ADDRESS & DIRECTIONS:

Kona Historical Society’s Kalukalu Headquarters
81-6551 Mamalahoa Hwy, Kealakekua, HI 96750

OPEN HOURS:

Out of abundance of caution, all Kona Historical Society programs and physical sites will be closed to the public from March 16, 2020 until further notice to help prevent the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19). To read more about Kona Historical Society’s temporary closures, click here.

 
 

Discover the history, significance, and beauty of Hawaii’s native forests through a special living exhibit at Kona Historical Society’s Kalukalu Headquarters.

Recognizing that people and nature are inseparable and highly interdependent, the Kona Historical Society cleared ranch land south of its historic general store museum and headquarters to create a half-acre native forest exhibit in 2004. Kona Historical Society utilizes this exhibit to help share the importance of these forests and their roles in Hawaii’s natural resource landscape.

Through its unique programming, which emphasizes Native Hawaiian culture and the deep reverence for the natural world, the Kona Historical Society also shares the unique stories about these ecosystems in the Kona Districts. Our hope is to inspire stewardship and preservation of this important historic, cultural, and ecological knowledge.

While walking the pathways, take a closer look at this collection of 10 endemic, indigenous and Polynesian-introduced plants planted and grown here. Learn about our community’s long-standing relationships with Kona’s landscape.

Hear the voices of canoe builders, farmers, fisherman, ranchers, cowboys, adventurers, and others while also sharing your own story about how these forests have shaped your life and your community.

Kona Historical Society’s Native Forest Exhibit is intended to be a thriving place of learning, where people of all ages can engage with nature and develop a connection.

Kona Historical Society is currently offering virtual field trips and virtual tours of the Native Forest Exhibit. Virtual field trips are currently free for all Hawaii schools.

To book your virtual visit, email Public Programs Manager Audrey Blair at audrey@konahistorical.org.

Kona Historical Society is in the process of restoring this Native Forest Exhibit. This task is being accomplished through the generosity of the Ama OluKai Foundation, local partners, sister nonprofit organizations and many volunteers.

For information about this restoration or to sign up for an upcoming volunteer work day, email khs@konahistorical.org.

The beauty of this part of Kona is wonderful. The interminable forest is richer and greener than anything I have yet seen, but penetrable only by narrow tracks which have been made for hauling timber. The trees are so dense, and so matted together with trailers, that no ray of noon-day sun brightens the moist tangle of exquisite mosses and ferns which covers the ground. Yams with their burnish leaves, and the Polypodium spectrum, wind round every tree stem, and the heavy i’e, which here attains gigantic proportions, links the tops of the tallest trees together by its knotted coils.
— Isabella Lucy Bird, 19th century British explorer, writer, photographer and naturalist