Hilo Brokers, Ltd. Newsletter
Aloha!

We have a wonderful assortment of articles, Big Island Calendar of Events, resources, tips and industry updates for you this month and we hope you enjoy. Some of these include:

  • Hilo for Hula!  Merrie Monarch Festival
  • Condos Pay Off As Second Homes
  • Timing Is Everything: When And How To Move
  • How To Stop ID Theft Cold
  • Use Home Equity Protection

Don't forget to sign-up to receive regular updates throughout the month from Kelly's blog.  If you're not very familiar with signing-up for blogs, we've made it super easy. Just click the email sign-up link in the right area, enter your email address, and you'll receive each blog entry (about 1-2 per week) in your email box. You can unsubscribe at any time. Of course, the traditional feeds are also available.

If you are having any difficulty reading the newsletter below, you may view the current (and past) newsletter here:
http://www.hilobrokersnews.com 

In addition to the featured articles, don't forget to dig a little deeper for additional articles located in the "Daily News & Advice" area, as well as the "More Articles" section.

Mahalo,
Kelly & the Hilo Brokers, Ltd. Team


 
Your Big Island REALTOR®:
 

Kelly H. Moran
 

March 2008 - Hilo Brokers, Ltd.

Real

Quality Big Island Real Estate Service & Experience
for Over 20 Years!

 

Some Articles Copyright © 2008 Realty Times
All Rights Reserved.


Hilo Brokers, Ltd.
400 Hualani St., Bldg 21
Hilo, Hawaii, 96720

Office: 808-969-9400

Direct: 808-938-5757
 


 

 
 


Here on the Big Island: Hilo for Hula!  Merrie Monarch Festival

- By Kelly H. Moran

 

 

There's one week a year when every hotel room in Hilo is booked solid, and it’s not during Summer vacations or Winter holidays. It’s the week of the Merrie Monarch Festival - March 30-April 5, this year - when Hilo celebrates its status as the world capital of hula. King David Kalakaua (dubbed the “merrie monarch” for his joie-de-vivre) liked to have the Islands’ ancient dances performed. This upset the missionaries and haole educators who had long tried to suppress the native culture and language. But Kalakaua understood that, for the Hawaiians - with no previously written language - hula was a kind of cultural language, ideal for telling stories and passing on myths, and that it ought to be preserved for future generations. So, the world’s largest hula festival is named in his honor.

 

But a royal command alone did not - could not - keep hula going. After the overthrow of the monarchy, puritanical attitudes again prevailed, and for most of the twentieth century hula was denigrated as mere entertainment. The careful movements of hands and bodies that had evolved to tell complex tales were crudely simplified to fit tourists’ expectations of something “Hawaiian.” (The cliché of grass skirts and twirling hips, by the way, is actually Tahitian.) And for much the same reasons as girls elsewhere took piano lessons, girls in Hawaii took hula lessons. Boys, however, did not - like ballet, hula was considered an effeminate pursuit.

 

But then, seemingly overnight, in the 1970s, hula came roaring back. Along with the revival of traditional Hawaiian folk music (see Posts: “Hawaii Musics (Plural)” - Part 1 & Part 2) with which some styles of hula were closely associated, there was a renewed interest in Hawaiian legends, language, and traditional handicrafts, many of which also had links to hula. And the surviving kumu hula (masters/teachers of hula) attracted new acolytes.

But the tipping point came when two of the Islands’ most celebrated musicians - the Cazimero Brothers - started a hula halau (school) for men. Before European contact, the biggest, strongest Hawaiian men danced high-energy, athletic forms of hula. And now, in the Merrie Monarch Festival, it’s the beefcake troupes in the male hula competitions that draw the loudest cheers.

 

The top competitive events are held on the last three (Thurs., Fri. and Sat.) nights; and if you haven’t already gotten tickets, you probably can’t get them now: they go on sale for only one week, at the beginning of each year, and sell out almost immediately. But those competitions will be televised, live, so you can watch them anywhere in the state.

 

Every other event, all week long, is free. Informal hula shows are presented each weekday at noon, at the Hilo Hawaiian Hotel and the Naniloa Volcanoes Hotel, on Banyan Drive. There’s a huge arts-and-crafts fair, with many handicrafts related to hula and Hawaiian music; and a big parade winds through downtown Hilo, starting at 10:30 Saturday morning (Apr. 5).

 

Admission to the big Wednesday night (Apr. 2) show - though not a competition - is also free. Just be sure to get to the stadium early, because it will fill up with local families long before the 6:30 starting time. It’s worth noting that although that venue was originally built as a tennis stadium, it’s Hilo’s largest performance space, and it’s named in honor of the late Edith Kanaka’ole, the Big Island’s most famous kumu hula.

 

For more information, call 808-935-9168, or visit the Merrie Monarch Festival’s website.


 

Mortgage Rates
U.S. averages as of February 28, 2008:

30 yr. fixed:   6.24%
15 yr. fixed:   5.72%
1 yr. adj:        5.11%


View current rates
 

 

Featured Listing

Rarely Available!

Secluded 4.8 acres near Akaka Falls, with mature trees and pasturelands, forested stream and waterfall. Ocean views from hills and knolls. Paved driveway leads to private, estate-size cleared home site beside a shady fern grotto. Located near Akaka Falls State Park, several miles above Honomu, a vibrant plantation town on the Hamakua Coast. It's a twenty minute drive to downtown Hilo. Property is located at the end of a private road.

For a virtual tour, downloadable flyer, additional images and information:
Click Here


 

Click Here for Local Market Conditions:

Hilo Update


 

Condos Pay Off As Second Homes

Make a condo, townhome or other community association property your second home and, chances are, you'll be pretty happy with your choice.

More than seven in 10 condo and townhome residents say they are satisfied with their purchase, according to a recent survey conducted by Zogby International for the Foundation for Community Association Research.

The foundation periodically conducts the survey to keep tabs on the perceptions of those who live in condos and townhomes and to identify recent trends in the condo world.

Satisfaction is a big trend in housing communities governed by homeowners associations due to a host of reasons.

Compared to single-family homes, condos are generally less expensive.

That's particularly true in areas where condo speculation once ran rampant, including Florida, Nevada, California and other areas which are now loaded with bargains not seen in years. Cheaper prices make condos cheaper to operate as a vacation home, because property taxes, homeowners insurance and utility bills cost less.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported that in November, a 13-month supply of condos had swamped the market. That was the biggest backlog since NAR began keeping condo statistics in 1999. The National Association of Home Builders expects the oversupply to last through 2009.

Townhomes and condos are also easy on your back.

Landscaping chores are managed not by you, but by the homeowners association. And, given the average condo has a smaller square footage footprint than the average single-family home, keeping the interior spic and span is easier too. Again, if your property is a vacation home, you'll spend much less time

CONTINUED >>>
 


 
         

 



Upcoming Island Calendar of Events

45TH ANNUAL MERRIE MONARCH HULA FESTIVAL
March 30 - April 5, 2008
The premiere hula festival. See the finest hula halaus (schools) perform both kahiko (ancient) and auwana (contemporary) hula in a competition that draws thousands to Hilo every year. Hotels and car rentals book early (some hotels are already fully booked) and performances are packed. Contact Merrie Monarch Office direct for early ticket purchase information: (808) 935-9168 between 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. (Hawaii time).

MA LALO O KA PO LANI (UNDER THE NIGHT'S SKY)
Date: Every 3rd Saturday of Each Month
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Place: Mauna Kea Visitor Information Station An innovative program of cultural experiences shared by members of our Hawaiian communities followed by the regular evening stargazing program. Call: (808) 961-2180 or visit their site.

CULTURAL DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM
Date: January through September (Call Park Headquarters for Date)
Time: 9:00 a.m. - Noon
Place: Puukohola Heiau National Historic Site, Kawaihae, S. Kohala
Cultural demonstration programs on Hawaiian crafts. Other special Hawaiian programs are presented throughout the year. Footpath, guided and self-guided tours, exhibits and interpretive talks, bird watching. Call: (808) 882-7218 or visit their site.

HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK EVENTS:

AFTER DARK IN THE PARK
Date: 2 or 3 Tuesdays per month
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Kilauea Visitor Center Auditorium
After Dark in the Park is a series of free evening programs on topics of geology, biology, Hawaiian culture and history. Call: (808) 985-6014 or visit their site.

RANGER-LED PROGRAMS
Date: Daily
Ranger-led walks and hikes enrich your knowledge of the Park's resources and Hawaiian culture. Walks may be wheelchair accessible or may be longer hikes. The daily schedule of ranger presentations is posted each morning at 9:00 a.m. in the Kilauea Visitor Center. Call: (808) 985-6000 or visit their site.

VOLCANO ART CENTER
Date: Ongoing
Place: Kilauea, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
The Volcano Art Center is a nonprofit, tax-exempt, educational organization created in 1974 to promote, develop and perpetuate the artistic and cultural heritage of Hawaii's people and environment through activities in the visual, literary and performing arts. Under a cooperating agreement with the National Park Service, Volcano Art Center presents ongoing programs in the Park. Call: (808) 967-8222 or visit their site.

For additional Island events, see the Big Island Calendar of Eco-Cultural Events.
 


 

Enroll Today!

Kelly's Blog is now available.
Read online, RSS feed, or receive easy email notifications of new posts. Just use the handy Subscribe Here links in the blog's right hand column.


 


 

Quick Search -
Hawaii Real Estate


Quick Search for Big Island Real Estate, including Featured Listings and options to search by price, area, features, new listings and more.
 

 


 

Wondering What
Your Home is Worth?
Let us show you






Daily News and Advice

Read about the events shaping the Real Estate market today, find current interest rates, or browse the extensive library of advice and how-to articles written by some of the top experts in Real Estate. Updated each weekday.
 


 

More Articles


 
February Round Up: Rates Jump Upward
 

 
How To Stop ID Theft Cold
 

 
Use Home Equity Protection
 

 
Super-Sized Homes Shrinking
 


 

Timing Is Everything: When And How To Move

In the next few months making a move can become increasingly more complicated say industry experts.

"June to September is really known as the high season for the moving industry," says John Bisney, Director of Public Relations for the American Moving and Storage Association (AMSA).

It's a popular time because kids are out of school and people are trying to get the move done before the children have to return to class.

"So if you can avoid moving during June to September you're probably going to get better service and have more options," Bisney.

However, Bisney says, "If you do have to move between June to September, then it's better to move in the middle of the month and the middle of the week as opposed to doing it at the end of the month when everybody wants to do it."

AMSA certifies movers and holds them accountable to higher standards and a code of ethics. The association says most people don't take moving very seriously and they assume that everything will go alright. But Bisney says careful consideration is a must when moving. "Because people don't move that many times, maybe it's their first move,

CONTINUED >>>

 


When Selling Your Home, Using Scents Makes Sense!

Even if now doesn't seem to be the ideal time to sell your home, you can take heart in knowing that small actions may make a difference in getting your home sold.

"Scentmosphere" isn't exactly new but it is rapidly becoming a way to attempt to attract buyers.

"When buyers walk into a house before they actually see anything in that house, because they breathe, they are smelling. So they are actually getting an impression, whether it's conscious or subconscious, of your home -- just by the way it smells," says Rick Ruffolo, senior vice president of brand, marketing, and innovation for Yankee Candle Company.

So, right now take a deep breath. What kind of "smellment" is your home making?

Choosing to proactively make a statement in the way your home smells is just another step in helping to sell your home faster. It's the next step after curb appeal. Ruffolo says curb appeal gets buyers in the door but then they see and smell your home and begin to decide if this is the home for them.

"If it's a vacant home

CONTINUED >>>

 



Kelly H. Moran, CCIM, CIPS, REALTOR®
E-mail: Kelly@hilo-brokers.com
Web: http://www.hilo-brokers.com
Office: 808-969-9400 x11
Toll Free: 800-769-4456 x11
Mobile: 808-938-5757
Fax: 808-969-7900

 
Hilo Brokers, Ltd.
808-969-9400
400 Hualani St.
Bldg 21
Hilo, Hawaii, 96720
 


Equal Housing Opportunity