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I aloha ia nö `o Kanaio Aloha ku`u one hänau `Olu`olu i ke ahe a ka makani Aloha wau iä `oe Lei Pimoe i ka `ehukai E Kanaio puna i ke kai Onaona no kou`ala Aloha wau iä `oe U`i maoli këia `äina He aloha noue Kanaio I ku`u mana`o iä `oe Aloha wau iä `oe Ha`ina `ia mai ana ka puana Aloha ku`u one hänau `Olu`olu i ke ahe a ka makani Aloha wau iä `oe |
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Source: Pandanus Club CD "Ho`okupu", Copyright Pandanus Club 1988 - On their first visit to lower Kanaio, the composer and her husband, Charles Maxwell, Sr., passed the hill Pimoe. Pele was envious of Pimoe, a beautiful mermaid known to entice men with her beauty. Pele, in one of her jealous rages, immortalized Pimoe by turning the mermaid to stone in the eruption of 1790. Sonny Kuaana, born and raised in a grass hale on the beach, related the story of this hill to them. Sonny took them down to the ocean where he was born and showed them how his mother would dry her lauhala leaves in lava mounds built for this purpose. He also showed them the fresh water cave they used for drinking water and the brackish water cave used by the cattle. Sonny showed the composer and her husband his Aumakua, a huge tiger shark that lives in the ocean. When they went onto the papa (reef), he called to his Aumakua, who immediately swam into the shallow water. The composer, a prominent kumu hula in Maui, was so impressed with Kanaio, she wrote this song and dedicated it to Sonny Kuaana.
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