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Kona, Hawaii Rental Cars, Auto/Car Rentals BreezeNet.com Guide to Great Rental Car Deals RentalCarGuide.com Bnm.com Home Compare Guide Airports Intl Airports NonAirport/Local Rental Car Deals SUV/Vans Luxury Kona Rental Cars & Auto Rentals Online Reservation Center to Car Rental Agencies Serving the Keahole Airport Car Rentals Serving Keahole Airport (KOA) (Kona, HI) Search Great Rates with Our Compare Guide Alamo, Avis, Budget, Dollar, Enterprise, Fox, Hertz, National, Thrifty, and more Search for Cars At an airport In or near a city Pick-up City/Airport My pick-up and drop-off locations are different. Drop-off City/Airport Pick-up Date/Time Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 2006 2007 - Time - 12:05 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM 1:30 AM 2:00 AM 2:30 AM 3:00 AM 3:30 AM 4:00 AM 4:30 AM 5:00 AM 5:30 AM 6:00 AM 6:30 AM 7:00 AM 7:30 AM 8:00 AM 8:30 AM 9:00 AM 9:30 AM 10:00 AM 10:30 AM 11:00 AM 11:30 AM 12:00 PM 12:30 PM 1:00 PM 1:30 PM 2:00 PM 2:30 PM 3:00 PM 3:30 PM 4:00 PM 4:30 PM 5:00 PM 5:30 PM 6:00 PM 6:30 PM 7:00 PM 7:30 PM 8:00 PM 8:30 PM 9:00 PM 9:30 PM 10:00 PM 10:30 PM 11:00 PM 11:30 PM Drop-off Date/Time Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 2006 2007 - Time - 12:05 AM 12:30 AM 1:00 AM 1:30 AM 2:00 AM 2:30 AM 3:00 AM 3:30 AM 4:00 AM 4:30 AM 5:00 AM 5:30 AM 6:00 AM 6:30 AM 7:00 AM 7:30 AM 8:00 AM 8:30 AM 9:00 AM 9:30 AM 10:00 AM 10:30 AM 11:00 AM 11:30 AM 12:00 PM 12:30 PM 1:00 PM 1:30 PM 2:00 PM 2:30 PM 3:00 PM 3:30 PM 4:00 PM 4:30 PM 5:00 PM 5:30 PM 6:00 PM 6:30 PM 7:00 PM 7:30 PM 8:00 PM 8:30 PM 9:00 PM 9:30 PM 10:00 PM 10:30 PM 11:00 PM 11:30 PM Car Type ( Details ) No Preference Economy Compact Mid-Size Standard Full-Size Premium Luxury Convertible MiniVan SUV Compact Pickup View existing itinerary » Sample Car Rental Reservation Ratesfor Kona Ke-Ahole Airport (KOA) These deals are SAMPLES ONLY for the period 1/16-1/23. For specific real timeprices for Kona Ke-Ahole Airport check our Compare Guide above. COMPANIES ECONOMY MIDSIZE FULLSIZE MINIVAN SUV Priceline.com Guaranteed Best Rental Car Rates Alamo $214+-/wk $234+-/wk $241+-/wk $351+-/wk $348+-/wk Budget $213+-/wk $234+-/wk $241+-/wk $371+-/wk $380+-/wk Dollar $214+-/wk $234+-/wk $322+-/wk $316+-/wk $313+-/wk Hertz $231+-/wk $252+-/wk $268+-/wk $423+-/wk $405+-/wk National $216+-/wk $242+-/wk $245+-/wk $355+-/wk $374+-/wk Thrifty $214+-/wk $234+-/wk $322+-/wk $316+-/wk $313+-/wk Snapshots clarified. Rates are in US Dollars and do not include taxes, fees,coverages or car options. See why rates change. Suppliers are not responsible for inaccuracies on the rates listed ifrates are out of date or were incorrectly posted. Rates are based on UScountry of residence and may not be available at time of booking. Check with rentalcar agency. Rates do not include taxes, airport fees or other surcharges. 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Hawaiian Quilt Collection [Collections - Special - North American Indian and Native Hawaiian About special collections North American Indian and Native Hawaiian Quilt Collection [ click here to see samples ] Native quilters in the Hawaiian Islands and on the North American continent have long used colors and designs distinctly their own to make quilts which function in ways both similar to other cultural groups as well as in ways that have specific tribal or pan-Indian meanings. Quilts have been used in nearly every Native community for everyday purposes such as bed coverings, shelter coverings, infants' swing cradles, weather insulation, and providing a soft place to sit on the ground. In some communities, quilts are also used to honor individuals, in ceremonies, and in a variety of activities that strengthen community life. Native peoples in the Hawaiian Islands and North America have always had many indigenous traditions of textile production and use; the materials and skills of quiltmaking had many precedents in these communities. When commercially-manufactured cloth and steel needles became available to native peoples, it was not surprising that, adept at similar craft forms, they quickly picked up quiltmaking. Native needleworkers continually combine or replace old materials and technologies with new. Finger-woven animal pelt blankets have been replaced by wool blankets and quilts, hides replaced by cotton fabrics, and awls and needles replaced by sewing machines and rotary cutters. The initial conveyance of quilting skills to Native peoples occurred in the nineteenth century with the establishment of mission schools and churches in Native communities. Numerous references in missionary diaries and letters, mission records and newsletters, and oral histories point to the substantial influence that Christian denominational mission churches and schools had in introducing quiltmaking to Native peoples. Through both formal instruction and in the context of affiliated women's social groups, missions promoted Euro-American domestic arts, including quiltmaking and other forms of needlework. Whether Mennonite missions on Hopi land, Mormon missions in Utah and Nevada, Quaker mission schools in Pennsylvania, or Catholic missions in frontier outposts, these Christian evangelical and educational efforts were instrumental in introducing and sustaining interest in these crafts. Within Native communities, quilts are often used to mark rites of passage or special occasions and to honor individuals for their special achievements or contributions. At naming ceremonies, quilts are given to friends and family in honor of the loved one being named. Students graduating from high schools or college are given quilts as a sign or recognition of their academic accomplishments. Athletes winning competitive events are given quilts for their physical achievements. Veterans returning from military service are honored with quilts to thank them for their bravery and personal sacrifice. Any one who has contributed significantly to his or her own, family's or community's well being is honored, either by being given a quilt or having quilts given away on their behalf. Production techniques (patchwork, appliqué, quilting, tied work), material preparation (batting, recycling cloth), patchwork patterns, quilting designs, and quilt names were shared among Native and non-Native quiltmakers. Yet choices of patterns, construction techniques, materials, and names often are tied to Native or tribal identity. Native artists adapt the beadwork, rug weaving, and basket weaving patterns of their cultural heritage of their own experience into their quilts. Color choices often reflect the Native quilter's close spritual ties to the natural world. Many times Native quilters, irrespective of their own tribal background, will select printed fabrics that incorporate Southwestern or pan-Indian imagery, such as eagles, running horses, or motifs from or resembling those of Navajo rugs. Of all the discrete collections of the MSU Museum's quilt collections perhaps the most important is the collection of North American Indian and Native Hawaiian quilts. Several museums have one or a few samples of Native quilts and a handful of museums have quilts specializing in the quilts of one culture or tribe (for instance Native Hawaiian or Lakota Sioux) but no other musuem in the world has a collection that not only represents the breadth and diversity of Native quilting in North Amercia but also is accompanied by documentary information resulting from historical and ethnographic research. There are a number of reasons why Native quilters have been so little known to those outside their families or communities and that museums have so few examples in their collections, but perhaps the chief reasons were that it is an art form that has appeared so extensively in everyday life and that it was primarily the result of indigenous cultural contact with outsiders. Considered commonplace and perceived firmly tied to a European rather than a Native artistic tradition, quilts, unlike other Native arts, were historically not collected or studied as items of ethnographic, aesthetic, or marketplace value. In addition, most quilts made within Native communities were made for everyday use; even those made and given in ceremonies were intended for everyday use. Thus, there are few extant historical quilts in either private or public collections. The first Native American quilt acquired by the Michigan State University Museum was one documented in a Michigan Quilt Project Discovery Day in 1985. The quilt, made c. 1920 by Margaret (or Anna) David, an Odawa quilter, from Peshawbestown, Michigan has distinctively Woodland Indian floral motifs in the corners and sides of a traditional Star quilt pattern. It was donated by a non-Native family who had acquired it from its maker. Subsequent research has uncovered five more quilts done in this style and has revealed that the quilter was probably affiliated with a group of women who quilted together in the basement of the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Peshawbestown, Michigan, a community where Ojibwa and Odawa had long resided. Additional research by museum staff on Ojibway, Odawa, and Potawatomi quilting resulted in the collection of narratives, photographs, and quilts documenting the long-time engagement in quilting by many Native women in the region. Working in tandem with the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of the American Indian, Atlatl (the national service organization for professional Native artists), and many tribal museums as well as quilters, collectors, and other scholars, the Michigan State University Museum staff continued to document Native quilting traditions throughout the United States and Canada. These efforts have resulted in the exhibition "To Honor and Comfort: Native Quilting Traditions" that toured to major museums across the nation, a smaller version of the exhibit that is touring to tribal museums, a publication, and the collection of well-documented quilts and related materials at MSU. -- by Marsha MacDowell [excerpt from Marsha MacDowell, ed., Great Lakes,Great Quilts. Concord, California: C&T Publishing, 2001] GLQC Home About GLQC Collections Exhibits Programs Publications Internships/Volunteers Quilt Index OnLine Newsletter Virtual Quilt Sponsors/Endowments Links Quilt Care Site Info Contact Us Hawaii CondoAffordable Makaha Condo - Oahu, Hawaii Studio Hosted by Alternative-Hawaii: Paradise Awaits! A beautiful Makaha Valley Towers Studio Overlooking the Mountains, the Valley and the Sea On the Leeward Coast of Oahu, Hawaii (Click on photos for better view) Pool The Accommodation features: A large studio with private lanai (patio) Queen Murphy bed & queen sleeper sofa (comfortably sleeps four) Completely furnished & air conditioned Full kitchen & built in microwave Cable, TV, internet access, telephone Gated community, on-site security Washers & dryers on each floor Olympic size swimming pool, BBQ area The Location: Situated in one of Oahu's most beautiful valleys on the Leeward Coast - the Valley of the Peacocks. Beautifully landscaped, arboretum-like grounds. One of Hawaii's top surfing beaches is one mile down the road. Site of one of the State's best preserved heiaus (ancient Hawaiian temples). Only a 45 minute drive to Honolulu Airport. Things to See & Do: Golf (two championship golf courses & tennis at nearby Makaha Resort) Deep sea fishing Hiking, biking Surfing, snorkeling, scuba diving Sailing, kayaking Swim near the dolphins, whale watch (Dec.-Apr.) Cultural and historical sites Or simply relax under the warm Hawaiian sun! Studio with Murphy Bed/Full Kitchen Rates and Policies: High season (11/15/05 - 4/15/06): $68 per night ( 5 night minimum stay ); $475 per week; $1237 per month Low season (4/16/06 - 11/14/06): $62 per night ( 5 night minimum stay ); $428 per week; $1142 per month Lodging tax extra - 11.25% Cleaning fee $70 A $300 deposit is required. Balance due 35 days before arrival date Deposits are refundable up to 46 days prior to arrival date less a $75 administration fee Full Bathroom For more information, please contact: Pat at Affordable Makaha Condo Email: INQUIRY FORM TESTIMONIALS: My husband and I stayed in this condo for two glorious weeks. The condo was super clean and the view unbelievable! We loved the pool and BBQ area, the people were very friendly too. The location is fantastic with mountains behind the condo and the ocean in front. Each morning we woke up to the beautiful view of the ocean. When I saw this condo on the website, I realized how long its been since our trip to Hawaii. We're definitely going back and we're definitely staying in this condo! Cheryl Randall, Plymouth, MA I recently spent 10 days on vacation at the Makaha Valley Towers. A great location with both ocean and mountain views - and peacocks wandering the lush tropical grounds! The Studio was immaculately furnished in the Polynesian style and very comfortable. Highly recommended. S. Clements, Denver, CO Visit Alternative-Hawaii's Special Places in Leeward Oahu Site Maintained by Alternative-Hawaii Hawaii HoneymoonHawaii Honeymoon packages, Hawaii Honeymoon Vacations, Kauai, Maui, Lanai, Molokai, Oahu, Big Island Bride & Groom Guests & Gifts Log In | Sign-Up -- Shopping Bag | | What do you think? What's the main reason you'd consider a charity registry? We want to give back We can honor a loved one We already have everything we need We want to give guests a lot of gift options Hawaii Lush greenery, sparkling ocean, and spectacular sunsets... say "Aloha" to the honeymoon of your dreams in Hawaii. Click to View Top Honeymoon Spots Kauai Lanai Maui Molokai Oahu Things to Do The Big Island Featured Destinations Sheraton Waikiki Hotel Relax in paradise on a half mile of sun-blushed beachfront. Dance at Waikiki's only beachside nightclub. 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Beautiful swaying palms overlooking the glistening blue ocean, plan your wedding at Hilton Waikoloa Village ®. -- Choose a Beachfront Wedding or the new Ocean Crystal Chapel at Hilton Hawaiian Village ®. Great Deals Honeymoon on the Beach Book a tropical beach getaway now. From coast to coast, domestic and international - hotels.com has a beach deal that's right for you. Book a celebrity styled destination wedding by Preston Bailey , exclusively at Sandals & Beaches Resorts and receive a special keepsake gift (promo code: WM201). Reserve yours now! All-Inclusive in Los Cabos from $1,850 Enjoy 5 nights luxury accommodations at The Westin Resort & Spa, Los Cabos for $1,850 per person. Pampered in Puerto Vallarta from $1,525 Enjoy 5 nights at the spectacular oceanfront Westin Resort & Spa in Puerto Vallarta with daily breakfast and dinner, couples massage, dolphin encounters and more for $1,525 per person. Romantic. Secluded. The Westin St. John . Experience the ultimate in romance at The Westin St. John with seven nights deluxe accommodations, couples massages, a bottle of champagne upon arrival, full daily breakfast, and more. MAUNA KEA BEACH HOTEL Golden sunsets and swaying palm trees make Mauna Kea Beach Hotel the most perfect and romantic paradise on the Big Island of Hawaii. Experience our Romance Package and enjoy luxurious accommodations, exquisite dining and warm island hospitality. Sponsored Links buy a link PHOTO CREDITS: Susan and Andrew: John Riedy Debbie and Ivan / Rebecca and Alan: Stewart Pinsky Katie and Greg: Robert Evans Hawaiians used the wordIntroduction to Kilauea Volcano, Hawai`i Eruption Update Eruption Summary Hazards History Panorama Images Kilauea -- Perhaps the World's Most Active Volcano View north-northeast across Kilauea's summit caldera and Halema`uma`u crater (left of center) Kilauea is the youngest and southeastern most volcano on the Big Island of Hawai`i. Topographically Kilauea appears as only a bulge on the southeastern flank of Mauna Loa, and so for many years Kilauea was thought to be a mere satellite of its giant neighbor, not a separate volcano. However, research over the past few decades shows clearly that Kilauea has its own magma-plumbing system, extending to the surface from more than 60 km deep in the earth. In fact, the summit of Kilauea lies on a curving line of volcanoes that includes Mauna Kea and Kohala and excludes Mauna Loa. In other words, Kilauea is to Mauna Kea as Lo`ihi is to Mauna Loa. Hawaiians used the word Kilauea only for the summit caldera, but earth scientists and, over time, popular usage have extended the name to include the entire volcano. 11 October 2002 The eruption of Kilauea Volcano that began in 1983 continues at the cinder-and-spatter cone of Pu`u `O`o (high point on skyline). Lava erupting from the cone flows through a tube system down Pulama pali about 11 km to the sea (lower left). Map of Kilauea, including location of Pu`u `O`o Sketch showing magma reservoir & active lava-tube system Kilauea is the home of Pele, the Hawaiian volcano goddess. Hawaiian chants and oral traditions tell in veiled form of many eruptions fomented by an angry Pele before the first European, the missionary Rev. William Ellis, saw the summit in 1823. The caldera was the site of nearly continuous activity during the 19th century and the early part of this century. Since 1952 there have been 34 eruptions, and since January 1983 eruptive activity has been continuous along the east rift zone. All told, Kilauea ranks among the world's most active volcanoes and may even top the list. | Eruption Update | Eruption Summary | Hazards | History | Kilauea Facts Map of the Island of Hawai`i Location 19.425 N 155.292 W Elev. Above Sea Level 1,277 m 4,190 ft Area 1,430 km 2 552 mi 2 (13.7% of Hawai`i) Volume 25,000-35,000 km 3 6,000-8,500 mi 3 Hawaiian Meaning The Hawaiian name "Kilauea" means "spewing" or "much spreading," apparently in reference to the lava flows that it erupts. Most Recent Eruption Continuous since January 3, 1983 Number of Historical Eruptions 61, not counting the continuous lava-lake activity in Halema`uma`u crater Summit Caldera The caldera itself has no Hawaiian name other than Kilauea but houses the famous crater, Halema`uma`u; "hale" is a house, "ma`uma`u" a type of fern. Kamapua`a, a jilted suitor of Pele, is said to have built a house of ferns over Halema`uma`u to keep Pele from escaping her home and causing eruptions. The ploy failed. Dimension: 6 x 6 km (outermost faults), 3 x 5 km (main depression) Depth: 165 m deep Age: probably several incremental collapses 500-210 years ago Oldest Dated Rocks 23,000 years old Estimated Age of Earliest Subaerial Eruptions 50,000-100,000 years Estimated Age of First Eruption of Kilauea 300,000-600,000 years before present Hawaiian Volcano Stage Shield-forming stage The URL of this page is http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/kilauea/ Contact: hvowebmaster@usgs.gov Updated: 6 December 2005 (pnf) |
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