| |
|
Sell your home
faster and keep more dollars in your pocket

The "World of Hawaii Real Estate" can be a Minefield!
Confused? Anxious? Disillusioned? Frazzled?
Would you like a guide and a mentor to help you succeed in this
volatile market? Our web site is a library of special reports,
white papers and audio help that is totally free to registered
Info Seekers. Register as an Info Seeker today and have all our
library of information at your fingertips. It is extremely
important to be well informed in home selling before you put the
For Sale sign up.
Read our Special Report on Home Selling
Interesting
Data About Hawaii
- Hawaii is the most isolated population center on the face of the earth.
Hawaii is 2,390 miles from California; 3,850 miles from Japan; 4,900 miles from
China; and 5,280 miles from the Philippines.
- Hawaii is the only state that grows coffee.
- More than one-third of the world's commercial supply of pineapples comes
from Hawaii.
- There are only 12 letters in the Hawaiian alphabet.
Vowels: A, E, I, O, U
Consonants: H, K, L, M, N, P, W
- From east to west Hawaii is the widest state in the United States.
- The Hawaiian Islands are the projecting tops of the biggest mountain range
in the world.
- Honolulu's zenith star, (the star that rises directly above it) is Arcturus.
The Hawaiians called it Hokule'a. (Hoe koo lay uh.)
- Under-sea volcanoes that erupted thousands of years ago formed the islands
of Hawaii.
- The Hawaiian Archipelago consists of over 130 scattered points of land
stretching some 1,600 miles in length from the Kure Atoll in the north to the
Island of Hawaii in the south.
- The first Asian American in the United States Senate was Hawaii's Hiram
Fong. Descended from Chinese immigrants, Fong was elected to the Senate in 1959.
- Hawaii was the 50th state admitted to the union on August 20th, 1959.
- Island flowers and colors used to represent each island.
Niihau - Pupu Shell - White
Kauai - Mokihana (Green Berry) - Purple
Oahu - Ilima -Yellow
Maui - Lokelani (Pink Cottage Rose) - Pink
Molokai - White Kukui Blossom - Green
Lanai - Kaunaoa (Yellow and Orange Air Plant) - Orange
Kahoolawe - Hinahina (Beach Heliotrope) - Grey
Big Island of Hawaii - Lehua Ohia - Red
- Hawaii has its own time zone (Hawaiian Standard Time.) There is no daylight
savings time.) The time runs two hours behind Pacific Standard Time and five
hours behind Eastern Standard Time.
- There are four counties in Hawaii (Kauai; city and county of Honolulu; Maui;
and Hawaii). Each city has a mayor and council in charge.
- All subterranean minerals belong to the state. Except for state owned water,
some lava stone, and minor granites and semi-precious minerals, there are few
underground minerals.
- The wind blows east to west in Hawaii. The highest recorded temperature is
96' F (Honolulu Airport), but temperatures over 92' F generally occur only once
or twice a year. The lowest temperature (under 3000 feet altitude) is 56' F.
Temperatures under 60' F may occur but rarely more than once a year. Average
daytime temp. (July) is 82' F. Average daytime temperature in January is 72' F.
- There are no racial or ethnic majorities in Hawaii. Everyone is a minority.
Caucasians (Haoles) constitute about 34%; Japanese-American about 32%;
Filipino-American about 16% and Chinese-American about 5%. It is very difficult
to determine racial identification as most of the population has some mixture of
ethnicities.
ISLAND OF NIIHAU
- A privately owned island, with livestock raising as its principal industry.
There is highly limited access by general public through helicopter landings at
uninhabited sites. Legend says Niihau was the original home of the goddess Pele.
The island has a population of 230, and is 69 square miles.
ISLAND OF KAUAI
- The fourth largest of the Hawaiian Islands.
- The Waialua River is one of five navigable river in Hawaii. It drains off
Waialeale Mountain, which averages 488 inches of rain per year and is considered
the wettest spot on earth.
- The Waimea, the Hanape'pe, the Lumahai and the Hanalei River are almost as
big and quite navigable. The Hanalei River was dedicated a "national treasure"
recently and is under government protection from use as a "place of business".
ISLAND OF OAHU
- Honolulu is the largest city in the world -- at least it has the longest
borders. According to the state constitution any island (or islet) not named as
belonging to a county belongs to Honolulu. This makes all islands within the
Hawaiian Archipelago, that stretch to Midway Island (1,500 miles northwest of
Hawaii) part of Honolulu. Honolulu is about 1,500 miles long or more distance
than halfway across the 48 contiguous states.
- Wai Golf Course is Hawaii's first municipal course.
- Honolulu is the nation's 11th largest metropolitan area.
- More than 100 world-renowned beaches ring Honolulu.
ISLAND OF MAUI
- The island is home to many famous attractions including Haleakala Crater,
the old whaling town of Lahaina, the road to Hana, and Kaanapali Beach.
- Haleakala Crater (Ha-lay-ah-ja-lah), is the world's largest dormant volcano.
ISLAND OF MOLOKAI
- Molokai is known as the most Hawaiian Isle.
- Molokai's east end is a tropical rain forest and part of the island receives
240 inches of rainfall a year.
- Molokai Ranch Wildlife Park is home to rare African and Indian animals.
- Kalaaupapa was once a leper colony administered by Father Damien.
- The island contains the world's highest sea cliffs, Hawaii's longest
waterfall, and the largest white sand beach in the state.
ISLAND OF LANAI
- The island of Lanai is considered Hawaii's most secluded.
- The island was once the home of the world's largest pineapple plantations.
- Hulope Bay is a marine preserve and considered one of the best diving spots
in the world.
ISLAND OF KAHOOLAWE
- Once used as a target by the U.S. Navy and Air Force the services are
cleaning up unexploded shells. No one is allowed to go ashore without
permission. The island consists of an uninhabited area of 45 square miles.
THE BIG ISLAND OF HAWAII
- The Big Island is Hawaii's largest at 4,038 square miles. It is twice the
size of all other Hawaiian Islands combined.
- The largest contiguous ranch, in the United States, is in Hawaii. The Parker
Ranch near Kamuela has about 480,000 acres of land.
- At 800,000 years the Big Island is the youngest of the island chain.
However, it was the first island discovered by voyaging Polynesians.
- Kilauea volcano is the world's most active.
- Ka Lae is the southernmost point in the United States. It is located at
18:54:49 N 155:41:00 W. There is a constant 27 knots per hour wind blowing
east to west, 24 hours per day and 365 days per year.
- Two of the tallest mountains in the Pacific - Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa -
dominate the center of the island. Most of the world's macadamia nuts are grown
on the island.
- Kilauea Iki is the world's most active and largest volcano.
- Mauna Kea is the tallest mountain in the world (measured from its base at
the ocean floor).
- The island houses the world's biggest telescope and more scientific
observatories in one place than anywhere else in the world.
- The island is the worldwide leader in harvesting macadamia nuts and orchids.
Google News - Hawaii
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hawaii State Trivia
Capital City:
Honolulu
Area: 10,932 sq.mi.
Land: 6423 sq.mi.
Water: 4508 sq.mi.
Coastline: 750 mi.
Shoreline: 1052 mi.
Area Codes: 808
Bird: Nene
Flower: Hibiscus
Highest Point: 13,796 feet
Lowest Point: Sea level
Soil: Hawaii Hilo
Tree: Kukui-Candlenut
Largest Cities: Honolulu, Hilo, Kailua, Kaneohe, Waipahu,
Pearl City, Waimalu, Mililani, Kahului, Kihei
Nickname: Aloha State
Population: 1,211,537
Economy:
Agriculture: Sugarcane, pineapples, nursery stock,
livestock, macadamia nuts
Industry: Tourism, food processing, apparel, fabricated
metal products, stone, clay, glass products
Hawaii State Flag
Hawaii
was once an independent kingdom. (1810 - 1893) The flag
was designed at the request of King Kamehameha I. It has
eight stripes of white, red and blue that represent the
eight main islands. The flag of Great Britain is
emblazoned in the upper left corner to honor Hawaii's
friendship with the British. The combination of the
stripes of the United States flag and the Union Jack of
Great Britain is said to have pleased the merchant
shippers of both nations. Flag adopted for official
state use in 1959.
|
|
|
|