Amauulu.com will live here until its website is built and activated.
The Yellow Line is Amauulu Road Amauulu.com is at the top end.
Overview
Amauulu road was built 140 years ago to service sugar cane production. The white outline is the Puueo ahapuaa (district). Only the lower section of Amauulu is paved. Beyond that it is a rock road.
Amauulu.com’s mission is not fully defined yet, but likely involves the three pieces shaded yellow on the right side of the picture. All three pieces are owned by Mahilani Partners LLC and would be owned by Amauulu. The smallest piece (3-2-6-28-4) is about 32 acres, the middle piece (3-6-28-1) is 118 acres. The largest piece (3-2-6-18-8) is zoned conservation resource is about 494 acres. The two pieces outlined are both owned by Bishop Estate, and are also zoned conservation. All three of the shaded lots have interesting features.
28-4
This lot is half field and half Eucalyptus Robusta. The orientation is the more familiar north is up. This lot’s northern boundary is the Pukihai River for most of it’s length.
There are several unusual features on the river including a stone dam that crosses the entire river, and the loop at the eastern end of the lot.
The peninsula/island
The three pictures at the left show how the Pukihai can switch from taking the loop to taking the short cut. Look at the bottom picture closely, and it looks like there is a concrete dam section. The upper left photo is from Google Earth in 2015. The right one in 2018 after a major rain storm. The bottom picture was taken using a drone.
The distance from the concrete to the land on peninsula/island is about ten vertical feet. The stream drops about 20 feet going around the loop.
Lon Hocker
Website & Tech Support and Development