Greenwell Garden nonprofit awarded $550K

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Maile Melrose, president of the Friends of Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden, speaks Saturday at the garden during a celebration of Greenwell’s birthday and the group’s annual meeting. (Cameron Miculka/West Hawaii Today)
Kamuela Meheula, left, looks on as Kaleigha Van Dyke experiences the practice of kui kalo Saturday at the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden during a celebration of Greenwell’s birthday.
Jim Miller, right, shows ulei to Richard Morse at the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden on Saturday. (Photos by Cameron Miculka/West Hawaii Today)
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CAPTAIN COOK — Although the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden has remained closed to the public since the Bishop Museum shuttered it in 2016, life continues nonetheless at the 15-acre site in Captain Cook.

Much of that is due to the efforts of dedicated volunteers, who have ensured the legacy of botanist Amy Beatrice Holdsworth Greenwell and its residents continue to thrive here, all the while championing the day residents and visitors alike can come in and experience the array of life that grows here.

“You can tell the love that has been put into this place,” said Meg Greenwell, Amy Greenwell’s niece. “And how clean everything is and with no weeds, and it’s amazing.”

Now, with the announcement of a $550,000 grant through a federal community forest program, the nonprofit Friends of Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden have collected $1.3 million in raised funds that can go toward purchasing the garden from the Bishop Museum.

And on Saturday, one day after what would have been Amy Greenwell’s 98th birthday, the garden’s supporters celebrated the announcement at their annual meeting and open house held at the garden.

“This is a nice whack of money,” Maile Melrose, president of the Friends Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden, told the group of members gathered at the garden Saturday. “So I think you should all feel proud of this board.”

The latest award comes through the Community Forest and Open Space Conservation Program under the U.S. Forest Service and is designed to give communities the chance to conserve their local forests and offer recreational opportunities to the public while protecting water supplies and wildlife habitat.

The number of projects funded each year varies depending on funding and the total amount of funding ranged from under $2 million to $2.3 million from fiscal years 2014-17.

For fiscal year 2018, nine community forest program projects in six states will get a grand total of $4 million.

Melrose said the funding awarded to the Greenwell Garden is the first such award in the Pacific.

The grant, the work for which Melrose credited to Marie Morin and Janet Britt, puts the Friends in a prime position to approach Bishop Museum.

“We are looking forward to entering negotiations with the museum to purchase the garden,” Melrose said.

Like many at Saturday’s event — which included garden tours, kui kalo and a birthday cake to celebrate Amy Greenwell — Morin has a deep affection for the Greenwell Garden and everything within it.

A wildlife biologist by training, Morin used the garden many years ago when she was working at Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park.

When she came to the garden to get some native plants for her house, only to discover the garden was closing, it grabbed her attention.

“There’s all these endangered plants planted here,” she said, “and you can’t just walk away from those.”

Meg Greenwell recalled the weekends she spent at her aunt Amy’s house and remembered how important it was to her that the property become an ethnobotanical garden.

And one of the saddest things, she said, has been the loss of school tours that formerly came to the Greenwell Garden when it was open and the profound effect it had on young people who visited.

“There are children that grew up working here that were molded into loving this garden and what it represents,” she said.

Kamuela Meheula, who was helping children at the garden with the practice of kui kalo, or taro pounding, also spoke about the importance of having a place like the garden open for children.

“They need a place to unplug in order to replug … to disconnect from everything in their busy lives and electronics to be able to connect to aina and to experience aina with all of our native plants that are used in almost all of our practices today, to make the full-circle connection,” she said, “and to be a part of something greater than themselves and to grow a sense of kuleana to aina.”

Meheula worked at the garden for about five years, where she took care of the kalo collection and ran an after-school program about Hawaiian agriculture. The Greenwell Garden, she said, is “a living example of a traditional field system,” and can be a great model for sustainability.

“Something of the past that we can look to now to sustain us in the future,” she said.

The Bishop Museum closed the site to the public in January 2016 after putting the land up for sale, although it continues to employ a single staff member, garden manager Peter Van Dyke, to manage it.

In May 2016, the Friends of Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden officially became a nonprofit and has worked with a keen focus on the day the Greenwell Garden can reopen to the public and once again offer its programs to local residents and visitors.

At the end of last year, the Friends landed a major win when the Legacy Land Conservation Commission, a state commission under the Department of Land and Natural Resources, recommended the department’s board approve $750,000 for the group through the Legacy Land Conservation Program.

Weekly weeding activities meanwhile continue at the Greenwell Garden on Saturdays — meeting typically at the visitor center — from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Gloves, tools, water and snacks are all provided.

More details about the Friends, including how to become a member, are available at www.amygreenwell.garden, where those interested can also donate to the nonprofit.

Now looking forward to potentially a new era of the Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden, its champions continue to work toward the day the garden’s gates can reopen, so the public can once again appreciate the diversity of life that grows in the place they call home.

“Everybody that comes contributes in some way,” said Meg Greenwell. “And this is her legacy, and the sooner we can get it opened up to the community again, the better.”