TEDxMaui - Dr. Arthur Medeiros - Auwahi: Hope on a Hawaiian Volcano

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 15

  • @RAEchelRunning
    @RAEchelRunning 3 года назад +2

    I can't help but tear up for sorrow and for hope thank YOU for being EARTH stewards.... and teaching the little ones. Take care of our Mother Earth and love that, "look at the man who takes care of the tree'. All the beauty of diversity. Gratitude andinspired from the borderlands of Arizona. Mexico.

  • @saratekula
    @saratekula 12 лет назад +4

    This man is one of my Maui heroes.

  • @mauimina
    @mauimina 8 лет назад +2

    Art so nice to revisit and watch this amazing presentation you articulated of collaborating and cooperating with the natural environment. It was an honor to be a fellow presenter at the first TEDx Maui. My only regret was in preparing my presentation for the 7 minutes of what the organizers first said I had then to find out the day of they were giving me fifteen threw my whole rhythm off. Oh well life in the big city! It is great work your doing Art! Mahalo Nui Loa IMUA!

  • @itskitty808
    @itskitty808 4 года назад +2

    One of the most captivating talks I have heard!

  • @kerricorser4562
    @kerricorser4562 6 лет назад +1

    The connectivity of all things...Mahalo dude for harmony restored one square at a time. More please.

  • @kahakelii
    @kahakelii 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful Art.....beautiful.....

  • @stefanigwen5263
    @stefanigwen5263 8 лет назад +3

    Yes, you are a hero :) Thank you

  • @angrykumu8147
    @angrykumu8147 2 года назад +1

    Notes:
    wahi pana “sacred places”
    arthur made a perfect square, “who waters that square”
    “uluwehi” healthy ecosystem; verdant growth
    “Unbalanced structure”
    Hala pēpē - there’s more of those in the acres than there are in the rest of Maui
    Epiphany - no one ever helped the mountains as much as the mountain helped them
    “I used to fear them because I’m shy, but now I look forward to see them. Because it actually gives me hope in humanity. When I meet those 30-40 people, it makes me realize that Maui cares.”
    ʻŌlelo noʻeau 18:40

  • @kaleopodcasts3370
    @kaleopodcasts3370 2 года назад +1

    12:10 PM Pōʻahā 14/x/2021
    Notes:
    Birds ruled Hawaiʻi in old days
    2:00 Honeycreepers
    (Examples of birds: Nēnē, Akohekohe)
    2:45 Non-native vegetation is shown in red
    3:40 “almost all eroded water-shed lands in the Hawaiian Archipelago occur on Maui”
    4:00 "Information is a dangerous thing."
    Poʻohuli - as soon as they were discovered, they were on the brink of extinction
    4:45 - Place of Auwahi
    5:00 Joseph “Pohaku” Rock - from Austria; first one who said, “What’s happened here in Hawaiʻi?”. William taught Joseph a lot about the trees.
    5:40 "Diverse forests like Auwahi were the tool boxes of early Hawaiians. They are called wahi pana, sacred places."
    5:55 - Joseph went to china and came back to what they called "museum forests"
    6:35 - antagonistic relationship between ranch owners and biologists
    7:25 - "perfect square" - didn't want people to mistake it as a natural feature.
    8:30 "I'm a expert on dryland forests" "Sometimes plants make a jail break"

  • @RobBuser123
    @RobBuser123 11 лет назад +2

    ...thank you Dr. Medeiros...aloha sir : )

  • @d188p221
    @d188p221 2 года назад

    Great work.

  • @ericluke847
    @ericluke847 11 лет назад +2

    Right on Art!

  • @bubba25151
    @bubba25151 11 лет назад +1

    i find it hard to believe that college students in the 1980s found a species of birds before the hawaiians did, its also hard to believe that during the time the "first hawaiian botanist" lived there was cameras. pacific islanders were botanists and scientists way before that

  • @nealmcauliffe7376
    @nealmcauliffe7376 4 года назад

    Ua Mau ke Ea I Ka Aina I Ka Pono!
    E Hawaii Au!
    Mahalo!
    Aloha No!