Inoa | Name(s)
Hānai holoholona; Hana kahu pipi
Hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo
ʻO ka hana kahu pipi ka hana o nā limahana a me nā paniolo ma nā wahi hānai holoholona ma Hawaiʻi. Hoʻomaka ʻia nā wahi hānai holoholona mua ma ka mokupuni o Hawaiʻi ma kahi o ka makahiki 1835 no ka hānai ʻana i nā pipi ʻāhiu ma laila. Hānai ʻia nā pipi no ke kūʻai aku ʻana i ka ʻiʻo a me ka ʻili a hānai pū ʻia nā hipa no kona hulu. ʻO John Parker kekahi o nā kahu pipi mua ma Hawaiʻi a ʻo Parker Ranch ma Waimea kāna wahi hānai holoholona kaulana loa a i kēia lā.
Description
Ranchers and paniolo are who cultivated ranching work in Hawaiʻi. The first ranches were established on the island of Hawaiʻi around 1835 for the purpose of raising wild cattle. They were raised and then sold for their meat and the hides and later sheep were also raised for their wool. John Parker is one of the first ranchers in Hawaiʻi who established Parker Ranch in Waimea which exists through today.
ʻŌlelo kuhikuhi
E koho i kēia huaʻōlelo no nā kumuwaiwai pili i ka hana kahu pipi.
Instructions
Use this term for resources related to ranching in Hawaiʻi.
Moʻokūʻauhau | Genealogy
Kanaka | Person: John Parker
ʻĀina | Land/sea: Waimea
Hana | Practice: Hana paniolo
Kūmole | Source(s)
Langlas, Charles M. “A History of Ranching Operations in the Saddle Region of Hawai’i Island.” The Hawaiian Journal of History 56, no. 1 (2022): 113–41. doi:10.1353/hjh.2022.a907634.
Pukui, Mary Kawena, and Samuel H. (Samuel Hoyt) Elbert. Hawaiian Dictionary : Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian. Rev. and enl. Ed. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986.
Hoʻopili ʻia i | Applied to: Rodeo as Refuge, Rodeo as Rebellion. They wear a lei and a large handkerchief: ranching, rodeos, and paʻu riding in Hawaiʻi; Pau Hana Years. Ranching on Kahoʻolawe
Mea haku | Created by: Keahiahi Long; Annemarie Paikai