Be a Kona Coffee Farmer for a Day in Hawaii!

Coffee beans in a tin
Hawaii Aloha Travel > Blog > Be a Kona Coffee Farmer for a Day in Hawaii!

Have you ever imagined what life in Hawaii was like during the early to mid part of the last century? The 1920’s to 1940’s saw an enormous influx of Japanese immigrants who changed the landscape and culture of the Big Island. During the same time, Kona Coffee was beginning to become a staple of the Big Island economy.

The era was so important, the Kona Historical Society has decided to host a series of events and workshops that feature what it was like to be part of the Big Island Community during the ’20s, ’30’s, and ’40’s. In essence, YOU have the opportunity to “go back in time” and become a Japanese immigrant or Kona Coffee farmer for a day!

Every Wednesday and Friday at 11 a.m., the Kona Historical Society will host Hands On History at the Kona Coffee Living History Farm in Captain Cook,
a 5.5-acre Kona Coffee Living History Farm tells the story of these Kona coffee pioneers, emphasizing their family values, independence, and resourcefulness.

Hands On History provides visitors and community members with the opportunity to learn, experience and practice activities important to the daily lives of Kona’s Japanese immigrants and coffee pioneers during the 1920s and 1940s.

“Hands on History” provides Big Island visitors with the opportunity to be Kona coffee farmers for a day.

The activities include:

  • Coffee roasting
  • Medicinal herb gardening
  • Japanese calligraphy
  • Japanese pickling
  • Lauhala weaving
  • Mochi making
  • Tofu making

Each week, living history farm staff and Kona Historical Society volunteers invite visitors to participate in one of these rotating activities. Take a look at the following program schedule, so you can plan your Big Island activities around your trip down memory lane:

  • Wednesday, March 1 – Home Grown Remedies: Kona’s Tradition of Medicinal Gardening
  • Friday, March 3 – A Japanese Girl’s Day Tradition: Mochi Making!
  • Wednesday, March 8 – Fresh Off the Press: Making Tofu in the Family Kitchen
  • Friday, March 10 – Backyard Groceries: Sustainability in the Kitchen Garden
  • Wednesday, March 15 – Balanced Bento: Pickling as a Mainstay of the Japanese Table
  • Friday, March 17 – Art & Language: Learning Japanese with Calligraphy
  • Wednesday, March 22 – Home Grown Remedies: Kona’s Tradition of Medicinal Gardening
  • Friday, March 24 – Beans in the Skillet: Coffee Roasting at Home
  • Wednesday, March 29 – Backyard Groceries: Sustainability in the Kitchen Garden
  • Friday, March 31 – Weaving Tools & Treasures: Lauhala on a Kona Coffee Farm

Although some of these traditions are limited to the past, many are still practiced today. That’s why the Kona Historical Society hopes this program will help perpetuate these cultural traditions and further preserve the history behind Kona’s coffee industry and its pioneers.

Kona Coffee Tours

“Hands On History provides a unique opportunity for visitors and residents alike to learn and practice traditional activities that were important to the daily lives of our Kona ancestors,” said Gavin Miculka, Kona Historical Society assistant program director and Kona Coffee Living History Farm museum manager.

All farm visitors may walk through the coffee and macadamia nut orchards, tour the historic farmhouse, talk story with costumed interpreters, and visit with the donkey, chickens and farm cat. Participation in Hands On History is included in the price of admission. The farm is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. weekdays and is located at 82-6199 Mamalahoa Highway in Captain Cook, near mile marker 110.

It’s not every day you have the opportunity to be transported back in time! So, make your plans now to visit this living piece of history!

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