food source.
And they compose the Ring of Fire that extends from the nascent
up-thrusting Lo`ihi, southeast of the Big Island of Hawaii - to
Kure and Midway atolls, sinking slowly in the Northwest. Taken
together, they tell a 25 million year tale of geologic birth and
death, the expression on our planet's face of slowly moving
tectonic plates. Once again science has proven ancient belief
correct. The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands are literally the
kupuna - the ancestors - of the main Hawaiian group.
Hokule`a’s
voyage serves as a thread to tie together these far flung
islands and atolls of the Northwestern Hawaiian group to tell
many stories of ongoing research and conservation - all linked
by our increasing concern for conserving life on our planet.
In
the late 1800’s, for example, Laysan Island was mined for
eggs, birds and guano - leading to great destruction and the
death of 95% of one species of seabird. Today, this remote
island and its bird population are being returned to nature by
the work of dedicated conservationists. On land, monk seal teams
set up camp at several islands to monitor the endangered
populations. Seabird counts measure the success of nesting
seasons. Research on spinner dolphins has just begun at Midway.
Efforts to curb the invasive weeds and insects on several of the
islands are accelerating. And potential translocation of the
rare Laysan Duck, endemic to small, flat Laysan Island, is in
discussion. Undersea, scientists continue to explore the deep
waters surrounding the islands to discover new sea life and
better understand the life cycles of bottom fish.
With
corals in decline worldwide, marine scientists are anxious to
understand these reefs before they too become victim to global
warming and other environmental threats.
Hokule`a’s
first mission was to prove that Polynesia was settled by
intrepid seafarers who learned to blend with their ocean world
in order to survive. Today, Hokule`a sails to the theme of
“navigating change” on a crowded and increasingly violent
planet. “Our human societies are navigating off course,”
Nainoa Thompson explains. “Learning to survive on fragile
islands is a microcosm for learning to survive everywhere. Every
one of us - no matter what our ethnic background or nationality
- is native to this planet. As the native community of Earth we
should all aspire to live in pono – in balance - between all
people, all living things and the resources of the Earth – our
island home in an immense sea of space.”
Sam
Low will be onboard Hokule’a to document the first leg of the
NWHI voyage. He will send daily articles and photographs via
satellite to be posted on the Internet, allowing the people of
Hawaii and beyond to take part in this voyage.
As
an integral part of the NWHI voyage, the partner agencies and
organizations participating in the voyage will foster and build
productive, cooperative, and sustained working relationships
among cultural, environmental, scientific, economic,
governmental, and educational groups concerned about the future
of the Hawaiian and other Pacific Islands. The Polynesian
Voyaging Society is pleased to join with the following partners
as we work to finalize research, education and outreach projects
in conjunction with the voyage:
•
Department of Land and Natural Resources, State of Hawai'i
- Department of Aquatic Resources
- Division of Fish and Wildlife
• Department of Education, State of Hawai'i
• Hawai'i Maritime Center
• Monte Costa Photography
•
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration - National
Ocean Service
• Polynesian Voyaging Society
• The Nature Conservancy
• U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior
• University of Hawai'i
- Center for Hawaiian Studies at Manoa
- Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology
- Sea Grant
- School of Ocean and Earth Sciences and Technology
• Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council |