Driving amphibious assault vehicles through ancient fishponds to help endangered birds?

The Marines will drive amphibious assault vehicles through Nu’upi’a ponds to remove invasive weeds and supposedly help create habitat for Ae’o, the endangered Hawaiian Stilt.    And in doing so are spreading the seeds of the pickleweed.  I wonder how the military was allowed to do this in an ancient Hawaiian fishpond.   I can’t imagine that amphibious assault vehicles are good for preservation of cultural sites.   What about letting Hawaiians restore the fishponds?

Check out this article from 2003:  “It’s better than a monster-truck rally.”

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100207/BREAKING01/100207026/Marine++Mud+Ops++to+help+endangered+birds+next+week

Updated at 12:19 p.m., Sunday, February 7, 2010

Marine ‘Mud Ops’ to help endangered birds next week

Associated Press

Marines at Kaneohe Bay are due to help endangered native birds this week by driving amphibious assault vehicles through the mud as part of three days of exercises that begin tomorrow.

The annual exercises at the Nuupia Ponds Wildlife Management Area at Marine Corps Base Hawai’i are called “Mud Ops.”

The vehicles break up weeds on mudflats, improving foraging and ground-nesting opportunities for endangered Hawaiian Stilts that live there.

Without these efforts, the invasive pickle weed would crowd the birds out of their natural habitat.

The number of Hawaiian stilts using the ponds has grown to 160 from 60 since the Marines began Mud Ops 28 years ago.

Other native and migratory waterbirds have also started using the Windward Oahu ponds more.

Security kept Obama close to marine base, on stolen Hawaiian land

Military occupation of Mokapu means the president gets a beautiful, secure playground for his visit to Hawai’i.  But the story fails to address the fact that the military forcibly seized this land during WWII, much of it ancestral Hawaiian lands and national lands of the Hawaiian Kingdom.   More than two thousand Hawaiian iwi kupuna (ancestral remains) were removed (evicted) from Heleloa sand dunes to build the runway. They sit in cardboard boxes in the Bishop Museum while the families haggle with the Marines over the repatriation of the bones.   Meanwhile vast burial sites are being desecrated by expansion of housing on the base and the recreational facilities such as the Klipper golf course.   It figures that the President of the U.S. would prove his worthiness to rule the empire by golfing on Hawaiian bones.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100103/NEWS21/1030383/Obama+stayed+near+marine+base

Posted on: Sunday, January 3, 2010

Obama stayed near marine base

Vacationing president using its gym, beach, even its ballroom

By Dan Nakaso

Advertiser Staff Writer

President Obama has stayed even closer than usual to Marine Corps Base Hawaii on his latest O’ahu vacation.

And the reasons are probably as much security-conscious as symbolic for a wartime commander in chief from the Democratic Party.

“The military tends to be more right wing, conservative leaning, and there’s a bias when you have a Democratic, liberal president,” said Michael Naho’opi’i, who graduated from the Naval Academy in 1986, retired as a lieutenant commander and is now executive director of the Kahoolawe Island Reserve Commission. “A lot of it has to do with security. But it does show that he supports the troops.”

As on last year’s Hawai’i Christmas vacation as president-elect, Obama has begun his days with early-morning workouts at Marine Corps Base Hawaii’s Semper Fit gym, which sits next to his beachfront rental home in Kailua.

But on this trip, Obama has returned to the nearly 1,000-acre base several times after working out: to take family and friends for private beach time Dec. 27 at Pyramid Rock out of the eye of reporters and photographers; to play a private basketball game in the gym, also on Dec. 27; to make two widely publicized statements about the Christmas Day attempted terrorist attack on a commercial airliner; and, joined by the first lady, to shake hands with Marines, soldiers and sailors on Christmas Day, for the second year in a row.

As the president’s Hawai’i vacation neared its conclusion, he returned to the base again yesterday, with family and friends, to enjoy the beach after a morning visit to Sea Life Park in Waimanalo.

Last year, during an August vacation break from the presidential campaign trail, Obama stepped out from the same rental home he’s staying in now to deliver a sidewalk statement on Russia’s incursion into neighboring Georgia.

Various media reports at the time referred to the “palm tree-lined driveway” that served as a backdrop for Obama’s statement.

This time, Obama’s entourage erected an ad hoc briefing room, along with a decidedly more presidential-looking podium, inside the Mauka Ballroom of the Marines’ Klipper Golf Course.

“He is the commander in chief and he takes that seriously,” said Dan Boylan, a Hawai’i political commentator and University of Hawai’i-West O’ahu professor. “But the security guys clearly want to keep him close to base.”

Commander in chief

Even for military members who preferred Republican Sen. John McCain for president, Obama is still their commander in chief, said Jim Hickerson, 75, a Vietnam POW and retired Navy captain who lives near the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl.

During his Navy career, Hickerson met and admired President Reagan in California and said, “I am not a very big Obama fan.”

“But it’s great to have a president here, there’s no doubt about it,” Hickerson said. “The president’s the president. I have the utmost respect for the office. He’s our commander in chief. Having him come by (Marine Corps Base Hawaii) is an honor, whether you respect him or not.”

The base is well suited to accommodate the president and his family.

Anderson Hall — where Obama and the first lady thanked military members for their service and wished them Merry Christmas — is outfitted with new 52-inch and 42-inch flat-screen televisions and has been named the best chow hall in the entire Marine Corps three years running.

“We feel our amenities exceed what you would typically find at other bases, without calling them extravagant,” said Col. Robert D. Rice, commanding officer of Marine Corps Base Hawaii. “We’re particularly proud of our Klipper Golf Course and its newly refurbished club. Our Semper Fit gym, where the commander in chief has worked out each morning of his stay thus far, has approximately 20 percent of its strength-training equipment replaced or upgraded each year. Our basketball court in the gym just had its floor resurfaced in September, as it has almost every year in the last several years. Our cardio training equipment is as modern as you’d find in most gyms out in town.”

‘superb relationship’

Marines have been assigned to the Windward side’s Mokapu Peninsula since Dec. 7, 1941, when Japanese fighters strafed Naval Air Station Kane’ohe Bay eight minutes before the main attack on Pearl Harbor.

On Jan. 15, 1952, Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Bay was officially commissioned. Today, Marine Corps Base Hawaii is home to more than 7,500 Marines and more than 7,000 family members, with hundreds more sailors, Marines and civilians pouring in each day.

Rice, the base’s commanding officer, said the Marines “enjoy a superb relationship with the White House staff and Secret Service, and eagerly look forward to supporting future presidential visits to Hawai’i.”

The Marines’ accommodations are good to go for the leader of the free world, said base spokesman Maj. Alan Crouch. But there is one spot on base that even the Marines can’t improve on, Crouch said.

Where the first family enjoyed a beach picnic at Pyramid Rock, Crouch said, “there’s no improving on perfection.”

Reach Dan Nakaso at dnakaso@honoluluadvertiser.com.

USS Arizona artifacts are sacred – so are Native Hawaiian burials

The Navy and the veterans community have rightfully rallied to stop the auctioning of artifacts salvaged from the USS Arizona after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The silver plated service set is considered ‘sacred’, and is being claimed as property of the Navy.  It is good to have a sense of history and the sacred.  But it is hypocrisy when the military fails to extend the same degree of respect to Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) sacred sites and burials in areas touched by military activity.  For example in Waimanalo, the expansion of recreational cabins by the Air Force is evicting the bones of Kanaka Maoli ancestors from their resting place to make room for…toilets.    On Mokapu the Marines golf and build their homes and training facilities atop the vast Heleloa sand dunes, a well known burial site.   Years ago, sand was mined from the dunes to build the base, and now bone fragments are turning up in the driveways, pavements and foundations of many military homes on base.   Military homes are literally built with the bones of Native Hawaiians!  I wonder how well those families sleep.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091111/NEWS01/911110353/Artifacts+off+auction+block

Posted on: Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Artifacts off auction block

Navy raises ownership questions over recovered items from USS Arizona

By Christie Wilson

Advertiser Staff Writer

A partial silver-plated service set salvaged from the USS Arizona just months after the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor was withdrawn from auction yesterday after the Navy took action to claim the artifacts.

Cowan’s Auctions Inc. of Cincinnati was planning to sell the items at a Dec. 9 auction and estimated the 24-piece lot would fetch up to $20,000. When Navy officials learned of the auction through inquiries by The Advertiser, they contacted Cowan’s to discuss ownership of the artifacts, according to a spokesman from the Naval History & Heritage Command, which is part of the Department of Navy.

“We have withdrawn the items from our Dec. 9 auction and have encouraged the present owner to strongly consider donating the collection to the Navy or to the USS Arizona Memorial,” said auctioneer Wes Cowan, who has appeared on the PBS shows “Antiques Roadshow” and “History Detectives.”

U.S. military veterans and others were dismayed that artifacts from the USS Arizona might be sold to the highest bidder, because the battleship is considered hallowed ground. Many of the 1,177 crewmen who died on the ship are entombed in its hull.

Cowan said the artifacts, which include a teapot, saucers and a candlestick from the officers’ mess, were received on consignment from the daughter of Navy diver Carl Keenum, who collected the pieces while salvaging remains, ammunition, weaponry and personal items from the stricken U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor.

Keenum was serving as a construction battalion master of arms aboard the USS Oklahoma during the Pearl Harbor attack and helped saved the lives of 37 crewmates in the hours after the ship was sunk by Japanese torpedoes, according to the auctioneer.

A statement from Cowan’s Auctions said Keenum brought home the service pieces as souvenirs of his wartime experiences, just as countless other soldiers, sailors and other military personnel saved mementos of World War II.

The 30-year Navy veteran died in 1964.

“While Keenum is no longer alive to tell the story of how he acquired the silver plate, there is little doubt that he did so with the belief that it would have only been discarded,” the auction house statement said. “Indeed, the shipboard salvage operations at Pearl (Harbor) produced mountains of trash that was simply piled onto scows, towed to sea and dumped. Such would have likely been the fate of Keenum’s souvenirs.”

The current owner of the artifacts decided to sell the collection when a family member became ill with leukemia, Cowan’s Auctions said. “The consignor was genuinely surprised to learn that the souvenirs saved from almost certain destruction were not hers to sell,” the statement said.

Keenum’s daughter wishes to remain anonymous and would not comment, Cowan said in an interview.

“In her eyes, her dad did nothing wrong, he was a hero and he kept these not for their monetary but historical value,” he said.

Navy Region Hawaii issued a statement yesterday saying the issue of ownership of the artifacts is being reviewed by the Navy’s legal staff and the Naval History & Heritage Command.

The statement also reiterated the longstanding position that “U.S. Navy craft and their associated contents remain the property of the U.S. Navy unless expressly abandoned or title is transferred by appropriate U.S. government authority. Property rights are established in the U.S. Constitution and international maritime law.”

The statement said the USS Arizona “is considered one of our nation’s most sacred and hallowed historical sites.”

“We cherish the memory of the sailors who sacrificed in World War II. The significance of USS Arizona should never be diminished or cheapened.”

The lot of 24 pieces includes a candlestick with a raised Navy seal, a pedestal bowl, sauce boat and two lids, a tray, seven saucers marked Gorham, six bowls, a teapot marked Reed & Barton, a cruet stand, and several pieces of silver burners.

Salvage diver and former merchant marine Gary Gianotti, 38, of Milford, Conn., alerted The Advertiser to the impending auction. He said he has been involved in the recovery of Revolutionary War cannons, flags and other relics with a mind toward preservation.

“I was really shocked. I could not believe that (the auctioneer) would condone allowing sacred relics to that shipwreck being sold off,” Gianotti said.

Gianotti said he hopes the artifacts are returned to Hawaii.

Arthur Herriford, 87, national president of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, said he was relieved to hear the items will not be sold at auction.

“It’s sacred material and we feel very strongly that you don’t monkey around with anything like that,” said Herriford, of Sherman Oaks, Calif. “The Arizona Memorial museum is the place it should be.”

The auction catalog indicated the USS Arizona Memorial had written to Keenum’s heirs in 1997 expressing interest in acquiring the items as a gift from the family.

Paul DePrey, superintendent of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument, which includes the USS Arizona Memorial, has said the National Park Service would very much like to own the partial serving set, but was not planning to bid for it.

Reach Christie Wilson at cwilson@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Marines plan another urban training site in Hawai’i?

The article doesn’t specify where the Marines plan to put this new facility.  They already built a new MOUT at Waimanalo (Bellows) on Hawaiian national land that was supposed to be returned.  They failed to consult with the local community, which sparked protests.   Previously, the Marines had wanted to build a MOUT on Mokapu peninsula, in a Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) burial site, but this was opposed by the Hawaiian families from that area. So the MOUT was moved to Waimanalo.   Afghan nationals were shipped in from California to play the role of villagers for a recent training event in Waimanalo:

Nearly 50 Afghan nationals were recruited in Southern California and brought to Hawaii. They not only participated in checkpoint and village exercises but also prepared Afghani dishes for the Marines to sample.

Travel to Hawai’i, be extras in a military exercise…not bad work if you can get it.   Beats getting shot up or bombed by drones.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091108/NEWS08/911080390/Marines+to+build+urban+training+site+in+Islands

Posted on: Sunday, November 8, 2009

Marines to build urban training site in Islands

$7.9 million facility will help meet requirements for predeployment

By Dan Lamothe

Marine Corps Times

The Marine Corps will expand its use of special effects in infantry training next year, with an expansive urban training facility anticipated in Hawaii and high-tech immersion trainers planned in North Carolina and California, Marine officials said.

The next-generation Military Operation on Urban Terrain facility planned for Marine Corps Base Hawaii is expected to cost $7.9 million. Officials say it will help Marines meet predeployment requirements while reducing the need for travel to the Mainland.

Currently, most Hawaii-based units conduct such training at the Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif.

New Infantry Immersion Trainers are planned for Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Camp Lejeune, N.C.

The new facilities will incorporate many of the same methods to familiarize Marines with what they’ll see in war zones, including the use of foreign role players, digital holograms that resemble insurgents and special effects that simulate improvised explosive blasts and the chaos afterward.

The Corps chose to expand its immersion facilities to increase the number of Marines who receive the training. Since the existing trainer opened at Pendleton in fall 2007, about 12,400 trainees have gone through it, Marine officials said. A smaller immersion trainer overseen by the Marine Expeditionary Rifle Squad program based near Quantico is used to assess combat gear, but does not train large Marine units.

taste of combat

The “hyper-realistic” immersion trainers are important, Marine officials say, because they give Marines a chance to experience a taste of combat before they actually deploy, to test themselves while hearing different languages in tense situations and discern who is — and is not — the enemy.

But the Corps hasn’t been able to provide this type of training to as many Marines as it would like.

“One of the things that we realized through the experience at Camp Pendleton is that the IIT that they put in the old tomato factory just had limited through-put,” said retired Lt. Col. Rich Engelen, a range requirements officer with Training & Education Command, based at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va. “They had an ability to host squads for training, but not in the volume that they wanted.”

Construction on the facilities has yet to begin, but planning is under way for all three facilities. The completion date for the Pendleton facility is May 2010, while the Hawaii facility could open in October and the Lejeune shoothouse could open in early 2011.

The facilities will offer Marine units training options that don’t exist now. At Pendleton, some units will be able to train for days, maneuvering through existing outdoor urban training facilities before sending squads of Marines through both the indoor and outdoor immersion trainers, Engelen said.

A conceptual drawing for the new Pendleton Infantry Immersion Trainer shows it could have dozens of buildings, a marketplace, cemeteries and mosques. Like existing outdoor urban training facilities, it also will have observation decks on the second floor of buildings, where the units can be observed during training.

“We’re going to make a concerted attempt to make this more realistic,” Engelen said. “One of the problems is that there is no solid definition of what immersion is. Everyone sort of understands that it’s the temporary suspension of belief to make you believe that you’re somewhere that you’re not, but we want to make it as good as we can.”

More role players

The facilities will likely incorporate even more role players who speak languages such as Pashtu, which is common in Afghanistan, Engelen said. They interact with Marines during training sessions, acting out scenarios that can range from friendly group meals to deadly ambushes.

The planned trainer in Hawaii also will break ground for the Corps. It will build on the service’s Military Operation on Urban Terrain concept, but offer four separate training areas with increasing levels of complexity, Engelen said.

“There will be some very basic structures that can teach some urban skills, then, as you ramp up, the most complex area will have irregular roads and paths, agricultural areas and other structures,” he said. “Conceivably, a company could come in, run distributed operations in the simple part then have an entire company take the final objective.”

MOUTs already exist on bases across the Corps, including Lejeune, Pendleton and Twentynine Palms. There are no holograms at MOUTs, however, and the facilities are typically large enough to send at least a company of Marines through, rather than a squad.

‘Hey, can you move the birds?’

Marines drive amphibious assault vehicles through Nu’upia pond, a wetland and Hawaiian fishpond, to help create bird habitat?    “It’s better than a monster-truck rally.”

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Posted on: Monday, January 13, 2003

Mud-churning Marines help birds

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

KANE’OHE BAY – Back in the late 1970s, the Marines used to drive their tanklike amphibious vehicles through the Nu’upia Ponds on base to get to the ocean.

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Marines drive their amphibious-assault vehicles through Nu’upia Ponds during training. The wetlands on the Marine Corps base in Kane’ohe are home to about 50 species of birds, including the endangered Hawaiian stilt. William Cole • The Honolulu Advertiser

But that created a problem: Birds liked to nest in the organism-rich mud churned up by the vehicles’ tank treads in the salty coastal wetlands.

“They called Fish and Wildlife and said, ‘Hey, can you move the birds?’ ” recalls Diane Drigot, senior natural resources manager for Marine Corps Base Hawai’i.

But what could have become a confrontation instead turned into a solution, and one of the more unique environmental partnerships within the U.S. military.

Once a year, Marines of the amphibious-assault vehicle platoon from Combat Support Co., 3rd Marine Regiment, get to churn up the mud of the 482-acre wetlands to their hearts’ content.

The vehicles flatten invasive pickleweed that threaten to choke off the ponds, and create the same kind of mud mounds that nesting birds found to their liking in the 1970s.

Drigot said over the past 200 years, Hawai’i has lost about one-third of the wetlands that once covered 20,000 acres.

“Eighty percent of wetlands left on the island of O’ahu are on this side of the island, and most of them are right here at Nu’upia Ponds,” Drigot said.

In the past 21 years, with help from the Marine Corps, the ponds – part of a wildlife management area – have become home or a stopover spot for 50 different species of birds.

Among them is the endangered Hawaiian stilt.

In 1980 and 1981, only about 60 of the birds lived in the wetlands.

“Now, we have about 130 birds that call Nu’upia Ponds their home,” Drigot said. “Without the help of these 26-ton vehicles, they wouldn’t have any home here at all because of these weeds that have moved in.”

At a time when military training areas are increasingly coming under fire from environmentalists, the Nu’upia Ponds program has become a poster child for the type of partnership that can exist.

This year it will be featured in just that way – on a national Marine Corps conservation effort poster.

On the Marine Corps side, the AAV platoon of 16 vehicles gets training driving in the mud and in recovery operations when they get stuck.

mn02a2_b

The vehicles used at Nu’upia Ponds help to flatten invasive pickleweed; if not for the Marine drive-throughs, “you’d have pickleweed up to your waist,” said one official. William Cole • The Honolulu Advertiser

Plus, it’s fun.

“It’s awesome. It’s better than a monster-truck rally – you can actually do it yourself,” said Sgt. Jared Genco, 22, an AAV driver. “No matter how bad of an off-road machine you might get – an SUV, whatever, it will never go through stuff like this.”

That “stuff like this” is knee-deep mud and water.

The AAVs, armed with .50-caliber machine guns and 40 mm grenade launchers and capable of carrying up to 20 combat-ready Marines, made quick work of pickleweed control last week during two days of training.

The outings are timed to precede the March and April breeding season for stilts.

“Basically, the idea is you’re going in a crisscross pattern, and just covering all the ground that you can,” said 2nd Lt. Houston Evans, 24, the AAV platoon commander.

“(The Marines) have told me in a lot of places in Hawai’i they have to do very controlled training and stick to a straight line and make sure they don’t damage anything because Marines care about the sensitive environment,” Drigot said. “But right here, we let them go full throttle and have a little more fun, because that helps the environment.”

Evans calls the mud the most challenging land environment to drive in. In the ocean, the tank treads aren’t used; water jets push the AAV along.

“Just driving along the road or swimming in the ocean – that’s a completely different environment (than the wetlands),” Evans said.

The AAVs get to drive up to 15 mph through Nu’upia Ponds. Top speed on land is about 45 mph.

These days, the Marines bypass the wetlands to reach the ocean for training.

The once-a-year opportunity in the ponds is all the Marines get.

“We’d like to do it more,” Evans said.

Of the 482 acres, about one-third is covered in pickleweed, which was brought to Hawai’i from Argentina, Drigot said.

“It’s just taken over Hawai’i’s habitat for these birds,” she said.

The stilts live on bugs, crustaceans and little fish, and use mud mounds surrounded by water moats to lay their eggs.

“If we didn’t do this operation, you’d have pickleweed up to your waist,” Drigot said.

Endangered Hawaiian ducks, black-crowned night heron and golden plover can be found at Nu’upia Ponds, which is a bird spotters’ paradise.

During training last week, Drigot spotted a rare pair of Caspian terns.

“Without the help of the (amphibious-assault vehicle) platoon here at Marine Corps Base Hawai’i, the birds would have gone away a long time ago,” Drigot said.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com or 525-5459.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Jan/13/mn/mn02a.html

Marines: Stranded concert goers “should have planned their day” better

Posted on: Monday, August 17, 2009

Band’s fans stalled on H-3

Some never made it to Black Eyed Peas concert at Kane’ohe Marine base

By John Windrow
Advertiser Staff Writer

People who waited for hours on H-3 Freeway only to miss Saturday night’s Black Eyed Peas concert at Marine Corps Base Kane’ohe’s BayFest should have planned better, Marine officials said yesterday.

Debbie Bookatz, marketing director for Marine Corps Community Service, pointed out that Saturday’s concert area opened at 4 p.m. for the scheduled 8 p.m. concert.

“People should have planned their day,” Bookatz said.

The start of the 90-minute show actually was delayed and did not begin until around 9 p.m.

Out of the 15,000 tickets that were sold for one of the most popular hip-hop groups in the country, 90 percent were used, which means that about 1,500 people with tickets did not attend, Bookatz said.

There are no plans for refunds, Bookatz said, but her office is studying the situation.

Jacob and Cheryl Reed of Waikiki left for the concert with three other people at 7 p.m.

“When we got to the area and turned off H-3 the traffic stopped,” Cheryl said yesterday. It took us two hours to get to the gate. We didn’t get to the gate until 9:30 or 10.”

The Reeds and their friends gave up and turned around. “We were in disbelief,” Cheryl said. “We had five people in the car who spent $52 each and we never got to see the show.”

When they returned to town, Cheryl said traffic to the base was backed up for “a couple of miles.”

Donald Naquin of Kane’ohe said he and his girlfriend left about 7:30 p.m. and came to a standstill about two miles from the gate.

“Never have I encountered a traffic mess like the one we got into,” he said. “We spent two hours waiting in traffic.”

Naquin said when he reached the gate at 10:10 p.m., “The Marines told us the show was over and let people decide if they wanted to go ahead and leave.”

Naquin said he thought the difficulty was in getting people parked. “I just don’t understand what happened,” he said.

The Marines yesterday said some people simply didn’t leave home early enough. They said about 21,000 people were at the event counting the staff volunteers, and that 200 military personnel, police officers, staff and volunteers were directing traffic and providing security.

Lt. Marc Farr, a member of the base police force, said his personnel controlled events on the base, not on H-3.

“Absolutely we had ample parking and security,” he said. “We partnered with HPD and provided a safe environment all day. Once people reached the gate we had them parked in 20 minutes.”

He also said that shuttles were available to take people from the parking lot to the concert area.

Farr and Marine Maj. Alan Crouch stressed that there were no significant safety incidents or injuries reported and once people got onto the base things ran safely and smoothly.

Crouch likened the event to an air show or rock festival.

“People have to plan and leave early,” he said.

Also the traffic flowing off H-3 and onto the approach to the two-lane gate formed an unavoidable bottleneck, he said.

“It’s like emptying a 5-gallon jug going through a funnel,” he said. “The water only flows so fast.”

Officials said the base only has two gates. The front gate was used to let people onto the base and the back gate was for people who work and live on the base, they said.

Farr did say the the situation would be evaluated and officials would see if there were some way to ease the traffic problem next year.

Reach John Windrow at jwindrow@honoluluadvertiser.com.

War and Peace: The challenges of staging modern-day makahiki celebrations on military lands

WAR AND PEACE

The challenges of staging modern-day makahiki celebrations on military lands

By Lisa Asato

Publications Editor

Twenty-first century makahiki festivals encounter modern-day challenges, such as coordinating with the military for access and trying to stay true to tradition, but festival organizers at a recent panel discussion said they are undeterred and continue to learn as they go.

“The difficulty organizing our makahiki with the Navy is simply one of ship movements, and given the extreme difficulty of moving the submarines we have to pretty much plan ahead,” said Shad Kane, who has helped coordinate the Moku‘ume‘ume(Ford Island) and Kapuaikaula (Hickam

Air Force Base) festival for about seven years. “There’s been some years where we actually had to slow up, pull alongside and let the sub pass.”

Speaking to a group of about 75 people at the Kamakaküokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies on Oct. 9, Kane and five other panelists covered everything from the relevance of makahiki in modern times to what they envision for future festivals. Scenarios included an island-wide event with shared opening and closing ceremonies and games among the winners of each ahupua‘a.

But a recurring theme was one of challenges and deciding how true to stay to tradition. “Can you have a makahiki with the food you grow in your ahupua‘a, or do you have to go to Costco and buy sweet potatoes?” asked Kaio Camvel, whose wife’s uncle, Sam Lono, revived makahiki at Marine Corps Base Hawai‘i in the late ’70s on the basis of freedom of religion.

The Hawaiian culture is a “living culture,” Camvel said, so it’s OK to reinvent at times. What’s important for the Mökapu festival, he said, is ceremony, welcoming diverse groups and sharing food and mana‘o.

Makahiki, traditionally a four-month-long season of peace, sport and honoring the Hawaiian fertility god,

Lono, starts with the rising at sunset of Makali‘i, or the Pleiades constellation. This year the season begins Nov. 17.

William Ailä of Hui Malama o Mäkua, said the challenges of holding a makahiki in Mäkua center around destruction of the valley, which is an Army training ground, as well as more fundamental questions such as: Am I good enough? Is my ho‘okupu good enough? Is my oli in the correct form?

“The answer to those challenges are found in the wind,” he said. At times, he said, 40 mph winds in the valley have stopped for half an hour while an oli was being chanted, and at other times the breeze will surge and “all of a sudden you get that cool wind pushing from behind.

That’s the demonstration that what you’re doing may not be completely right, but your efforts are being appreciated.”

Makahiki events

Moku‘ume‘ume (Ford Island) and Kapuaikaula(Hickam Air Force Base)

Sat., Nov. 10

At 7:30 a.m. Lono enters harbor in a procession including canoe clubs, with 8:30 a.m.

landing at Moku‘ume‘ume and 11 a.m. landing at Hickam Harbor beach, followed by festivities and games. Access is limited and participants must RSVP in advance to Shad Kane at kiha@hawaii.rr.com

Kualoa Regional

Sat., Nov. 17; setup,

Nov. 16 after 12 p.m.

Sunrise procession followed by games and potluck at 9 a.m. Games are limited to men, and

competitors must provide their own game implements. Attendees must provide their own food and drink and RSVP in advance by email to Umi Kai at ulupono1@gmail.com

Makua Military Reservation

Fri.-Sat., Nov. 16-17

Community access at 9 a.m. Saturday. To participate in the entire ceremony, call William

Ailä at 330-0376 for a training schedule or email ailaw001@hawaii.rr.com. RSVP is required.

Mokapu (Marine Corps Base Hawai‘i)

Fri.-Sun., Nov. 23-25

Processions, games and cabanas to accommodate about 200. Access is limited and participants must RSVP to Kaio Camvel at iolekaa@hawaii.rr.com

Kaho‘olawe

Thurs.-Sun., Nov. 15-18

Open to Kaho‘olawe returnees and cultural practitioners, the 2007 event is now closed as it requires paperwork and orientation to be completed a month in advance. For information on next year’s event, contact Kim Ku‘ulei Birnie of Protect Kaho‘olawe ‘Ohana at kkb@kahoolawe.org,808-383-1651 or visit www.kahoolawe.org/home/?page_id=7

Locals pound kapa to enshroud ancient bones

The Molokai Dispatch published a story about a kapa-making workshop on Molokai led by Mililani Hanapi.  Terri Keko’olani was one of the participants. She is one of the claimants for burials at Mokapu, site of the Marine Corps Base Hawaii Kaneohe Bay:

At the Kewanui fish pond last Sunday, 44 international students learned the Hawaiian craft of kapa-making from Mililani Hanapi as a lesson in the making of traditional clothes, but the Wauke bark they pounded will not be worn by anyone living. Hanapi, along with Terrilee Kekoolani-Raymond of Oahu and several other volunteers, are preparing the kapa for the traditional burial of the largest collection of skeletal remains in the pacific – the bones of Mo`okapu on the island of Oahu.

The kapa prepared on Molokai will be used to wrap the individual bones for reburial. The skeletal remains of 1500 individuals have been stored at the Bishop Museum since 1942, when they were extracted from the Mookapu sand dunes to clear the way for a military airstrip. The US Marine Corps has been in control of the area since 1952.

Although she agrees that University of Hawaii archaeologists have learned invaluable information about Hawaiian history from the remains, Kekoolani-Raymond says that the excavation of the bones represented an assault on the Kahiko of Mo`okapu. She is part of a group of families and organizations who have come together to take responsibility for the proper reburying of their ancestors.

The bones have been released for reburial because of movement led by people in the Oahu community who are federal claimants under the NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation) Act. NAGPRA is a federal law that requires federal agencies to allow federal tribes to obtain culturally affiliated human remains and artifacts. “It is a matter of respect,” explained Kekoolani-Raymond, “This is our way of saying we are sorry. We are so sorry for allowing this to happen.”

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Nonstop war duty tests Marines

Nonstop war duty tests Marines

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer
KANE’OHE BAY – Less than four months ago, Lt. Col. Norm Cooling and his 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines were getting ready to leave Afghanistan after a seven-month deployment.

Many of the 1,000 Hawai’i Marines humped heavy loads through remote mountain valleys, camping for days on patrols.

Parts of Paktia Province fell to 20 below zero, and one 3/3 company operated practically in arctic conditions at 11,000 feet.

Their reward should have been seven months’ “stabilization” in Hawai’i. Instead, they’re on a hectic and compressed training schedule for a return late this winter or early spring to combat – this time in Iraq.

It’s the same tempo for some other units at Kane’ohe Bay, and the same story across the Corps – Marines preparing for repeat deployments with minimal breaks in between, and families fretting anew at home.

Cooling, 41, will be on his third war deployment in three years – Iraq, Afghanistan, Iraq.

The 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, which fought house-to-house through Fallujah last November and lost 46 Marines and sailors to the Iraq deployment, is in California receiving mountain warfare training for a deployment to Afghanistan in January or February.

The CH-53D Sea Stallion helicopter community, meanwhile, is preparing for squadron-sized rotations to Iraq, although a deployment order has not been received.

Sgt. Ted Ramos, 28, a 3/3 Marine, has a training schedule for Iraq that includes several days a week spent in the field; “fire and movement” range practice; road marches; trips to Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island, and a full month to be spent on desert training at Twentynine Palms in California between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Then the Afghanistan veteran goes to Iraq.

“At times it is stressful, and you almost want things to slow down to where you can catch your breath,” said Ramos, of San Antonio.

But the India Company Marine also says the high tempo is necessary to be prepared.

“It’s not just me that I’m worrying about. I have my Marines underneath me that I have to keep at the same pace,” Ramos said. “If we were to start to slack off, and slow the tempo down to where we’re not getting as much as we should out of training, I think it would really affect us when we got on the ground over there.”

In some respects, the Iraq deployment has been easier to prepare for than Afghanistan, Cooling said. Then, the battalion had only 3 1/2 months notice before heading to Afghanistan.

Still, Cooling describes the training regimen as “fast and furious.”

All companies stay in the field Tuesday through Thursday in the Kahuku training area, at the Kane’ohe Bay Marine Corps base, at Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, or at Dillingham Airfield.

The Marines practice live fire at Ulupau crater at the Marine Corps base, at Pu’uloa near ‘Ewa Beach, at the Army’s Schofield Barracks and, last year, at Makua Military Reservation – a use they hope to repeat.

There’s a lot of cooperation with Schofield – and some training schedule juggling. Because of Stryker Brigade projects at Schofield, some ranges are closed until 4:30 p.m., and the Army is using Marine Corps ranges, officials said.

Dan Geltmacher, the Marine Corps Base Hawai’i training area manager, said the Marines “are doing an awful lot of training in a short period of time.”

“There are challenges, just like any place,” he said. “But they are getting it done. They are doing their weapons qualifications here and they do maneuver training here. They do their basic annual qualifications that are required, combat or no, and then they go to California and get the final touches.”

Cooling said going to Twentynine Palms gives his battalion the opportunity to spend a full month in a desert training environment. There’s also a Military Operations on Urban Terrain site.

“The disadvantage is that’s another month of deployment away from our families,” he said. “It’s very hard on the families, but we’ve got to strike a balance between the training that’s necessary to get their husbands and fathers prepared for a combat zone and the time that they rightfully need to prepare their families (for a deployment).”

Approximately half the battalion that was in Afghanistan moved to different duty stations, 124 Marines extended to go to Iraq, and as much as 35 percent are new recruits.

Better training could come to O’ahu in the form of an “urban terrain” facility that would have mockups of European, Middle Eastern and Asian city blocks, an elevator shaft, a sewer system that could be navigated, and a prison.

A Military Operations on Urban Terrain site, planned for nearly 40 acres at Bellows, could cost up to $35 million but hasn’t been funded. It remains the Marines’ No. 1 priority for a training area improvement on O’ahu.

Ramos, who has a girlfriend in Texas who’s not at all happy he’s going on a second combat deployment, joined the Marines in 1996, got out in 2000, and re-enlisted in 2004 because he felt “it was a duty of mine to come back to the Marine Corps and do my part” for the country.

The two combat deployments and the intensive training in between haven’t been much of a problem for Ramos, but he isn’t pledging any longer term commitment to the Corps beyond this enlistment – at least for now.

“I look at it this way,” he said. “It all depends on how things are when I come back from Iraq. With the blessing of God I’ll come back with a good straight head and everything I left with, and then I’ll determine (my future) from that.”

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2005/Sep/25/ln/FP509250341.html