Category Archives: Bananas

Bananas & Dignity

There was a farmers market event this past Saturday at Foodland Supermarket in Ewa Beach. The weather was great and nearly 20 farmers participated, bringing their asparagus, bananas, tomatoes, lettuce, watercress, sweet potatoes, mangoes, papayas, watermelon, corn, cucumbers, beans and lots more. Foodland Supermarket set up cash registers outside and people could purchase things right on the spot.

June and I were there in all our dignity.

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The next photo is of the group in our tent. That’s our friends Clyde Fukuyama, Kylie Matsuda and Momi Matsuda of Kahuku Farms. June is third from the left.

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Chef Kent with David Sumida from Sumida Watercress. Chef Kent showed us why aged balsamic vinegar is so special. He drizzled some aged balsamic vinegar and sprinkled a little pinch of Hawaiian salt on one of our Cherokee Purple heirloom tomatoes. It was great. Now we need to go get a bottle of aged thick balsamic vinegar.

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There was even a watermelon-eating contest.

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KCCN did a live show. Here’s the DJ from KCCN interviewing Kylie Matsuda.

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James Law and Tisha Uyehara, both executives from Armstrong Produce, jumped right in. That’s James handing a Hamakua Springs tomato to a customer.

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Chef Keoni Chang, Corporate Chef at Foodland Supermarkets, had three action stations going where people could taste samples prepared by his staff. The chefs had a great time preparing small taste samples on the fly out of everything they could get their hands on. This is me with Chef Keoni.

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This is June, John Schilf, who is Director of Purchasing for Foodland Supermarkets, and me.

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Jenai Walls, President of Foodland Supermarkets, came by and bought some of our tomatoes.

Mark Teruya, President of Armstrong Produce, personally saw to it that the farmers had all the support they needed. They even brought us Starbucks coffee to get us started in the morning. They did a great job.

We got to see our farmer friends. And we had a chance to talk story with the customers, who seemed to enjoy talking with the people who actually grow the crops. This was great fun.

Foodland will be having several of these around the state. Next weekend we head to one at the Foodland Supermarket in Pukalani on Maui.

How It All Started: The Kapoho Days (part one)

Richard Ha writes:

After starting a banana farm at Waiakea Uka under the corporate name Ha Bros., Inc., I decided to start another farm as a separate entity, and I started looking for parcels. But land was scarce then. It was around 1978, and the sugar industry had most of the good land.

There was one 60-acre parcel available, which was owned by Elvin and Kay Kamoku together with Bill Kaina. Elvin was my Pop’s old diving buddy and at the time he was the Big Island fire chief. Bill Kaina was the pastor of Kaumakapili Church and later of Kawaihao Church. I leased the land from them.

The parcel was located at Koa’e, which is a 40-minute drive from Hilo. The Pahoa bypass hadn’t been built yet so we drove through the middle of Pahoa on the way to work. You went towards Kapoho, past Lava Tree State Park, past old Kapoho town, which was covered by lava, to the four stop sign corner and then back toward Hilo on Beach Road. You passed the Lyman cinder cones, and then the pavement ended and the road went under tall mango trees. The farm was about a hundred yards on the left.

The land had been planted in papayas and there was no soil at all. But a foot or more of cinder, from the 1960 eruption that destroyed Kapoho town, covered the entire parcel. The lava fountain had been more than 1000 feet high in 1960, and the prevailing wind blew the cinder onto the land.

We were kind of new to farming and we didn’t know we weren’t supposed to be able to grow bananas where there was no soil.

Fortunately, the papaya farmer before us had had a D9 bulldozer rip deep rows through the pahoehoe lava, and that’s where he planted his papayas. We didn’t have any money so we planted 45 acres of bananas in those papaya rows. Luckily for us, the ripped pahoehoe allowed the banana plant roots to go down far enough to reach moisture.

Mom, Pop and I planted the first bananas. Later we hired people to help us to plant and take care of the growing farm. Our original banana crew consisted of Miles Kotaki, Jerryl Mauhili, Jason, Jolan and Jocky Keahilihau, Puggy Nathaniel, Jolson Nakamura and Bert Naihe. Most of them came from Keaukaha and Panaewa. Jerryl was the farm manager.

We planted the bananas as deep down amidst the ripped slabs of pahoehoe as we could, then we covered them up with a mound of cinder. This was all done by hand using picks, shovels and o’o bars because we could not afford a tractor. We filled buckets and walked down the rows throwing fertilizer by hand.

As the bananas started bearing fruit, the guys would harvest the bunches, bring them to the closest road and lean them up against a banana plant. When the bunches were all harvested they would come by, cut the hands off and put them in two papaya bins we had on a flat bed trailer.

We were operating hand to mouth, and one day the two papaya bins were repossessed, so we had nothing to put the bananas in. Jerryl decided to just haul them on the trailer without any bins. So they put a bed of banana leaves down on the trailer and lined up banana hands, one inside the other, from one end to the other. They put a layer of banana leaves on top of the bananas and then a second level of banana hands, then a third and a fourth and on up until there were seven layers.

The first time they passed through Pahoa town like that, heads swiveled: “What was that?!”

We would drop off the trailer at the Waiakea Uka packing house after work, around 5 in the evening, and Mom would cut the bananas up and have them packed before 6:30 the following morning. It went on like that for several months—maybe a whole year. I don’t know how we would have done it without Mom’s help.

My brother-in-law Dennis Vierra is a guy who can do anything related to construction, and he helped us build a packing house. Until then we had no shelter, no toilet—just a lot of determination.

Dennis built a structure where we could hang the bunches and roll them on a rail to a place where we could cut off the hands and place them in a tank full of water. The hands were floated across the tank, where they were cut into clusters and packed into banana boxes. We thought we were in the big time.

It turned out that nobody really wanted our bananas on O‘ahu. We had more guts than brains at that time, so we sent several hundred boxes to someone we called Uncle Chow, though we were never sure that was his real name. He took them around Honolulu and sold them off his flatbed truck for ten cents a pound. He never sent us the money, and we wrote it off as marketing and promotion.

His efforts got the attention, though, of Stanley Unten, owner of Hawaiian Banana Company, who was the main banana distributor on O‘ahu. He called and we started shipping to him.

Next we bought a large cargo van. Mechanization was coming fast and furious for us. We bought a roller conveyor to aid in loading the cargo van, which we drove to the docks. We also used the roller conveyor to unload our banana boxes into a Young Brothers refrigerated container.

Then we really hit the big time—we bought a secondhand forklift for $100. The guys called it “Fred Flintstone.” It had hard rubber tires and would go “clunk” every time the part missing from the wheel hit the concrete. But it could move pallets of bananas, meaning each one didn’t have to be carried by hand. All the guys appreciated it very much.

To be continued

How It All Started, part one

Richard Ha writes:

People occasionally ask me how we came to grow bananas.

After I graduated from UH Manoa in 1973 with a degree in accounting, Dad asked if I would run the family poultry farm. I agreed and moved back to Hilo.

After running the chicken farm for several months, I was asked to manage the Hilo Egg Producers Cooperative, located on Kalanikoa Street in the building just Hilo Bay side of Hilo Lunch Shop. The co-op supplied Hilo area supermarkets with fresh eggs.

In the course of that job, I noticed that supermarkets were importing Chiquita bananas. We had been thinking about what crop to grow at the farm, where we had 25 acres of family land and lots of chicken manure, and bananas seemed to have potential.

All I had was a credit card with a $300 limit and a Toyota Land Cruiser, so when I delivered eggs to the supermarkets I started collecting their used banana boxes. I stashed them in the open area beneath my parents’ house.

To get banana planting material, I traded chicken manure with local farmers. I got some from a Mr. Kudo on Haihai Street and some from Eric Mydell, Mr. Ah Heen and Uncle Sonny Kamahele, down the beach road at Maku‘u.

We had no money to clear the land so we marked banana rows by running down the California grass with my Land Cruiser. We are talking tall California grass, higher than the Land Cruiser and with those tiny hairs that make you itchy. We used sickles to clear the grass and an ‘o’o and post hole digger to plant the banana pulapula (seedling). Mom and Dad, my three brothers and I planted all the bananas.

Having majored in accounting, I was interested in acquiring a large market share, so we needed to plant as fast as we could. Using sickles and an ‘o’o, “moving quickly” meant planting 50 plants a week. Now, with automatic planters, it takes us only six seconds to plant one plant.

Later on, to make it easier on ourselves and to speed up the process, we poisoned the grass first instead of using a sickle. But at the beginning, we had more muscle than money so we used the sickle until we had our first harvest a year later.

I cannot believe how much we didn’t know back then. It’s kind of humorous to look back at where we came from.

We were so new to banana growing that we thought the larger the plant we put in the ground, the quicker and larger the bunch we would harvest. So we took the biggest plants we could find. But now we know that a banana plant needs maximum undisturbed time to develop a large bunch, so that wasn’t a good strategy.

Some of the plants we selected back then even had their bunch halfway up the tree already. We know now that those bunches would not be saleable. But we didn’t know any better then.

At the time we were very self-satisfied, having loaded a trailer to the top with banana keiki that looked like ‘ohi‘a logs. Nowadays, the same number of small, tissue-cultured banana plants could be carried under one arm and they would make larger bunches than the giant keiki we chose back then.

We started with two acres of bananas, which was maybe 1,500 plants. After planting them, we just let them grow. We would work for two or three hours and then my brothers’ friends would come by and we would talk story and hit the punching bag or lift weights for another few hours. Then, pau work.

After a year went by, we started to harvest and pack the bananas in boxes we had stored under the house.

But customers prefer ripe bananas. So we would lay all the hands of bananas on chicken wire in one of the empty chicken houses, and pick out the riper ones to put in the boxes.

This was really unwieldy. I had heard that on the mainland people were ripening bananas with some kind of gas. But I had no idea what it was, so I inquired at Gaspro if they knew of a product that ripens bananas. The lady told me, “You mean banana gas?” I said, “Yes, banana gas.” And I took the cylinder with me.

We made a room out of plywood in which to contain the gas and treat the bananas. And amazingly, the bananas ripened uniformly in just a few days. Our first customer was Food Fair Supermarket. We took a photo with the boss there, Mr. Eji Kaneshiro, of the first box we delivered. This was a big deal, as I did not even get to talk to him when I was in charge of marketing fresh eggs.

For some reason, the individual bananas would occasionally fall off the hand. I was called down to Food Fair on many occasions, where I would always act surprised and promise I would fix it. It went on like that for too long and I was having to talk to Mr. Kaneshiro way too often.

Then I learned that banana companies on the mainland used refrigeration to control ripening. We didn’t have money, so we bought a small air conditioner. It worked and it was amazing. We were delivering maybe ten boxes a week to Food Fair Supermarket and they were perfect. We were in the big time with cutting-edge technology.

One day, when we hit peak production of 25 boxes or so, I opened up the door to the air-conditioned enclosure and smelled the unmistakable odor of overripe bananas. What could have happened?

The air conditioning unit had ice all over it. That’s when I found out that ripening bananas give off a lot of heat, and we had overtaxed the small air conditioning unit. It was a disaster—we lost all 25 boxes.

I applied for a loan to build a warehouse and we made three ripening rooms with real refrigeration. From then on, we were really in the banana business.

To be continued….

Yellow Bananas

Richard Ha writes:

Kindergarteners from Kaumana School came to our farm on an excursion Friday. Tracy took them on a tour to see what we do here on the farm.

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First, she asked them, “Does anyone know which way bananas face when they are hanging on the tree? Up or down?”

Some of the children answered “UP!” enthusiastically and an equal amount shouted “DOWN!” Some just yelled.

There were maybe 70 children, in several groups, each with an adult teacher or volunteer in charge. They were well behaved, walking in double lines and holding hands.

Tracy showed them how a worker removes the hands of banana from the stalk with a special air tool. And they got to see how the bananas are trimmed, washed and then weighed and put in trays of forty pounds each.

After learning how the bananas are carefully packed into a box, being careful not to bruise them, the children got a banana break. Each child received a banana.

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This was the most enthusiastic bunch of banana eaters I have ever seen. One kid ate three bananas. I wondered out loud, Are they always this hungry? Kris, my daughter-in-law and one of their teachers, told me that they do get hungry around mid-morning.

All of us on the farm were flattered that they liked our bananas so much. But I’m pretty sure any food at all would have been just fine for these little bundles of energy.

Our workers like when we have schoolchildren visit and they make a point of having the farm in top shape, looking clean and neat. They should be proud of the good image they present to the kids. I know that I am proud of the farm at these times.

After their banana break, the young children went into the coolers to look at the tomatoes that were ready to be sent to market.

They saw small, medium, large, red, and yellow tomatoes. They saw loose tomatoes, tomatoes attached to the vine as well as tomatoes packed in plastic clamshells. But, most of all, they liked getting to stand around in the cooler getting cool.

From there they walked to the tomato packing house, where they saw how the tomatoes that are harvested into plastic trays are brought up to be washed and disinfected and then packed into the containers that are sold in the supermarkets.

While they were looking at the tomatoes being packed, the lettuce came in and everyone went over to see how that was done. Tracy explained that the Chef Select has three different lettuces, so that Mom can make a colorful salad with just one container of lettuce.

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It reminds me of when Tracy took her first group of first graders on a farm tour more than 10 years ago.

We were wondering if farm tours would help us market our bananas. So she explained all about bananas and how Kea‘au Bananas (our name at the time) were the best.

And at the end of the day, hoping that her message had gotten across, she asked the children: “Now children, when your mommy goes to buy bananas at the market, which ones will you tell her to buy?”

They all replied in unison, “YELLOW BANANAS!!!” I am still laughing at that one. We no longer try to sell bananas to kindergarten and first grade kids, but we still love to have them visit.

Run, Then Eat Bananas

Besides the supermarkets, our bananas sometimes find their way to some interesting places.

Such as the ones we donate to the annual Kilauea Volcano Runs. Every summer, up at the 4000-foot elevation of Kilauea Volcano within the Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park, people gather from Hawai‘i, the mainland U.S. and other countries to participate in what has become the state’s largest trail run.

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The runs started modestly more than 20 years ago when a Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park ranger wanted to “toughen up” his staff by having them run in the back country. And it is “back country”—still, runners find themselves climbing crater walls and crossing dirt trails, cooled lava fields, the Ka‘u Desert’s sand, tropical rainforest and more.

These days, more than 1000 people participate each year in what’s sometimes called “Athletes for the Arts.” That’s because the runs benefit the many arts, cultural and educational programs offered by the non-profit Volcano Art Center. The VAC also donates artwork as prizes for top finishers.

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There are three different races. The Volcano Marathon, considered “the world’s toughest measured marathon,” encompasses rough, uneven terrain, stark lava fields and 1000-foot elevation changes. Race information warns that runners should have trained on trails, or have participated in trail running events, and should be able to finish in 7 hours and 30 minutes. “Add one hour to your best time to see if you can meet this requirement,” paperwork warns.

The 10-mile “Kilauea Rim Rum” circles the summit caldera of Kilauea, mostly following its rim. Runners cross rugged pahoehoe lava, pass steam vents and cinder cones, and traverse beautiful wooded trails amidst birdsong.

The 5-mile Kilauea Caldera Run & Walk—the only run that allows walkers—takes runners past steam vents along the caldera’s edge, down into the caldera and along its pahoehoe lava floor, and then out again through the high-elevation rainforest.

Afterwards, participants visit the refreshment tent where they pick up their finisher t-shirts and some rejuvenative snacks. Besides Hamakua Springs Country Farms bananas, there are papaya, potato chips, cookies and other goodies, as well as water and juice. And then it’s on to the awards ceremony.

Maybe, when Richard loses some more weight, we could bully him into registering for one of the Kilauea Volcano Runs. I wonder if he would try to sneak his bike in. – posted by Leslie Lang

Watch Us Harvest Bananas

Richard Ha writes:

Several years ago, the owner of a large, organic produce distributor visited us from Tokyo to explore whether we could supply bananas to Japan. He was soft-spoken and reserved. We had dinner with him and his interpreter, and he was so formal that I felt a little uncomfortable wearing my shorts at dinner. We arranged to show him our banana farming operation the following day.

As we showed him the banana packing operation, we explained about our sustainable farming methods as well as our food safety procedures, but we couldn’t tell whether we made a favorable impression or not.

Then we demonstrated how we harvest bananas. We stood at the road alongside our rows of bananas and watched as our harvester Albert notched the banana tree so it would bend over just right, placing most of the banana bunch weight on his shoulder. Then he cut the bunch off and carried it to the trailer. Up to that point, it was a routine demonstration.

But then Albert went back to cut the tree down and move its pieces so they’d be out of the way of the fertilizer tractor.

Our banana trees are very healthy and their trunks are as thick as a man’s torso. The standard tool used to harvest bananas is a razor-sharp machete with a two-foot blade.

Albert swung his machete once and cut the tree completely off, and then on the back swing he chopped it in two more pieces before it hit the ground.

Unexpectedly, our quiet, reserved guest yelled, raised his arms and leapt completely off the ground. Glancing at him, I instantly guessed what he saw–a samurai warrior swinging his sword cleanly through the enemy.

That’s what banana harvesters are like: Samurai warriors.

Only certain people can be banana harvesters. It’s not necessarily the biggest, strongest or baddest person who will become a successful banana harvester. It’s the person who has the most determination and mental toughness. I’ve seen lots of big, strong and mean guys over the years who just could not handle the job. A successful banana harvester doesn’t give up just because the job is hard. He has much more pride than that.

Watch our Harvest Superviser Radley Victorino harvest a bunch of bananas in this video (above), and notice how he positions the bunch on his shoulder. When he swings and cuts the bunch off the tree, he doesn’t flinch at the weight of that bunch dropping onto him—though that bunch probably weighs more than a hundred pounds.

Banana harvesting is by far the most physically demanding job on the farm. Good harvesters, like Radley, make it look easy. It’s not easy at all.

To help, we’ve invented a system where our banana harvesters walk only an average of seven steps with a bunch on his back. In Central America, it’s common for banana harvesters to carry the heavy bunches 100 feet or more. We’ve also designed our trailers so the harvesters don’t have to bend forward too much to put the bunch down. And we use a winch system to lift the bunches off the trailer.

The deal with the Japanese importer didn’t come to fruition, but it gave me a great new way of thinking about our harvesters–as Samurai.

No matter how you cut it, so to speak, you have to be tough to be a banana harvester. I’m proud to have been the original banana harvester more than 25 years ago. That’s how come I know what a difficult job it is, and it’s why I have such enormous respect for our banana harvesters.

Meet Florence Ha

When I chatted with Richard’s mom, Florence Ha—who still works on the farm at age 82—I realized that her family’s history tells some of Hawai‘i’s story.

Florence’s mother, Kamado Kina, came to the Islands from Okinawa as a picture bride.

“She was supposed to marry somebody else,” Florence told me. “But when she got off the boat and saw the person she was supposed to marry, she didn’t like him. And, you know, it was a disgrace to go back.”

It worked out. She met Matsuzo Higa, who had come from Okinawa to work on a sugar plantation. They married and had nine children.

Florence was their third child. She grew up in Honolulu and then lived for several years on Moloka‘i, where her father farmed, raising watermelons he sent to market in Honolulu by barge.

After the family returned to Honolulu, Florence worked at a cousin’s café. A young man who lived upstairs came down for breakfast every morning. That was Richard Ha, Sr., and they were married in 1944.

Chef_alan_and_grandma_ha_2Florence and Richard had six children, and Richard, Jr.—our Richard—was the firstborn.

“Of all my children, he got into most of the trouble. Oooooh,” she said, remembering. Still, she said, she knew he was very smart.

“I didn’t think he was going to be a farmer. At first I thought he might be a lawyer. But when he came back from the service and saw us struggling, that’s when he came and helped us on the poultry farm.”

And then he started another farm. “I helped him. This and that—I helped him box the bananas and grade the bananas. Whatever needed to be done.”

She’s modest about her help, but Richard stresses how hard she worked.

“She’s been working with us from day one,” he said, “all the way to now. And she is the person most responsible for us being where we are today.

“Mom was the person in the early days who, when we needed help, she was there. Not only eight hours, but 12, 15, 20 hours. Whatever it took. Back when we started up it was seven days a week, for years.”

He told me that in those early years, she would work at their Waiakea Uka farm during the day. When that work day was done at 6:00, he’d bring a trailer load of bananas from his new farm in Kapoho and she would stay for hours, packing those bananas so the trailer was empty and ready to go back to Kapoho early in the morning.

“When I think about it now, I don’t know when she slept,” he said.

“She was always the hardest worker of all of us,” he said. “She was an example. Some of us were marketers and talkers, and she was a doer.”

Though she’ll be 83 next month, she still works from 7 a.m. to 11 in the mornings, “every day that I feel like going. Richard told me, ‘I don’t want you to retire.’ I’m working in the nursery and I feel kind of bad, because I hardly do anything now. I don’t feel I’m doing enough. But he says he doesn’t want me to retire because he wants me to get exercise instead of just sitting home and doing nothing.”

“People would tell me, Don’t work so hard. I said, I’m not working, I’m exercising.”

She talked about all the exercise equipment her son has bought her over the years, which she uses. “Exercise machines, weight-lifting machines, bicycles. One day one of the bishops came to my house, and said, where did you get all this equipment? I told him my son got it for me, and he said that’s the best thing he could do.”

Richard joked that he gives her the equipment because it keeps her able to work. “Cheap labor. But of course it’s not that. Mainly it’s for health.”

He said he wants her to exercise for her health, and to keep coming to work to keep active. “Even if she just comes to work for one hour a day,” he said. “Whatever it takes to keep on going. It keeps her young.”

He talked about a time when she decided to retire and stopped working at the farm.

“It was maybe more than ten years ago,” he said. “She started getting fat, really sluggish, not happy. When she started coming again, she slimmed down. I was able to pick her up and talk story with her, tell her where the farm was going, this is what we’re doing. She’s like a sounding board.”

They both told me that that’s the part of the day they enjoy the most—the mornings, when he picks her up at her Waiakea Uka home and they talk on the way to the farm in Pepe‘ekeo.

“He tells me what he’s thinking of doing (at the farm),” she said, “things like that. That’s what I really enjoy.”

Richard said he gets his sense of humor from her and sometimes they share a good laugh.

“She loves to laugh,” he said. “We have a good time. Every once in awhile I’ll crack a joke and crack her up.”

She’s at home right now, recovering from foot surgery, but said she’s going back to work this week.

“I know Richard’s trying so hard,” she said, “so it makes me feel good.” Her hard work at the farm, she said, has always been “a real labor of love.”

Not “Just a Banana Farm”

Richard Ha writes:

When Leslie was putting together that post about our employee Susie White, she asked me whether she should include Susie’s quote—“I thought, ‘I don’t want to work on a banana farm’”—or whether it wasn’t what we wanted to portray.

I told her that it was very honest and to include it.

I told her that I tell politicians and business people, and everybody, the same thing—that we know our workers don’t want their kids to be banana farm workers. They want more for their kids.

I understand that and that’s why I try to do whatever I can to help the situation so their kids might have more opportunities. That’s why I push for economic development opportunities. Like when the brand new College of Pharmacy (at the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo) came up and they were accepting testimony, I went and spoke in favor of it. I kept it light and humorous—I told them I wasn’t there to support the school of pharmacy because we were going to sell more bananas. I was there because it meant more opportunities for our banana workers’ kids.

Another example is the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) proposed for Mauna Kea. It gives economic opportunity; some of the kids might want to become astronomers. That’s my agenda, really. When I support something like the TMT, it’s with the thought of how this will help our workers.

What it really comes down to is if the kids can get good jobs, maybe they can buy their own piece of property. We can help them help themselves, without their having to leave Hawai‘i, or having to go get subsidies from the state.

I’m glad Susie made that comment about thinking we were just a banana farm, but soon realizing that we are much more than that. I don’t often get the opportunity to talk about this important subject.

Make-Your-Own Banana Splits

Hamakua Springs donated bananas again this year to the Hilo High School Grad Nite.

That’s the alcohol- and drug-free graduation night event the school has put on for fifteen years now. The action starts immediately after the graduation ceremony and lasts until the next morning.

This year three-quarters of the graduating seniors participated (some years it’s more than 90 percent), spending an action-packed night at the Hilo Yacht Club where they:

• climbed a rock wall
• played tennis
• played volleyball
• played basketball
• went swimming
• dressed up and had their picture taken, which was put into a key chain for them
• got massages
• had their portrait sketched
• had their fortune told
• got temporary tattoos (this was the most popular event)
• listened to live music
• danced, and
• ate all night long

Food was available the whole night—from the pizza served for dinner, to the make-your-own banana splits and ice cream sundaes with every possible topping, and then breakfast in the morning.

Each graduate took home a bag of goodies, including a beautiful towel with the Hilo High School logo, a Grad Nite t-shirt, a camera (so they could take pictures with their friends) and a coupon to develop the film.

At 5 a.m., they were bused back to the high school for their parents to pick them up—having spent a safe and sound graduation night, and a memorable one.

Hamakua Springs sends a hearty congratulations to the Hilo High School graduating class of 2006!

Employee Spotlight: Ida Castillo

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Tomato packing house supervisor Ida Castillo has always been so good at her job, Richard says, that it was almost hard to promote her.

“She’s one of those workers who you think you can’t afford to take out of her present position,” he says, “because she’s so good. But in our company we try to make sure we give people opportunities as they arise, no matter how uncomfortable it may make us feel in the short run.”

Ida came to the company 13 years ago, when she was hired as a banana packer at what was then Kea‘au Bananas.

“Ida was always the fastest and most efficient banana packer, and it always seemed effortless to her,” says Richard. “When we started raising hydroponic tomatoes we asked if she would consider packing tomatoes, and she immediately became the most efficient tomato packer.”

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Now, he says, she’s doing a great job as the tomato packing house supervisor, her position since the beginning of the year. “Ida has the little things under control and that takes care of the big things,” he says. “She is a quiet person but she is efficient and she definitely gets the job done very well. I’m extremely proud of her.”

Outside of work, there’s her family. She is married with three children. Her sons are 24 and 19, both in the army. Her daughter, 22, recently gave Ida and her husband their first grandchild, Shayla, who is 18 months old. “That’s the first (grandchild), and we love her so much.”

She laughs when she admits she likes to watch her soap operas. “The Young and the Restless, and some Filipino soap operas,” she says. “I go to church when I’m not working. I love to go shopping.”

And how does she feel about tomatoes after years of packing 15 pounds of them into 60 boxes a day?
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“I love to pack tomatoes,” she says. “I just love holding them, and the color. And I still like eating them. These are good tomatoes.”

She says she likes her job. “I always loved to work agriculture. Before I worked bananas, I worked papayas, flowers. I love it.

“Plus the management, they’re good,” she says. “They treat us like family, not a worker. They’re nice people.”

The 45-year-old says she hopes to work there for awhile. “Until I retire,” she says. “Then they going kick me out.” — posted by Leslie Lang