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Hōkūleʻa

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Hōkūleʻa arrival inHonolulufromTahitiin 1976
History
Hawai'i,United States
NameHōkūleʻa
NamesakeThestar Hōkūleʻa(Arcturus), which travels directly above the latitude of Hawai'i
OwnerPolynesian Voyaging Society
Launched8 March 1975
Identification
StatusActive
NotesA reconstruction of a traditional Hawai'ian bluewater vessel
General characteristics
Class and typewa'a kaulua
Tons burthen27,000 lb (12 t)[1]
Length62+13ft (19.0 m) overall[1]
Beam17.5 ft (5.3 m)[1]
Draught2.5 ft (0.76 m)[1]
PropulsionSail
Sail planwa'a kaulua,crabclaw sails
Complement12
NotesHōkūleʻahas, in the past, beenBermuda-riggedfor some passages.
Stern ofportsidehull and centersteering oar
Hōkūle‘a,under tow, inŌshima channel, Yamaguchi-prefecture,Japan

Hōkūleʻa[2][3]is a performance-accuratewaʻa kaulua,[4][5]aPolynesiandouble-hulled voyagingcanoe.[6][7]Launched on 8 March 1975[8]by thePolynesian Voyaging Society,it is best known for its 1976 Hawaiʻi toTahitivoyage completed with exclusively traditional navigation techniques.[9][10]The primary goal of the voyage was to explore the anthropological theory of theAsiaticorigin of nativeOceanicpeople (Polynesians andHawaiiansin particular) as the result of purposeful trips through thePacific,as opposed to passive drifting oncurrentsor sailing from theAmericas.[11][12]DNA analysissupports this theory.[13]A secondary project goal was to have the canoe and voyage "serve as vehicles for the cultural revitalization of Hawaiians and other Polynesians."[14]

Between the 1976 voyage and 2009,Hōkūle‘acompleted nineadditional voyages toMicronesia,Polynesia,Japan,Canadaand the mainlandUnited States,all using ancientwayfindingtechniques ofcelestial navigation.On 19 January 2007,Hōkūle‘aleft Hawaiʻi with the voyaging canoeAlingano Maisuon a voyage throughMicronesia(map) and ports in southernJapan.[a]The voyage was expected to take five months. On 9 June 2007,[15]Hōkūle‘acompleted the "One Ocean, One People" voyage toYokohama,Japan. On 5 April 2009,[16]Hōkūle‘areturned to Honolulu following a roundtrip training sail toPalmyra Atoll,[17][18]undertaken to develop skills of potential crewmembers forHōkūle‘a'seventualcircumnavigationof the Earth.[19]

On 18 May 2014Hōkūle‘aand its sister vessel,Hikianaliaembarked from Oahu for "Malama Honua,"a three-year circumnavigation of the earth. It returned to port in Hawaii on 17 June 2017. The journey covered 47,000 nautical miles with stops at 85 ports in 26 countries.[20][21]

In between voyages,Hōkūle‘aismooredat the Marine Education Training Center (METC) ofHonolulu Community CollegeinHonolulu Harbor.

Construction[edit]

Polynesian voyaging canoes were made from wood, whereasHōkūle‘aincorporatesplywood,fiberglass and resin.[8]Hōkūle‘ameasures 61 feet 5 inches (18.7 m)LOA,15 feet 6 inches (4.72 m) atbeam,displaces16,000 pounds (7,260 kg) when empty and can carry another 11,000 pounds (4,990 kg) of gear, supplies and 12 to 16 crew. Fully laden, with its 540-square-foot (50.2 m2) sail area,[22]it is capable of speeds of 4 to 6 knots (5 to 7 mph; 7 to 10 km/h). The twin woodmastswere built by LeVan Keola Sequeira.[23]They areriggedeithercrab claworMarconistyle with a smalljib.It issteeredwith along paddle.It has noauxiliary motor.Its escort vessel tows it into harbor when necessary. Its name means "star of gladness" inHawaiian,which refers toArcturus,a guidingzenithstar for Hawaiian navigators.[8]Arcturus passes directly overhead atHawaiʻi'slatitude,helping sailors find the island.

Pius "Mau" Piailug[edit]

Hōkūle‘anavigates without instruments. In 1975, no living Hawaiian knew the ancient techniques forblue watervoyaging.[24]To enable the voyage, the Polynesian Voyaging Society recruited theSatawaleseMasterNavigatorMau Piailug(of theWeriyengschool in theCaroline Islands(map) of theFederated States of Micronesia(map)) to share his knowledge of non-instrument navigation. While as many as six Micronesian navigators had mastered these traditional methods as of the mid-1970s,[25]only Mau was willing to share his knowledge.

Mau, who "barely spoke English", decided that by reaching beyond his own culture, sharing what had been closely guarded knowledge, he could possibly save it from extinction. Through this collaboration, Mau'smentorshiphelped "spark pride in theHawaiianandPolynesian culture",leading to" arenaissanceof voyaging, canoe building, and non-instrument navigation that has continued to grow, spreading acrossPolynesia(map) and reaching to its far corners ofAotearoa,New Zealand andRapanui,Easter Island ".[26]

Voyages[edit]

Inaugural voyage (1976)[edit]

Led by CaptainElia David Kuʻualoha "Kawika" Kapahulehua*and Navigator Pius "Mau" Piailug, aCarolinianmaster navigator*,[27]HōkūleʻadepartedHonolua Bay,Maui,HawaiʻiforPapeʻete,Tahiti, (voyage map) as part of the celebration of theUnited States Bicentennial.Mau navigated from Hawaii to Tahiti without instruments. Due to a conflict between crew members which escalated into physical violence, Mau abruptly returned home to Micronesia after reaching Tahiti.Hōkūleʻahad to be navigated back using western instruments (compass,nautical charts,sextant,chronometer,dividers,parallel rulers,pencil,nautical almanac).[28]

On board the inaugural voyage was Hoku, a golden hairHawaiian Poi Dogbackbredby Jack L. Throp of theHonolulu Zoo.Razor-backed pigs and Polynesian chickens were also bred at the zoo for the voyage, but the director would not part with them at the last minute. Instead, the voyage hurriedly brought a white domesticated pig from Kōkeʻe,Kauainamed Maxwell, and a cock and hen. The purpose of the animals was to study how to feed and care for these animals, which had been transported by the Polynesians during their voyages.[29][30][31]

Honolua Bay, Maui, Hawaiʻi (map),United States– Papeʻete, Tahiti (map),Society Islands(map),French Polynesia(map)
[28]1 May 1976 to 4 June 1976
The crew for this leg was as follows:'Navigator: Mau Piailug; Captain: "Kawika" Kapahulehua; Crew: Clifford Ah Mow*,Milton "Shorty" Bertelmann,Ben R. Finney,Charles Tommy Holmes*,Sam Kalalau*,Boogie Kalama, Buffalo Keaulana, John Kruse, Douglas "Dukie" Kuahulu*,David Henry Lewis*,David B. K. "Dave" Lyman III*,[32]William "Billy" Richards, Rodo Tuku Williams.*
Papeʻete, Tahiti,French Polynesia– Hawaiʻi,United States
5 July 1976 to 26 July 1976[33][34]
The crew for the return voyage was: Navigator: James "Kimo" Lyman;[35]Captain: "Kawika" Kapahulehua; Crew: Abraham "Snake" Ah Hee, Andy Espirto*,Mel Kinney, Francis Kainoa Lee, Gordon Piʻianaiʻa, Leonard Puputauiki, Penny Rawlins, Keani Reiner*,[36]Charles Nainoa "Nainoa" Thompson,Maka'ala Yates, Ben Young.

Kealaikahikiproject (1977)[edit]

In English, the Hawaiian "Ke ala i kahiki" means "the path to Tahiti." The "Kealaikahiki Project" recreated the traditional Kealaikahiki Point departure of ancient voyages to Tahiti.[37]Gordon Piʻianaiʻa's idea to recreate traditional departures tookHōkūleʻasoutheast, acrossKealaikahiki ChannelbetweenLānaʻiandKahoʻolaweIslands, past Kealaikahiki Point, into theʻAlenuihāhā Channeland the northeast trade winds. The object was to determine whetherHōkūleʻa,departing from west of the 1976 departure point, would bisect the more easterly 1976 voyage track, and so likely reach Tahiti were it to continue. After heading south for two days,Hōkūleʻadid not bisect the 1976 voyage track, but likely would have (further south than anticipated). It came about and returned to Hawaiʻi. The traditional departure point would be used for subsequent sailings to Tahiti.[38][39]

Legs[edit]

Crew[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Dave Lyman; Crew: Teené Froiseth, Sam Kaʻai, Sam Kalalau, John Kruse, "Kimo" Lyman, Jerome "Jerry" Muller, Gordon Piʻianaiʻa, Norman Piʻianaiʻa, Michael A. Tongg*,Makaʻala Yates[40]

Tahiti voyage (1978)[edit]

Following the 1976 voyage, Nainoa Thompson attempted to teach himself how to navigate without instruments, using only the position of stars and ocean cues, based on information he learned from books, planetarium observations, and short voyages in Hawaiian waters.[41]In 1978, the crew ofHōkūleʻaattempted a second voyage to Tahiti, which was aborted whenHōkūleʻacapsized[42]in high wind and seas southwest of the Island ofMolokaʻi,five hours after departing Honolulu's Ala Wai Harbor. The crew hung on to the capsized canoe through the night.

Plaque honoring Eddie Aikau's sacrifice aboard Hokule'a

Flareswere unseen by passing aircraft; the emergency radio reached no help. By mid-morning, with no sign of imminent rescue and the capsized canoe drifting farther from land,Eddie Aikau,aNorth Shore, Oʻahu,lifeguardandbig-wave surfer,volunteered to paddle a surfboard 12–15 miles (19–24 km) to Lānaʻi for help. About nine hours later, flares launched by the crew were spotted by aHawaiian Airlinesflight which circledHōkūleʻaand radioed theUnited States Coast Guard( "USCG" ). Half an hour later, a USCGsearch and rescuehelicopterwas hovering overhead;Hōkūleʻacrew was rescued. The following morning, theUSCGC Cape Corwintowed the vessel, from 22 miles southwest of Lāʻau Point, Molokaʻi, back to Honolulu.[43]Despite intensive land, air and sea search, Eddie Aikau was never seen again.Hōkūleʻacarries aplaquein his memory. Subsequent voyages were accompanied by an escort vessel.[44][45]

Ala Wai Harbor, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi,United Statesbound forPapeʻete, Tahiti,French Polynesia:16 March 1978 to 18 March 1978 (recovery followed by USCG investigation)[43][edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Dave Lyman; First Mate: Leon Paoa Sterling*;"Snake" Ah Hee, Edward Ryon Makua Hanai "Eddie" Aikau*,Charman Akina, M.D., Wedemeyer Au, Bruce Blankenfeld, Kilila Hugho, Sam Kaʻai, John Kruse, Marion Lyman,[46]Buddy McGuire, Norman Piʻianaiʻa, Curt Sumida, Teikiheʻepo "Tava" Taupu.[47]

Tahiti voyage (1980)[edit]

After the 1978 disaster, Mau returned and gave Nainoa further training on traditional navigation techniques.[41]In 1980, Nainoa Thompson recreated the 1976 voyage to Tahiti to become the firstNative Hawaiianin modern times to navigate a canoe thousands of miles without instruments. Mau sailed as an observer. After 29 days at sea, before sightingMataivaon the way to Tahiti, Mau offered Nainoa only one correction; of Nainoa's interpretation of sighting aland-based seabirdin mid-morning flight. Such birds generally fly seaward for food at morning and return to land in the evening. While it can usually be assumed that land lies opposite the birds' morning flight direction, this bird spotted mid-morning (during nesting season), carried a fish in its beak.[48]This detail suggested to Mau that the bird's morning flight was not away from land but toward it. The bird was not flying seaward to find more fish, but rather, was returning to land, to feed its young.[49]Leading up to the voyage, an extensive, formal crew training program helped to ensure a safe voyage.[50]Escort boatIshkafollowed for safety.[44][51][52]

Hilo,Hawaiʻi Island,United States– Papeʻete, Tahiti, Society Islands,French Polynesia:15 March 1980 to 17 April 1980[52][edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Gordon Piʻianaiʻa; Chad Kalepa Baybayan, "Shorty" Bertelmann, Harry Ho, Sam Kaʻai, Michael "Buddy" McGuire, Marion Lyman-Mersereau, Mau Piailug, Steve Somsen, Joanne Kahanamoku Sterling*,Leon Paoa Sterling, "Tava" Taupu; Patrick Koon Hung Piʻimauna Charles "Pat" Aiu, MD*[53]

Papeʻete, Tahiti,French Polynesia– Honolulu, Hawaiʻi,United States:13 May 1980 to 6 June 1980[54][edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Gordon Piʻianaiʻa; Wedemeyer Au, Chad Baybayan, Bruce Blankenfeld, "Snake" Ah Hee, John Kruse, Kainoa Lee, James "Kimo" Lyman, Mau Piailug, Steven Somsen, Leon Paoa Sterling, Michael Tongg, Nathan Wong

Voyage of Rediscovery (1985–1987)[edit]

In the "Voyage of Rediscovery",Hōkūleʻatraveled 12,000 miles (19,000 km) to destinations throughout Polynesia.[55][56]Inviting fellow Polynesians to join the crew on legs of the voyage extendedHōkūleʻa'ssuccess in revitalizing interest in Polynesian culture. For instance, professionalTongansea captain Sione Taupeamuhu was aboard during a night passage fromTongataputoNomukain the northerlyHaʻapaiIslands group ofTonga(map). He was skeptical thatHōkūleʻanavigator Nainoa Thompson could find Nomuka without instruments. When Nomuka appeared on the horizon at dawn as anticipated, Taupeamuhu remarked, "Now I can believe the stories of my ancestors."[57]DorcasandMaaleaserved as escort vessels.

Hawaiʻi Island,United States– Papeʻete, Society Islands,French Polynesia:10 July 1985 to 11 August 1985[58][59][edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: "Shorty" Bertelmann; Crew: Clay Bertelmann*,Dennis Chun, Richard Tai Crouch, Harry Ho, Dr. Larry Magnussen, "Buddy" McGuire, Mau Piailug, Thomas Reity (Satawal), James Shizuru, "Tava" Taupu

Papeʻete, Tahiti,French PolynesiaRarotonga,Cook Islands(map): 30 August 1985 to 14 September 1985[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Gordon Piʻianaiʻa; Crew: "Snake" Ah Hee, Dr. Pat Aiu, Chad Baybayan, Karim Cowan (Tahiti), Bob Krauss, John Kruse, Vic Lipman, Mel Paoa, Mau Piailug, Abraham Piʻianaiʻa, Chad Piʻianaiʻa, Michael Tongg, Andrew Tutai (Cook Islands), Peter Sepelalur (Satawal), Leon Paoa Sterllng, Puaniho Tauotaha (Tahiti), Cliff Watson. (Bob Krauss, journalist; Karim Cowan, and Puaniho Tauotaha were crew members only from Tahiti to Raʻiatea)

Rarotonga,Cook IslandsWaitangi,North Island,New Zealand(map): 21 November 1985 to 7 December 1985[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson;[60]Captain and 1st Watch Captain: "Shorty" Bertelmann; 2nd Watch Captain: Leon Paoa Sterling; 3rd Watch Captain: "Tava" Taupu (Marquesas); Crew: Dr. Pat Aiu, Chad Baybayan, Bruce Blankenfeld, Stanley Conrad (New Zealand), Dr. Ben Finney, Harry Ho, "Buddy" McGuire, "Billy" Richards, James Shizuru, Michael Tongg

Waitangi,New ZealandNukuʻalofa,TongatapuIsland,Kingdom ofTonga:1 May 1986 to 11 May 1986[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Leon Paoa Sterling; Crew: "Snake" Ah Hee, Dr. Pat Aiu, Carlos Andrade, Chad Baybayan, Philip Ikeda*, John Keolanui, "Kimo" Lyman, Mau Piailug, Scott Sullivan, Michael Tongg, Sione Uaine Ula (Tonga)

Nukuʻalofa,TongaPago Pago,TutuilaIsland,American Samoa(map): 23 May 1986 to 25 May 1986[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: Leon Paoa Sterling; Crew: Dr. Pat Aiu, Carlos Andrade, Gilbert Ane, Gail Evenari (California), Chad Baybayan,Hector Busby(New Zealand), Philip Ikeda*, Sam Kaʻai, John Keolanui, "Kimo" Lyman, Mau Piailug, Scott Sullivan, Jo Anne Sterling, Sione Taupeamuhu (Tonga), Michael Tongg, Sione Uaine Ula (Tonga)

Ofu Island,American SamoaAitutaki,Cook Islands:7 July 1986 to 16 July 1986[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: "Shorty" Bertelmann; Crew: Clay Bertelmann, Harry Ho, Pauahi Ioane, Bernard Kilonsky, Ben Lindsey, Mel Paoa, Mau Piailug, Tua Pittman (Cook Islands), "Tava" Taupu (Marquesas)

Aitutaki – Rarotonga: 10 August 1986 to 11 August 1986[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew: Dr. Pat Aiu, Chad Baybayan, Dede Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, "Wally" Froseith, Pauahi Ioane, "Jerry" Muller, Mau Piailug, Tua Pittman (Rarotonga), Rio Tuiravakai (Aitutaki), Raukete Tuiravakai (Aitutaki)

Rarotonga,Cook IslandsTautira,Tahiti Iti, Society Islands,French Polynesia:12 August 1986 to 21 August 1986[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew: "Snake" Ah Hee, Dr. Pat Aiu, Chad Baybayan, Bruce Blankenfeld, Wallace "Wally" Froiseth, Harry Ho, Glen Oshiro, Mau Piailug, Richard Rhodes, Michael Tongg, Aaron Young

Tautira – Papeʻete, Tahiti Nui – Tautira: 27 March 1987 to 29 March 1987[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew: U.S. SenatorDaniel Akaka,Chad Baybayan; "Wally" Froiseth, Harry Ho, Kilo Kaina, Michele Kapana, Will Kyselka, Russell Mau, Honolulu City CouncilmanArnold Morgado;Abraham Piʻianaiʻa, Tutaha Salmon (Tahiti), Cary Sneider (California), "Tava" Taupu (Marquesas), Michael Tongg, Aaron Young. Senator Akaka and Councilman Morgado joined the crew in Papeʻete.

Tautira, Tahiti Iti, Society Islands –RangiroaAtoll,Tuamotus(map): 2 April 1987 to 4 April 1987[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew; Chad Baybayan, Clay Bertelmann, "Wally" Froiseth, Rey Jonsson, Solomon Kahoʻohalahala, Will Kyselka, Charles Larson, Mel Paoa, Cary Sneider (California), "Tava" Taupu, Tracy Tong, Michael Tongg, Clifford Watson, Dr. Nathan Wong, Elisa Yadao, Aaron Young

Rangiroa, Tuamotus,French PolynesiaKualoa,Oʻahu(map), Hawaiʻi,United States:24 April 1987 to 23 May 1987.[edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Captain: "Shorty" Bertelmann; Crew: "Snake" Ah Hee, Dr. Pat Aiu, Chad Baybayan, Bruce Blankenfeld, Stanley Conrad (New Zealand), Eni Hunkin (Samoa), Tua Pittman (Cook Islands), Dixon Stroup, Puaniho Tauotaha (Tahiti), Sione Taupeamuhu (Tonga), "Tava" Taupu (Marquesas), Michael Tongg, Clifford Watson, Elisa Yadao

No Nā Mamo('For the Children') (1992)[edit]

Hōkūleʻasailed to Tahiti,Raʻiatea,and on to Rarotonga for the Sixth[61]Festival of Pacific Arts,[62]then, via Tahiti, sailed back to Hawaiʻi. This voyage, known as "No Nā Mamo"or" For the Children ", was designed to train a new generation of voyagers to sailHōkūleʻa,to share values and knowledge of voyaging and to celebrate the revival of canoe building and non-instrument navigation. The voyage included an educational component allowing Hawaiian students to track the progress of the canoe through daily radio reports.[63]Kama Heleescorted the voyage.[64]

Honaunau,[65]Hawaiʻi Island,United States– Papeʻete, Tahiti, Society Islands,French Polynesia:17 June 1992 to 15 July 1992[66][edit]

Crew: Nainoa Thompson, Sailing master; Chad Baybayan, Co-navigator; "Shorty" Bertelmann, Co-navigator; Clay Bertelmann, Captain; Nailima Ahuna, Fisherman; Dennis J. Chun, Historian; Maulili Dixon, Cook; Kainoa Lee; Liloa Long; Jay Paikai; Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon; Ben Tamura, M.D.; "Tava" Taupu

Papeʻete – Raʻiatea: 10 September 1992 to 16 September 1992[67][edit]

Crew: Nainoa Thompson, Sailing master; Chad Baybayan, Navigator; Keahi Omai, Navigator; "Billy" Richards, Captain; Gilbert Ane; John Eddy, Film Documentation; Clement "Tiger" Espere*;Brickwood Galuteria, Communications; Harry Ho; Sol Kahoohalahala; Dennis Kawaharada, Communications; Reggie Keaunui; Keone Nunes, Oral Historian; Eric Martinson; Nalani Minton, Traditional Medicine; Esther Mookini, Hawaiian Language; Mel Paoa; Cliff Watson, Film Documentation; Nathan Wong, M.D.

Raʻiatea, Society Islands,French PolynesiaMauke,Cook Islands– Aitutaki – Rarotonga: 20 September 1992 to 16 October 1992[38][edit]

Crew: Nainoa Thompson, Sailing master; Chad Baybayan, Navigator; Gordon Piʻianaiʻa, Captain; Moana Doi, Photo Documentation; John Eddy, Film Documentation; Ben Finney, Scholar; "Wally" Froseith, Watch Captain; Brickwood Galuteria, Communications; Harry Ho; Kaʻau McKenney; Keahi Omai; Keone Nunes, Oral Historian; "Billy" Richards, Watch Captain; Cliff Watson, Film Documentation Cook Islands Additional Crew: Clive Baxter (Aitutaki); Tura Koronui (Atiu); Dorn Marsters (Aitutaki); Tua Pittman (Rarotonga); Nga Pouʻaʻo (Mitiaro); Maʻara Tearaua (Mangaia); Peʻia Tuaʻati (Mauke)

Rarotonga,Cook Islands– Papeʻete, Tahiti, Society Islands,French Polynesia– Honaunau,[35]Hawaiʻi Island,United States:26 October 1992 to 1 December 1992[68][edit]

Co-navigators: Bruce Blankenfeld, "Kimo" Lyman;[35]Captain: Michael Tongg; Sailing Master: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captain and Cook: "Snake" Ah Hee; Watch Captain: Aaron Young; Ship's Doctor: Pat Aiu, M.D; Historian: Carlos Andrade; Fisherman: Terry Hee; Communications: Scott Sullivan; Crew: Archie Kalepa, Suzette Smith, Wallace Wong, Gary Yuen

Nā ʻOhana Holo Moana('The Voyaging Families of the Vast Ocean') (1995)[edit]

Spring voyage segment[edit]

In the spring,Hōkūleʻa,along with sister shipsHawai‘iloaandMakali‘i,sailed from Hawaiʻi to Tahiti. They participated in a gathering of voyaging canoes from acrossOceaniaat nearbyMarae Taputapuatea,Raʻiatea, which led to the lifting of a six-centuries-oldtapuon voyaging from Raʻiatea.[69]Then all the canoes returned to Tahiti, sailed toNuku Hivain theMarquesasand on to Hawaiʻi.[70]This was only the first part of a voyage spanning spring and summer known as "Nā ʻOhana Holo Moana"or The Voyaging Families of the Vast Ocean.[45][71]Hōkūleʻawas escorted byGershon IIunder Steve Kornberg;Rizaldar,under Randy Wichman, also escorted.

Hilo,Hawaiʻi Island,United States– Papeʻete, Tahiti, Society Islands,French Polynesia:11 February 1995 to 4 March 1995[72][edit]

Sailing Master: Nainoa Thompson; Navigators: Kaʻau McKenney, Keahi Omai; Crew: Shantell Ching, Junior Coleman, Catherine Fuller, Harry Ho, Mau Piailug, Sesario Sewralur (son of Mau Piailug), Ben Tamura, MD; "Tava" Taupu, Michael Tongg, Kamaki Worthington. AfterHōkūleʻasightedTikehauon 2 March 1995, Navigators Kaʻau McKenney and Keahi Omai turned over navigation to their apprentices, Junior Coleman and Sesario Sewralur, who guided the vessel to landfall in Papeʻete, Tahiti.[73]

Tautira, Tahiti – Fare,Huahine– Marae Taputapuatea, Raʻiatea –Tahaʻa– Tautira, Tahiti: 16 March 1995 to 24 March 1995[edit]

The crew may be the same as on the previous leg, but this is speculation.[74]

Tautira, Tahiti, Society Islands –TaiohaeBay, Nuku Hiva, Marquesas Islands: 6 April 1995 to 15 April 1995[75][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Chad Baybayan;

Taiohae Bay, Nuku Hiva, Marquesas,French Polynesia– Hilo, Hawaiʻi Island,United States:20 April 1995 to 7 May 1995[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Chad Baybayan; Co-assistant navigators: Moana Doi, Piʻikea Miller; Watch Captains: "Snake" Ah Hee, "Tava" Taupu, Michael Tongg; Medical Officer: Mel Paoa; Fisherman and Teacher: Nainoa Thompson; Cook: Gary Yuen; Crew: Clyde Aikau, Sam Pautu, Mau Piailug, Sesario Sewralur, Gary Suzuki[76][77][77][78]

Summer voyage segment[edit]

In the summer:HōkūleʻaandHawai‘iloasailed theWest Coast of the United States.Both vessels were shipped from Hawaiʻi toSeattle, Washington,after which they sailed toVancouver,British Columbia.They visited intermediate ports, where local American Indian tribes often hosted them to a dinner and gift exchange. From Vancouver,Hawai‘iloasailed as far north asHaines, Alaska.[79]Hōkūleʻasailed south toSan DiegoviaPortland, Oregon,and theCaliforniaports ofSan Francisco,Santa Barbara,andLong Beach.The voyaging canoes were shipped back to Hawaiʻi:HōkūleʻafromSan Pedro;Hawai‘iloafrom Seattle. This summer part of the voyage promoted cultural and educational exchanges with Hawaiians (some of whom had never been to Hawaiʻi),Native Americans,and other people living on the United States West Coast.

Crew: Captains: Gordon Piʻianaiʻa, "Kimo" Lyman, Michael Tongg, Chad Baybayan; Crew: Gil Ane, Beth Atuatasi (née Saurer),[80]Moana Doi, Laulima Lyman, Leon Sterling, Matthew Tongg[81][82]

Stops in thePuget Soundand Straits ofGeorgiaandJuan de Fucaarea[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

Neah Bay – Portland, Oregon: 12 June 1995 to 15 June 1995;Columbia River[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

  • Kalama, Washington where crew shared a dinner with Kalama ʻOhana: 16 June 1995
  • Fort Vancouver,Washington public dock whereHōkūleʻawas part of a festival and the rededication of Kanaka Village:[84]17 June 1995 to 20 June 1995

Portland, Oregon – San Francisco, California: 21 June 1995 to 29 June 1995[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

San Francisco – Santa Barbara: 3 July 1995 to 9 July 1995[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

Santa Barbara – Long Beach: 11 July 1995 to 12 July 1995[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

  • Gabrieleño/TongvaTribal Council, Kalifornia Outrigger Association, Hawaiian Civic Clubs, the Rapa Nui Outrigger Club,[85]and theCity of Long Beach,on 12 July 1995;
  • A two-day symposium with scholars, scientists, and master artisans calledCentury of the Pakipika,13 July 1995 to 14 July 1995;
  • A Hawaiian andPacific IslandFestival with teachers' workshops, the annual Long Beach Hoʻolauleʻa Canoe Regatta and a farewell dinner and ceremonies, 13 July 1995 to 19 July 1995

Long Beach – San Diego: 20 July 1995[edit]

Hōkūleʻavisited:[83]

  • Embarcadero, San Diego,there was a welcoming ceremony, 22 July 1995,
  • A Hawaiian and Pacific Islands festival, and an exhibition, called:
  • Hale Naua,or "Turning Back the Sky," at theSan Diego Museum of Man,23 July 1995 to 25 July 1995

San Diego – San Pedro: 26 July 1995 to 28 July 1995; from San Pedro,Hōkūleʻareturned to Hawaiʻi by ship, courtesy ofAlexander & BaldwinFoundation andMatson.[81][edit]

Closing the Triangle (1999–2000)[edit]

Hōkūleʻasailed from Hawaiʻi toRapa Nui(Easter Island) and back, via the Marquesas Islands of French Polynesia.[86]While in the Marquesas, short trips were made between principal islands of the group (map).[87]A brief stop was made at Pitcairn Island on the Mangareva – Rapa Nui leg. A technically challenging voyage due to Rapa Nui's isolation and location over 1,000 miles upwind;[88]it is known as "Closing theTriangle"because it took the canoe to the southeastern Pacific for the first time.[89]Kama Heleescorted the voyage.[90]

ʻ,United StatesIsland,United StatesNuku Hiva,Marquesas Islands,French Polynesia:15 June 1999 to 13 July 1999[90][91][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Bruce Blankenfeld; Apprentice Navigator: Piʻikea Miller; Watch Captains: Dennis Chun, Terry Hee, Leon Paoa Sterling; Crew: Russell Amimoto, Desmon Antone, Darcy Attisani, Kekama Helm, Kaʻau McKenney, Atwood Makanani, Hauʻoli Smith, Wallace Wong[90]

Nuku HivaUa PouUa HukaTahuataFatu HivaHiva OaMangareva,Gambier Islands:2 August 1999 to 29 August 1999[91][92][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Chad Baybayan; Apprentice Navigators: Moana Doi, Catherine Fuller; Student Navigator: Aldon Kim; Watch Captains: Terry Hee, Mel Paoa, "Tava" Taupu; Protocol Officer: Kaniela Akaka; Crew: Tim Gilliom, Kealoha Hoe, Aeronwy Polo, Mona Shintani, Gary Suzuki, Nalani Wilson, Gary Yuen[92]

Mangareva,French Polynesia– Pitcairn,Pitcairn Islands– Rapa NuiEaster Island(Easter Island), Territory ofChile:21 September 1999 to 9 October 1999[91][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Navigators: Bruce Blankenfeld, Chad Baybayan; Medical Officer: Ben Tamura, MD; Photographer and Videographer: Sonny Ahuna; Crew: Shantell Ching, Terry Hee, Mel Paoa, "Tava" Taupu, Michael Tongg, Max Yarawamai, Aaron Young[93]

Rapa NuiEaster Island(Easter Island), Territory ofChile– Tahiti,French Polynesia:9 November 1999 to 3 December 1999[91][edit]

Navigator: Bruce Blankenfeld; Captain: "Wally" Froiseth; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Bob Bee, Blane Chong, Dennis Chun, Terry Hee, Nalani Kaneakua, Kawika Crivello, Kealoha Hoe, "Kimo" Lyman, Kawai Warren, Kamaki Worthington[94]

Tahiti,French PolynesiaKaunakakai,Molokaʻi, Hawaiʻi,United States:5 February 2000 to 27 February 2000[91][edit]

Navigator: Nainoa Thompson; Navigator: Shantell Ching; Crew: "Snake" Ah Hee, Chad Baybayan, Pomaikalani "Pomai" Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, Sam Low, Joey Mallot, Kahualaulani Mick, Kaʻiulani Murphy, Kauʻi Pelekane, "Tava" Taupu, Michael Tongg, Dr. Patrice Ming-Lei Tim Sing, Kona Woolsey[95]

Navigating Change (2003–2004)[edit]

In 2003,Hōkūleʻasailed toNihoa,the closest of the "leeward," orNorthwestern Hawaiian Islands(maps:smallandlargescale), to set the stage[96]for the 2004 voyage to the furthest, most westerly of them,Kure Atoll.[97]Hōkūleʻa's2004 voyage took the canoe through the area now comprising thePapahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument[98]to promotestewardshipand awareness of this area.Hōkūleʻaparticipated in an interagency initiative with this voyage named after it, called "Navigating Change".[99]Upon reaching the remote islands, the crew helped remove hundreds of pounds of washed-up fishing nets that threatenedHawaiian monk sealsand HawaiianGreen sea turtlesand also helped withplant conservation.About 1,600 schoolchildren linked to the vessel by daily satellite phone calls. Teachers prepared with curriculum guides, video and web resources.[100]Navigating Change was supported byUS Fish & Wildlife Service,Polynesian Voyaging Society,Bishop Museum,NOAA,Hawai'i Department of Education,Hawai'i Department of Land and Natural Resources,Hawaiʻi Maritime Center,University of Hawaiʻi,The Nature Conservancy,Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council,Coastal Zone Management Hawaiʻi,National Fish and Wildlife Foundation,Harold K.L. Castle Foundation and the Pacific American Foundation.[101][102]Kama Heleescorted the voyage.[103]

OahuKauaʻi:7 September 2003 to?[edit]

Captain: Bruce Blankenfeld; Crew: Carey Amimoto, Anela Benson, Leimomi Dierks, Timmy Gilliom, Kiki Hugho, Nohea Kaiaokamalie, Jerry Muller, Dean Nikaido, Mel Paoa, Ronson Sahut, Jan TenBruggencate, Boyd Yap[104]

Kauaʻi –Nihoa:9 September 2003 to?[edit]

Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew: Russell Amimoto, Naʻalehu Anthony, Bruce Blankenfeld, Nohea Kaiaokamalie, Cindy Macfarlane, Mel Paoa, Jan TenBruggencate, Kana Uchino, Alex Wegman, Aulani Wilhelm

ʻ Harbor, ʻ, Hawaiʻi – ʻ, Kauaʻi: 2 May 2004 to 3 May 2004[105][edit]

Navigator: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Captain: Russell Amimoto; Crew: Jan TenBruggencate,

ʻ Bay, Kauaʻi –NihoaIsland – Tern Island, French Frigate Shoals –LaysanIsland –LisianskiIsland – Pearl and Hermes Atoll – Green Island,KureAtoll – Midway Atoll: 23 May 2004 to 9 June 2004[edit]

Navigator: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Sailing Master: Bruce Blankenfeld; Watch Captain: Russell Amimoto; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Ann Bell; Leimomi Kekina Dierks, Randy Kosaki, Keoni Kuoha, Cherie Shehata, MD, "Tava" Taupu, Jan TenBruggencate, Kanako Uchino, Kaleo Wong[106][107][108]

Midway Atoll – ʻ: 11 June 2004 to 22 June 2004[103][edit]

Navigator: Bruce Blankenfeld; Captain: Mel Paoa; Terry Hee, Kealoha Hoe, Nohea Kaiaokamalie, Keoni Kuoha, Kaʻiulani Murphy, "Tava" Taupu, Mike Taylor, Gary Yuen[109]

ʻ – ʻ, ʻ,[103]:23 June 2004 to 24 June 2004[103][edit]

Captain: Russell Amimoto; Gerald Aikau[103][110]

One Ocean, One People (2007)[edit]

The One Ocean, One People theme united two voyages in celebration of Pacific voyaging, Pacific Islands, and cultural ties,[111]in passages to Micronesia and Japan. These voyages were namedKū Holo MauandKū Holo Lā Komohana.[112]Kama Heleescorted the voyage.

Kū Holo Mau[edit]

Accompanied by the canoeAlingano Maisuand specialized escort boatKama Hele,(photo below, ingallery)[113]Hōkūleʻasailed from Hawaiʻi to theFederated States of Micronesia,23 January to 7 April 2007.[112]This voyage is known as "Kū Holo Mau",or" Sail On, Sail Always, Sail Forever. "While on the island of Satawal, the crew of theHōkūleʻapresented theAlingano Maisuto Mau Piailug.[112]While at Satawal, someHōkūleʻanavigators who had proven their mastery of non-instrument sailing and navigation over many ocean passages were inducted intoPwo,pronounced "poh." This was the firstPwoceremony onSatawalin five decades,[24]and the first time Polynesians were inducted.[114]

Kawaihae,Hawaiʻi Island,United StatesMajuro,Republic of theMarshall Islands:23 January 2007 to 18 February 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Bruce Blankenfeld; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Ben Tamura; Crew: Russell Amimoto, Bob Bee, Terry Hee, Nohea Kaiʻokamalie, Kaleo Wong, Palani Wright[115][112][116][117]

Marshall Islands,Republic of theMarshall IslandsFederated States of Micronesia,Federated States of Micronesia:21 February 2007 to 28 February 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Bruce Blankenfeld; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Gerald Akaka; Crew: Russell Amimoto, Terry Hee, Nohea Kaiʻokamalie, Gary Kubota, Kaleo Wong, Palani Wright[112][118]

PohnpeiChuuk:6 March 2007 to 9 March 2007[112][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Marjorie Mau; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Pomai Bertelmann, Gary Kubota, Keoni Kuoha, Nick Marr, "Billy" Richards, Ana Yarawamai, Max Yarawamai, Pauline Yourupi[119]

ChuukSatawal,YapState: 11 March 2007 to 21 March 2007[112][edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Marjorie Mau; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Chad Baybayan, "Shorty" Bertelmann, Pomai Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, "Snake" Ah Hee, John Kruse, Gary Kubota, Keoni Kuoha, Nick Marr, "Billy" Richards, Ana Yarawamai, Max Yarawamai, Pauline Yourupi[120]

SatawalWoleaiAtoll: 19 March 2007 to 21 March 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Marjorie Mau; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Chad Baybayan, "Shorty" Bertelmann, Pomai Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, "Snake" Ah Hee, John Kruse, Gary Kubota, Keoni Kuoha, Nick Marr, "Billy" Richards, Ana Yarawamai, Max Yarawamai, Pauline Yourupi[112][121]

WoleaiUlithiAtoll: 21 March 2007 to 23 March 2007[edit]

Navigator: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani; Medical Officer: Dr. Marjorie Mau; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Chad Baybayan, Pomai Bertelmann, Gary Kubota, Keoni Kuoha, Nick Marr, "Billy" Richards, Ana Yarawamai, Max Yarawamai, Pauline Yourupi[112][122][123]

UlithiYapIsland: 21 March 2007 to 23 March 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Marjorie Mau; Crew: Naʻalehu Anthony, Chad Baybayan, Pomai Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, Dr. Thane Hancock, "Snake" Ah Hee, John Kruse, Gary Kubota, Keoni Kuoha, Nick Marr, "Billy" Richards, Ana Yarawamai, Max Yarawamai, Pauline Yourupi[112][124]

Colonia, YapIsland,Federated States of MicronesiaPalau(map): 29 March 2007 to 31 March 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy; Medical Officer: Dr. Vernon Andsell; Crew: Aaron Akina, Naʻalehu Anthony, Pomai Bertelmann, Dennis Eric Co, Emily Fielding, Keoni Kuoha, Waimea McKeague,Tommy Remengesau(President of Palau), Pauline Sato, Patti Ann Solomon,[112][125][126]Jennifer Yano[127]

Palau– Colonia, Yap Island,Federated States of Micronesia:5 April 2007 to 7 April 2007[112][edit]

Navigator: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Captain: Naʻalehu Anthony; Watch Captains: Tim Gilliom, Attwood Makanani, Nainoa Thompson; Medical Officer: Dr. Vernon Andsell; Crew: Aaron Akina, Pomai Bertelmann, Dennis Eric Co, Emily Fielding, Keoni Kuoha, Waimea McKeague, Pauline Sato, Patti Ann Solomon[125]

Kū Holo Lā Komohana[edit]

From Yap, theHōkūleʻasailed toYokohama,Japan,from 11 April 2007 to 8 June 2007. Upon sightingKyūshū,navigation of coastal and inland seas utilized landmarks andaids to navigation.From departure to landfall atOkinawa,Japan,Hōkūleʻawas guided by Nainoa Thompson. Chad Baybayan then guided the vessel to further stops atAmami,Uto,Nomozaki,Nagasaki,Fukuoka,Shinmojimarina inMoji-ku,IwaishimaandSuō-Ōshima(Ōshima). Nainoa Thompson resumed as captain for stops atMiyajimaandHiroshima(image). Bruce Blankenfeld took over for stops atUwajima,Muroto,MiuraandKamakurabefore concluding the voyage inYokohama.[128]Thisvoyageis known as "Kū Holo Lā Komohana",orSail On to the Western Sun.WhileHōkūleʻawas shipped back to Honolulu, escort vesselKama Helesailed back to Oʻahu under German Captain Mike Weindl with six Japanese crewmembers.[129][130]

Yap,Federated States of Micronesia– Okinawa,Japan11 April 2007 to 23 April 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Crew: Takuji Araki (Japan), Pomai Bertelmann, Timi Gilliom, Kaina Holomalia, Attwood Makanani, Kaʻiulani Murphy, Maile Neff, Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon, Dr. Pete Roney, Kanaka Uchino (Japan).[131]

OkinawaŌshima28 April 2007 to 19 May 2007[edit]

Captain: Chad Baybayan; Crew: Imaikalani P. Aiu, Takuji Araki, Kalepa "Kala" Baybayan, Stephanie M. Beeby, Anela K. Benson, Dennis J. Chun, Monte Costa, Derek Ferrar, Timmy Gilliom, Heidi K. Guth, Kaimi C. Hermosura, Kiyoko Ikeda, William Keala Kai, Attwood Makanani, Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon, Makaʻala Rawlins, Dr. Cherie L. Shehata, Van K. Warren[132]

ŌshimaUwajima26 May 2007 to 27 May 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Nainoa Thompson; Watch Captain: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Crew: Imaikalani P. Aiu, Takuji Araki, Nanea Baird, Stephanie M. Beeby, Anela K. Benson, Pomai Bertelmann, Dennis J. Chun, Monte Costa, Heidi K. Guth, Kaimi C. Hermosura, Kiyoko Ikeda, William Keala Kai, Attwood Makanani, Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon, Dr. Cherie L. Shehata, Sky Takemoto, Kanako Uchino, Van K. Warren[133]

UwajimaYokohama3 June 2007 to 9 June 2007[edit]

Navigator and Captain: Bruce Blankenfeld; Senior Officers: Norman Piʻianaiʻa, "Tava" Taupu; Watch Captain: Naʻalehu Anthony; Crew: Takuji Araki, Chris Baird, Dennis Kawaharada, Attwood Makanani, Dr. Cherie L. Shehata, Patti-Ann Solomon; Watch Captain: Kaʻiulani Murphy; Crew: Pomai Bertelmann, Dean Nikaido, Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon, Leighton Tseu (representing the Royal Order of Kamehameha), Kanako Uchino, Kiyotsugu Yoshida (Sunset Films)[134]

Malama Honua(worldwide voyage) (2014–2017)[edit]

Legs[edit]

  • Polynesia, May 2014 – April 2015[135]
    • Malama Hawaiʻi:Statewide Sail
    • Hawaiʻi– Tahiti
    • Tahiti – Samoa
    • Apiaand Phoenix Islands
    • TutuilatoAotearoa
    • AotearoaI
  • [Australia and] Indian Ocean, May 2015 – December 2015[135]
    • Including Sydney[136]
    • July 2015: Great Barrier Reef
    • August 2015: Bali
    • September 2015: Mauritius
    • November 2015: South Africa[137]
  • Atlantic and Caribbean, January 2016 – February 2016[135]
    • January 2016 St. Helena, en route to Brazil
    • March 2016 US Virgin Islands in the Caribbean
    • March 2016 Havana, Cuba[137]
  • 'N. America & Canada', April 2016 – December 2016[135]
    • April 2016 interior waterways of Florida
    • April 2016 NASA Kennedy Space Center
    • May 2016 Washington, D.C.
    • June 2016 New York City[136]
    • June 2016 Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine
    • July 2016 Mystic Seaport
    • July 2016 Martha's Vineyard
    • July 2016 Mt. Desert Island, Maine
    • August 2016 Nova Scotia and the Bay of Fundy
    • September 2016 (Great Lakes journey) Great Lakes and Ontario, Canada.
    • September 2016 Glens Falls, New York
    • October 2016 Virginia (dry dockedfor maintenance, and on display)
    • December 2016 Miami
    • December 2016 towards the Panama Canal
    • January 2017 'reached Panama this week'[137]
  • Pacific Return January 2017 – June 2017[135]
    • January 2017 Back in the Pacific after two-day transit through the Panama Canal
    • February 2017 Galapagos
    • March 2017 Rapa Nui
    • April 2017 Tahiti
    • June 2017 Hawai‘i: Homecoming[137]
    • Homecoming, Magic Island, Oʻahu, 17 June 2017.[138]

Moananuiakea, a Voyage for Earth(2023–2027)[edit]

Legs[edit]

Images[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

a.^Derek Ferrar (October–November 2007)."In the Land of the Western Sun".Hana Hou!Vol. 10 No. 5 (Article includes a travel diary from May 14 inFukuokathrough May 25 inHiroshima).After the new canoe was presented toMauin March,Hōkūle'acontinued on a second mission, dubbed "Kū Holo Lā Komohana"(Sail on to the Western Sun), crossing 1,200 miles from the Micronesian island ofYaptoOkinawaand then hopscotching through the islands of southernJapantoYokohama.The journey was conceived to honor the cultural ties between Japan and Hawaiʻi, which began with the visit ofKing Kalākauato theEmperor Meijiin 1881 and were strengthened by the subsequentemigrationof thousands of Japanesecontract laborersto the Islands'sugarcaneplantations,many of whom remained in Hawaiʻi, forever weaving their heritage into the fabric of Island life.
*Shown at first mention of the crew person's name, denotes this person has died.[145][146]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^abcdHōkūle‘a Image Gallery (From 1973)archive.hokulea.com,accessed 12 February 2020
  2. ^Mary Kawena Pukui;Samuel Hoyt Elbert(2003)."lookup ofHōkūleʻa".in Hawaiian Dictionary.Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library,University of Hawaii Press.
  3. ^Finney & Among (1994), p. xiii, offers pronunciation guidance for the boat's name, "The macrons [" kahakō "in Hawaiian] over vowels indicate that they are longer than unmarked vowels and are stressed. The ʻ [character, called" okina ",] indicates a consonant called a glottal stop. It is similar to the sound betweenoh'sin the Englishoh-oh."
  4. ^Chun, Naomi N.Y.; with illustrations by Robin Y. Burningham (1995) [1988]. "Chapter 10: Types of Canoes".Hawaiian Canoe-Building Traditions(in American English and Hawaiian). E. Nuʻulani Atkins (Revised ed.). Honolulu, HI:Kamehameha SchoolsPress and HDL: Hawaiʻi Digital Library. pp. 57–62.ISBN0-87336-043-5.This is availableonline,orarchived by WebCite.
  5. ^Mary Kawena Pukui;Samuel Hoyt Elbert(2003)."lookup ofwaʻa kaulua".in Hawaiian Dictionary.Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library,University of Hawaii Press.
  6. ^Unattributed."Canoe Parts--Hōkūle'a".Polynesian Voyaging Society Visuals(in Hawaiian and American English).Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved4 September2012.A line drawing with vessel specifications, configuration, and parts named.
  7. ^Unattributed."360 degree tour ofHōkūle'a".The Honolulu Advertiser:Hōkūle‘a: 2007 Voyages to Micronesia and Japan(in American English and Hawaiian).Gannett Company.Retrieved9 August2008.Requires Flash, a free downloadable viewer fromAdobe.
  8. ^abcUnattributed."The Building of theHōkūle'a– 1973–75 ".Canoe Building.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved4 September2012.
  9. ^ Kawaharada, Dennis."Wayfinding: Modern Methods and Techniques of Non-Instrument Navigation, Based on Pacific Traditions".Hawaiian Voyaging Traditions.Honolulu, HI, US:Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archivedfrom the original on 22 October 2012.Retrieved29 November2012. This section of the Polynesian Voyaging Society web site offers and introduction to techniques; links in the right sidebar provide further information and bibliography.
  10. ^State of Hawaiʻi, House of Representatives,Twenty-third Legislature, 2006,House Resolution 267Archived2011-06-10 at theWayback Machine.Read the text of the State Resolution honoring Master Navigator Mau Piailug and the inaugural crew for their achievements.
  11. ^Finney, Ben."Voyaging into Polynesia's Past: The Founding of the Polynesian Voyaging Society".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved4 September2012.Dr. Finney discusses founding of the Polynesian Voyaging Society and gives background on contrasting theories of Polynesian settlement such asThor Heyerdahl(settlement from Americas), Andrew Sharp (settlement by chance from drift voyaging), and others proposed.
  12. ^Evenari, Gail."Wayfinders: A Pacific Odyssey".PBS.Retrieved5 August2008.Gail Evenari, crew on the Tonga-Samoa leg of the "Voyage of Rediscovery,"produced a documentary film on ancient Polynesian voyaging which was broadcast byPBS.TheHeyerdahl and Sharpsection of the related PBS website summarizes theories of Polynesian settlement which theHōkūle‘avoyages empirically undercut.
  13. ^Wilford, John Noble (18 January 2008)."Pacific Islanders' Ancestry Emerges in Genetic Study".Asia Pacific.The New York Times Company.Retrieved12 August2008.DNA analysisconfirms Polynesians' relationship toTaiwanese AboriginesandEast Asians.
  14. ^Finney & Among 1994,p. 71 Though Finney'sVoyage of Rediscoveryis primarily about the nearly two-year voyage of that name, 1985–1987, here Finney speaks about the canoe's original construction and 1976 voyage.
  15. ^Due to theInternational Date Line,the voyage was completed on 8 June, Hawaiʻi time.
  16. ^Shikina, Rob (5 April 2009)."Journey's End".starbulletin.com.Retrieved25 June2009.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^Polynesian Voyaging Society."Palmyra Training Sail".Hokulea Worldwide Voyage.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 26 March 2009.Retrieved16 March2009.About the Palmyra Training Sail
  18. ^Polynesian Voyaging Society."Daily Google Maps Position Tracking for Palmyra Sail".Hokulea Worldwide Voyage.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved16 March2009.
  19. ^Polynesian Voyaging Society."The Journey".Hokulea Worldwide Voyage – Mälama Honua.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 November 2009.Retrieved16 March2009.
  20. ^Davis, Chelsea (20 May 2014)."Hokule'a and its sister vessel Hikianalia set sail".Hawaii News Now.Retrieved20 May2014.
  21. ^"Tradition, elation marks Hokulea's triumphant homecoming".Hawaii News Now.Retrieved18 June2017.
  22. ^Unattributed."Hokule'aPlans ".The Building of the Hokule‘a.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved4 September2012.
  23. ^Brulliard, Karin (11 September 2023)."Lost in Lahaina: A family's cultural legacy, a community's identity".Washington Post.Retrieved12 September2023.
  24. ^abKubota, Gary (18 March 2007)."Navigators' Journey of Spirit, Skill Ends: Five Polynesians are Recognized as Select Master Wayfinders".Honolulu Star-Bulletin.Oahu Publications, Inc.Retrieved6 August2008.Describes the 2007 induction of Nainoa Thompson, Milton "Shorty" Bertelmann, Bruce Blankenfeld, Chadd Kaʻonohi Paishon, and Chad Kalepa Baybayan intoPwo,32 years afterHōkūle‘a'slaunching, in recognition of their mastery of Micronesian non-instrument navigation as taught by Mau Piailug. This reference adds that the Pwo ceremony had not been conducted in fifty years, whereasPwosuggests this was the first Pwo in fifty-six years
  25. ^Gordon, Mike (14 November 2006)."New Canoe a Tribute to Piailug".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Company.Retrieved6 August2008.Mentions the 1969 death of the last recognized Polynesian navigator and existence of only six Micronesian non-instrument navigators due to younger seafarers' adoption ofGPSandoutboard motorsover the rigors of learning ancestral non-instrument means of navigating sailing canoes.
  26. ^Thompson 2006.
  27. ^KITV.com (12 July 2010)."Master Navigator Mau Piailug Dies".KITV Honolulu News.Archived fromthe originalon 8 September 2011.Retrieved12 July2010.
  28. ^ab"1976 Hawai'i to Tahiti and Back".Polynesian Voyaging Society.
  29. ^Benson, Bruce (14 June 1976)."Hokule'a Sailors seek navigator for Hawaii trip".The Honolulu Advertiser.Honolulu. p. 9.Retrieved4 July2018– via Newspapers.com.
  30. ^Lewis, David (1978).The Voyaging Stars: Secrets of the Pacific Island Navigators.Sydney: Collins. pp. 187–188.ISBN978-0-00-216404-7.OCLC4722789.
  31. ^Lewis, David (1994).We, the Navigators: The Ancient Art of Landfinding in the Pacific.Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp.321–322.ISBN978-0-8248-1582-0.OCLC29466770.
  32. ^Adamski, Mary.Sea Captain Promoted Merchant Fleet CareersStar Bulletin,Honolulu, 31 January 2006, retrieved 23 July 2008. Notes Dave Lyman's untimely death in 2006 unrelated to sailing onHōkūleʻa
  33. ^Kubota, Gary T. (7 July 2006)."The First Voyage: Commemorating Hokuleas Historic 1976 Journey"(PDF).Honolulu Star-Bulletin.Gannett Company.Retrieved25 June2009.This source (p.2) cites inaugural voyage's ending whenHōkūleʻareturned to Hawaiʻi on 26 July 1976; for return voyage's date of commencement, note the citation immediately following.
  34. ^Unattributed."Hōkūleʻa1976 ".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 4 June 2010.Retrieved5 September2012.Map of voyage mentionsHōkūleʻa1976 return leg length of 22 days.
  35. ^abcKawaharada, Dennis (1993)."5. In the Northeast Tradewinds".KCCN Hawaiian Radio Cultural Vignette Series: No Nā Mamo.Polynesian Voyaging SocietyandKCCN Hawaiian Radio.Archived fromthe originalon 23 January 2010.Retrieved4 September2012.Kawaharada adds that the vessel can sail at just over 10 knots (10 mph; 20 km/h) knots in stronger winds and following seas.
  36. ^Keani Reiner
  37. ^abPiʻianaiʻa, Gordon."Kealaikahiki: The Tradition"(PDF).Polynesian Seafaring Heritage.TheKamehameha Schoolsand the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved20 August2008.
  38. ^abKawaharada, Dennis."1992 Voyage: Sail to Rarotonga".No Nā Mamo: For the Children.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved11 August2008.The writer mentions Piʻianaiʻa's 1977 voyage in his article on the 1992 voyage.
  39. ^Bakutis, Bunky (8 April 1977)."HōkūleʻaTest Voyage Backs Channel Theory ".The Honolulu Advertiser.Persis Corporation. pp. A–6.Retrieved6 September2012.The article appears alongside others on the same topic on a scanned page which aggregates them.
  40. ^Unattributed."1977 – Kealaikahiki".Polynesian Voyaging Society Archives – Secondary Source Information – Crew List.Kamehameha SchoolsArchives.Retrieved20 August2008.This document includes Bret Berber and Boogie Kalama as crew on the Kealaikahiki Project, whereasKyselkadoes not.
  41. ^ab"Nainoa Thompson".Hawaiian Voyaging Traditions.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved19 March2022.
  42. ^Polhemus, David (3 March 1978)."Hōkūleʻacapsizes; 2 copters shuttle crew here; 1 missing ".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved16 August2008.Retrieved from Kamehameha Schools archives of Polynesian Voyaging Society activities.
  43. ^abFranseen, R.A."61' S/Catamaran"Hokule'a",O.N. 571798; Investigation into the Swamping [rest deleted]"(PDF).Report of Investigation, Commander, 14th Coast Guard District.United States Coast Guard.Retrieved16 August2008.Retrieved fromUnattributed."1978 – Voyage to Tahiti – Analysis: Coast Guard Fact Finding".Kamehameha Schools Archives: Polynesian Voyaging Society Archives, Set 2: 1978–1984.Kamehameha Schools.Retrieved16 August2008.
  44. ^abKyselka, Will (October 1987).An Ocean in Mind.Kolowalu Books (1st ed.). University of Hawaii Press.ISBN0-8248-1112-7.
  45. ^abFinney, Ben R.(2003).Sailing in the wake of the ancestors: reviving Polynesian voyaging.Legacy of excellence. Honolulu, HI, US:Bishop Museum Press.p. 168.ISBN978-1581780246.OCLC607259780.Closed access icon(subscription required)
  46. ^Later Marion Lyman-Mersereau
  47. ^Unattributed."Voyage to Tahiti Cancelled After Canoe Swamping – 1978".Voyages: From 1976.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.
  48. ^Nainoa explains inWayfindingthat Mau had not previously shared this detail. The delicacy of Mau's signal reading demonstrates the navigator's intimate connection to his environment.
  49. ^InWayfinding,Dennis Kawaharada quotes Nainoa Thompson sharing knowledge of how to read birds for navigation, learned from Mau.
  50. ^Unattributed (1979)."Syllabus materials"(PDF).Hokule‘a Training Program.The Kamehameha Schools Archives and the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved20 August2008.
  51. ^Unattributed (9 February 1980)."Communications and Electronic Safety Measures Taken for your Voyage to Tahiti and Back".Polynesian Voyaging Society Archives.The Kamehameha Schools Archives and the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved20 August2008.Documents use of escort boat and some of the safety measures implemented for the 1980 voyage.
  52. ^abHollis, Robert (17 April 1980)."Tahitians welcomeHokule'a".The Honolulu Advertiser.Persis Corporation.Retrieved20 August2008.
  53. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (31 October 2002)."Kauaʻi's Dr. Patrick Aiu was Hokuleʻa voyager".The Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Company.Retrieved20 August2008.
  54. ^Finney, Ben."Voyaging into Polynesia's Past; Hawaiʻi to Tahiti and Return: 1980".1980 Voyage Homepage.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.
  55. ^Finney & Among 1994,p. 96.
  56. ^Finney, Ben (1992).Voyaging into Polynesia's Past.From Sea to Space (The Macmillan Brown Memorial Lectures 1989). Palmerston North, New Zealand: Massey University. pp.5–65.ISBN0-908665-59-8.Dr. Finney gives a short account of the Voyage of Rediscovery.
  57. ^Finney & Among 1994,p. 120.
  58. ^Finney & Among 1994,pp. 327–329 This is the authoritative printed crew list for these legs of the voyage.
  59. ^Unattributed."Voyage of Rediscovery: 1985–87".Voyage of Rediscovery.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved22 July2010.This page lists crew for all legs of the Voyage of Rediscovery and directs readers to further resources. Raukete Tuiravakai and Reo Tuiravakai, both of Aitutaki, are omitted from this web list but shown inFinney & Among 1994,p. 328
  60. ^Thompson, Nainoa."The Voyage of Rediscovery: 1985–1987".The Voyage of Rediscovery.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.Nainoa's moving account of the voyage to Waitangi that reconnected Māori and Hawaiian with their ancestral history.
  61. ^Griffiths, Rhonda."1992 Festival of Pacific Arts, Cook Islands".Festivals of Pacific Arts.Secretariat of the Pacific Community.Archived fromthe originalon 12 December 2008.Retrieved25 August2008.
  62. ^Unattributed."Overview of the Festival of Pacific Arts".Festival of Pacific Arts.Archived fromthe originalon 31 October 2010.Retrieved6 September2012.This festival brings together cultures from across the Pacific every four years.
  63. ^Unattributed."Voyage to Ra'iatea and Rarotonga: 1992".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.
  64. ^Wong, Wallace."Journal of Wallace Wong: Rarotonga to Hawaiʻi, November 16–30, 1992".No Nā Mamo: For the Children.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.
  65. ^Kubota, Gary T. (7 July 2006)."Hokule'a 30th Anniversary"(PDF).Honolulu Star-Bulletin; Hokule'a 30th Anniversary Special Section.Oahu Publications, Inc.Retrieved28 August2008.On p.2, the section on the 1992 voyage notes the Honaunau departure.
  66. ^Chun, Dennis."1992 Voyage: Hawai'i to Tahiti".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.Provides narrative about first leg ofNo Na Mamoand biographical information on key crew members.
  67. ^Kawaharada, Dennis."1992 Voyage: Sail to Ra'iatea".No Na Mamo Voyage to Ra'iatea and Rarotonga.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.A narrative of the voyage by Communications crew Kawaharada.
  68. ^Kawaharada, Dennis."1992: The Voyage Home".No Na Mamo Voyage to Ra‘iatea and Rarotonga.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved6 September2012.
  69. ^Finney, Ben."Sin at Awarua".1995 Voyage to Nukuhiva in the Marquesas Islands.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved5 August2008.
  70. ^Unattributed."Map of 1995 Na ʻOhana Holo Moana Voyage".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved8 September2012.
  71. ^Louvat, Marc."Meeting at Taputapuatea, 1995".A Fano Ra – Navigation Ancestrale(in French and American English). Institut de la Communication Audiovisuelle – Polynésie française. Archived fromthe originalon 24 September 2007.Retrieved5 August2008.This is 20MB Flash video of the 1995 ceremony at Taputapuatea marae.
  72. ^Unattributed."Departure from Hawaiʻi (Feb 3–11)".Spring 1995: Nā ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved7 August2008.
  73. ^Unattributed."Landfall Tahiti (Feb. 27- Mar. 5)".Spring 1995: Na ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  74. ^Unattributed."Ceremonies at Taputapuatea, Raʻiatea (Mar. 7–29)".Spring 1995: Na ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved8 August2008.
  75. ^Unattributed."To Nukuhiva, Marquesas Islands (April 15–18)".Spring 1995: Na ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.Documents dates of departure from Tautira and arrival at Taiohae Bay.
  76. ^Unattributed."Welcome Back to Hawaiʻi (May 3–14)".Spring 1995: Na ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved7 August2008.
  77. ^abUnattributed."Sailing for Hawaiʻi (Apr. 20-May 2)".Spring 1995: Na ʻOhana Holo Moana.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved7 August2008.
  78. ^Unattributed."Crew List 1995 Nuku Hiva".The Polynesian Voyaging Society Archives.The Kamehameha Schools and the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved26 August2008.This source shows Kainoa Lee as crew onHōkūleʻawhile the PVS website shows him as a watch captain, not onHōkūleʻa,but rather, onHawai‘iloa.
  79. ^Hawai‘iloawas built of traditional materials, with the sponsorship of the Bishop Museum's Native Hawaiian Culture and Arts Program in response to theHōkūleʻavoyages' revival of interest in Native Hawaiian culture. But no healthykoatrees large enough for its hulls could be found in Hawaiʻi's forests. This dilemma led to action to help Hawaiʻ's environment including planting koa seedlings for future generations, because traditional Hawaiian culture and Hawaiʻi's environment interdepend. (See Sam Low,Sacred Forestson Polynesian Voyaging Society web site, retrieved 7 August 2008 quoting Nainoa Thompson about "Mālama Hawaiʻi" ) So, to buildHawai‘iloawithout having to wait several centuries for the koa to grow, the Polynesian Voyaging Society accepted a gift of two enormous 400-year-oldSitka sprucelogs from the forests of theTsimshian,Haida,andTlingitNative Alaskans.Hawai‘iloa'svoyage throughSoutheast Alaskawas to thank these people for their kindness and to recognize their contribution to Hawaiian native culture (SeeNorthwest-Alaska 1995 Homeon Polynesian Voyaging Society web site, retrieved 7 August 2008)
  80. ^Saurer, Beth (Fall 1995). "Sailing and Practicing Law the Hawaiian Way".California Western Alumni News(in American English and Hawaiian). San Diego: California Western School of Law: 1, 4.Beth Atuatasi was aboard from San Diego to San Pedro
  81. ^abcUnattributed."The Northwest-Alaska and West Coast Tours".Summer 1995: Northwest-Alaska and West Coast Tours.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  82. ^Atuatasi (née Saurer), Beth; Mario Borja; Dewey Slough (1995).Pacific Islander Festival program booklet(First ed.). San Diego: Hōkūleʻa Steering Committee.Documents Gil Ane, Chad Baybayan, Moana Doi, Laulima Lyman, Leon Sterling, Matthew Tongg, Michael Tongg
  83. ^abcdefUnattributed."Voyaging Schedule for the West Coast Trip of the Hokuleʻa Voyaging Canoe".Polynesian Voyaging Society Archives.The Kamehameha Schools and the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved25 August2008.
  84. ^Unattributed (2 August 2006)."Introduction to the Village".Fort Vancouver National Historic Site.United StatesNational Park Service.Retrieved6 September2008.About Kanaka Village.
  85. ^Brookman, David Y. (2007)."Mata Hoe Vaka Kahu Kahu O Hera Rapa Nui".[www.netaxs.com/~trance/rapanui.html Easter Island Home Page].David Y. Brookman. Archived fromthe originalon 25 September 2008.Retrieved8 September2008.
  86. ^Unattributed."Vision, Exploration and the Voyage to Rapa Nui (map)".1999–2000 Voyage to Rapa Nui.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved22 July2010.A map of the voyage showing projected route.
  87. ^Unattributed."Isles of Hiva (The Marquesas)".The Voyage to Nuku Hiva: Leg 2: Nukuhiva to Mangareva.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved24 August2008.
  88. ^Unattributed."Voyage to the Marquesas: June 15 – July 14".Closing the Triangle: A Quest for Rapa Nui.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved25 August2008.
  89. ^Unattributed (23 July 1999)."Closing the Triangle: A Quest for Rapa Nui".Voyages: From 1976.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  90. ^abcUnattributed."Leg 1: Hawaiʻi to Nukuhiva".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  91. ^abcdeUnattributed."The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000".Voyages: From 1976.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.This page gives arrival and departure dates for all the passages of this voyage.
  92. ^abUnattributed."Leg 2: Nukuhiva to Mangareva".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  93. ^Unattributed."Leg 3: Mangareva to Rapa Nui".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  94. ^Unattributed."Leg 4: Rapa Nui to Tahiti".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  95. ^Unattributed."Leg 5: Tahiti to Hawaiʻi".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  96. ^Unattributed."Navigating Change: The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands 2003–2004".Voyages: From 1976.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved30 September2010.
  97. ^"Establishment of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument".
  98. ^"Secretary Kempthorne Joins Mrs. Laura Bush in Announcing Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument"(Press release).U.S. Department of the Interior.2 March 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 21 October 2007.Retrieved28 August2008.
  99. ^Unattributed (15 June 2006)."Navigating Change".Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument.United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Archived fromthe originalon 27 June 2010.Retrieved8 September2012.
  100. ^Saul, Susan."Hokule'aVoyages Through Hawaiian Islands NWR ".U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Archived fromthe originalon 4 October 2008.Retrieved8 September2012.
  101. ^O'Conner, Maura; Lise Martel (June 2008)."A Teacher's Guide to Navigating Change"(PDF).HawaiianAtolls.org.Bishop Museum, Co-Trustees of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, Polynesian Voyaging Society. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 30 October 2008.Retrieved2 September2008.
  102. ^"Navigating Change: The 2003 Voyage to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands".Polynesian Voyaging Society. Archived fromthe originalon 8 October 2003.
  103. ^abcdeTenBruggencate, Jan (23 June 2004)."Hokule'aprepares for passage into future ".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved2 September2008.Cites date of return to Kauaʻi; note that the contemplated September 2004 trip to Palmyra Atoll, Christmas Island, and return to Hawaiʻi under navigator Kaʻiulani Murphy and captain Russell Amimoto did not take place.
  104. ^"Crew List 2003–2004 Northwestern Islands Navigating Change".The Polynesian Voyaging Society Crew List.The Kamehameha Schools and the Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved28 August2008.
  105. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (3 May 2004)."Recovering the seafaring tradition of Hawaiʻi".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved2 September2008.Navigation to Nihoa and Mokumanamana (Necker Island) was done using traditional methods. Reefs circling islands further northwest are too low to spot from a safe distance, so positions for the remaining part of the journey are cross-checked against gps for safety.
  106. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (2004)."Navigating Change:Hokule'a'snew mission, Mission and Crew ".The Honolulu Advertiser Special Report: The Other Hawai‘i, A Journey to the Northwest Hawaiian Islands with Hokuleʻa.Gannett Co.Retrieved26 September2008.
  107. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (24 May 2004)."After delays,Hokule'avoyage finally begins ".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved2 September2008.
  108. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (7 June 2004)."Northwest islands dotted with wrecks of old vessels".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved2 September2008.
  109. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (12 June 2004)."Hokule'abegins trip home ".Honolulu Advertiser.Gannett Corporation.Retrieved2 September2008.
  110. ^TenBruggencate, Jan (2004)."Main page".The Honolulu Advertiser Special Report: The Other Hawai‘i, A Journey to the Northwest Hawaiian Islands with Hokuleʻa.Gannett Co.Retrieved26 September2008.
  111. ^Coleman, Stuart H. (December 2006)."Stars in His Head: The Last of the Wayfinders".Spirit of Aloha.com.Honolulu Publishing Company. Archived fromthe originalon 8 June 2008.Retrieved22 August2008.An overview of theHokule‘astory.
  112. ^abcdefghijklUnattributed."One Ocean, One People".Polynesian Voyaging Society.Retrieved30 September2010.Gives details of stops, dates.
  113. ^Kama Hele– The Ultimate Escort Vessel
  114. ^"Pwo Ceremony on Satawal, March 15–20, 2007".Kū Holo Mau: 2007 Voyage for Mau.Polynesian Voyaging Society.26 March 2007.Retrieved30 September2010.
  115. ^Unattributed."Leg 1: Hawaiʻi to Majuro: Crew Lists".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 28 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  116. ^Unattributed."Map of Kū Holo Mau Voyage".2007 One Ocean, One People.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 18 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  117. ^Kathy."What a Beautiful Departure it Was".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 28 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.Narrative about the departure from Kawaihae also mentions sailing plan and gift ofAlingano Maisuto Mau Piailug.
  118. ^Kaʻiulani, Murphy."Kaʻiulani'sHokule'aReports: 2/18, 2/19, 2/20, and 2/21-on our way to Pohnpei ".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  119. ^Unattributed (6 March 2007)."3/8 Crew Lists Pohnpei to Chuuk".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  120. ^Murphy, Kaʻiulani (12 March 2007)."3/12 Underway to Satawal".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  121. ^Kubota, Gary T. (20 March 2007)."Voyagers to Pay Homage to Chiefs: The Crews are Sailing to Woleai Atoll, then to Ulithi and Yap".Honolulu Star-Bulletin Mobile Edition.Oahu Publications, Inc.Retrieved9 August2008.
  122. ^Unknown, Kathy (26 March 2007)."3/26 Kathy's Report, recapping Chuuk to Yap".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  123. ^Bertelmann, Pomaikalani (2 April 2007)."4/2" Venus to the Moon, a run for CAPT. "".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.Mentions some crew leaving the vessel at Woleai.
  124. ^Murphy, Kaʻiulani (25 March 2007)."3/24 & 25: Kaʻiulani Reports, from Ulithi and Yap".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.Includes addition of Dr. Hancock to crew.
  125. ^abPolynesian Voyaging Society (28 March 2007)."3/28 Crew Lists: Yap-Palau-Yap".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.
  126. ^unknown, Kathy (29 March 2007)."3/29 Kathy reports from Yap:HōkūleʻaandMaisudepart for Palau ".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved9 August2008.Mentions president of Palau, Tommy Remengesau, sailing from Yap to Palau onHōkūleʻa.
  127. ^The Nature Conservancy; photo by Pauline Sato."Islands of Sustainability: Lessons from Palau's Coral Reefs".The Nature Conservancy in Hawaii.The Nature Conservancy. Archived fromthe originalon 2 December 2008.Retrieved8 September2012.
  128. ^Shintani, M.Google Tracking MapArchived21 September 2017 at theWayback MachineofKū Holo Lā Komohanavoyage.
  129. ^Unattributed (17 July 2007)."Kama Helearrives home ".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 29 August 2008.Retrieved2 August2008.
  130. ^Interview with Nainoa ThompsonArchived2008-05-12 at theWayback Machine,(inen-USorjpn), YouTube video on Polynesian Voyaging Society site, about theOne Ocean, One Peoplevoyage, retrieved 9 August 2008.
  131. ^Polynesian Voyaging Society."4/12:HōkūleʻaDeparts from Yap for Okinawa, Japan ".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved7 August2008.
  132. ^Baybayan, Chad (14 May 2007)."5/14 HST: Crew Lists to Ōshima".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved6 August2008.
  133. ^Ontiveros, Ramona (27 May 2007)."5/27: On its Way to Ehime".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved6 August2008.
  134. ^Unattributed (1 June 2007)."Uwajima to Yokohama Crew List".2007 Voyage Weblog.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 7 July 2010.Retrieved6 August2008.
  135. ^abcde'worldwide voyage', at hokulea.comAccessed June 18, 2017
  136. ^ab'Hawaiian Hokule'a canoe makes it round the world', at bbc.co.ukAccessed June 18, 2017
  137. ^abcd"Malama Honua Voyage", I Mua Newsroom, at ksbe.eduAccessed 30 June 2017
  138. ^Homecoming, at hokulea.com/home/Accessed June 18, 2017
  139. ^"VIDEO: The Hokule'a arrives in San Francisco Bay".Honolulu Star-Advertiser.24 September 2023.Retrieved26 September2023.
  140. ^Richardson, Mahealani (27 September 2023)."To offer solace to communities in mourning, Hokulea will temporarily return to Hawaii".HawaiiNewsNow.Retrieved28 September2023.
  141. ^Grigoryants, Olga (25 October 2023)."Hawaii's famous Hōkūleʻa canoe docked at Marina del Rey park".Daily News.Retrieved26 October2023.
  142. ^California Coast Port Schedule and Public Events.Retrieved October 25, 2023.
  143. ^Kapu Nā Keikiweb page translates the motto intoen-USas "Hold Sacred the Children," which refers to the children's outreach program by this name.
  144. ^Fuller, Catherine (23 August 1999)."Journal, Leg 2: Nukuhiva to Mangareva".The Voyage to Rapa Nui 1999–2000.Polynesian Voyaging Society.Archived fromthe originalon 17 September 2009.Retrieved8 September2012.
  145. ^Polynesian Voyaging Societynow (2017-06-21) at hokulea.comAccessed 2017-06-21
  146. ^Polynesian Voyaging Societycrewmembers at hokulea.comAccessed 2017-06-21

References[edit]

External links[edit]