Kohanaiki garden: Dream becomes a reality

Gary enjoys showing students how the Polynesians used a star compass to find their way to the Hawaiian Islands. (Sally Rankin/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Student volunteers are a valuable part of the maintenance of the garden at Kohanaiki. (Sally Rankin/Special to West Hawaii Today)

The ipu trellis and the native beds are important parts of the garden at the Kohanaiki site. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

The signage at the Kohanaiki site provides important educational information about the garden and the compass. (Brent T. Madison/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Gary Eoff happily participates in the continuing maintenance of the garden he helped establish at Kohanaiki. (Sally Rankin/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Reggie Lee, Mason Myrmo, Karen Eoff and Lanakila Ynigues as well as Gary Eoff (not pictured) have all worked together to make the Kohanaiki cultural center a reality. (Courtesy photo/Special to West Hawaii Today)

The cultural center at Kohanaiki features a native plant garden as well as a stone replica of a navigational compass and a large halau for community use. (Brent T. Madison/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Gary Eoff had a dream of creating a Hawaiian cultural center that included an educational garden of native Hawaiian plants as well as information about Polynesian navigational tools and a gathering place for the community. Along with Angel Pilago, the Kohanaiki Ohana, and the Kohanaiki community, he started working on manifesting this vision in the late 1980s. It wasn’t until 2003 that collaborative efforts by numerous players produced a formal agreement.