Additional opportunities have arisen in recent weeks as they navigate a new normal after the Aug. 8 fires.
Late April brought the start of a busy travel season for U鈥榠 Kahue-Cabanting and Mario Siatris, who鈥檝e committed to teaching a half-dozen Hawaiian cultural workshops on the mainland through July.
The workshops aren鈥檛 money-makers. But Maui Grown 808 is more than a business. It鈥檚 a mission, a way to help people deepen their connection to Hawaiian culture.
In three days, the business partners taught coconut-weaving workshops in three counties across Southern California.
At the end of the visit, the trip sponsor, , surprised U鈥榠 and Mario with a jumbo-sized check made out for $10,000 to help further their business recovery. More than 300 employees of PIHP and the health insurer Blue Shield of California contributed to the donation.
鈥淲e were fortunate not to lose anyone family-wise, but we come from Kuhua Camp,鈥 U鈥榠 explained as she and Mario accepted the unexpected gift. 鈥淲e lost 40 neighbors and friends out of the 101 identified.鈥
Their neighborhood, which was once a housing camp for sugar plantation workers, was the hardest hit by last August鈥檚 wildfire in terms of the number of deaths.
A few days after their return to Maui, U鈥榠 boarded a plane to a small village in Alaska to host a series of weaving demonstrations in a visit organized by . She also met with Indigenous leaders to share strategies for combating overtourism that have been successful for community organizers in Hawaii.
Last week U鈥榠 and Mario went to Oregon to teach more weaving workshops and to see their newly assembled trailer for the first time. The business partners plan to ship the 26-foot rig to Maui, where it will become their temporary living quarters until the government gives Mario the green light to rebuild his destroyed Lahaina home.
Up next: Las Vegas, North Carolina, then back to California. Maui Grown 808 will also offer weaving demonstrations at the in Honolulu in June. In the fall they plan to head back to Oregon for another round of workshops.
Yet while the cultural outreach component of U鈥榠 and Mario鈥檚 business is soaring, the more lucrative side of Maui Grown 808 is sputtering after so many wildfire losses.
There have been a few bright spots, however.
In March, U鈥榠 renegotiated her contract with the Westin resort, securing a $500 weekly revenue increase.
The income boost helps cover a new business expense: supermarket flowers. Since the fire destroyed Maui Grown 808鈥檚 plumeria nursery, U鈥榠 and Mario have had to buy flower bouquets in place of the fragrant plumeria blooms they used to source from their own trees, which all burned down in the Lahaina fire.
The extra money also helps U鈥榠 and Mario pay their workers higher wages in a tight job market.
Schools, open-air markets, cultural festivals and conferences have gradually started soliciting U鈥榠 and Mario鈥檚 services again as Lahaina鈥檚 recovery advances. The business partners also joined the lineup of cultural practitioners at the Old Lahaina Luau, which reopened in mid-March.
The fire spared the luau grounds, but it took months of extensive cleaning and repairs to ready the oceanfront property to welcome back guests for dinner and live entertainment, which now includes Mario鈥檚 coconut-weaving demonstrations.
Yet despite so much forward momentum, Maui Grown 808鈥檚 primary money-maker 鈥 its Lahaina plumeria orchard and native plant nursery 鈥 were wiped out by the fire. The blaze also incinerated the office space that housed more than a decade鈥檚 worth of business records.聽
It will likely take years for U鈥榠 and Mario to overcome these losses.
But the business partners are in good spirits, buoyed by so many new opportunities to share the disappearing art of coconut weaving with people in new corners of the country.
鈥淚t鈥檚 at the heart of why we do what we do,鈥 U鈥榠 said.
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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About the Author
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Brittany Lyte is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at blyte@civilbeat.org