Skip to content

Hoʻopili ʻAi – Uniting Keiki & Hawaiʻi Food Crops

Farm to school connects kids with their food and with the ‘āina, that which feeds and nourishes us all – fostering the next generation of healthy, caring stewards.

Earth Month 2022 ‘Ulu Tree Campaign

Hawaiian Electric partners with the Hawai‘i ‘Ulu Co-op and Hawai‘i Farm Trails to help local farmers plant ʻulu trees and sequester carbon through agroforestry!

Discover excitement in an unexpected part of your plate

If you're an adventurous eater, we're on a mission to show you why the most overlooked part of your plate is actually the most important: staples.

Squash Sustainability and Agroforestry

Palaʻai—also known as pumpkin or winter squash—is one of the oldest known crops. Read on to learn how palaʻai fits into different traditional growing models around the world, offering unique benefits to farmers. 

A Regenerative Circle: From Crops to Compost

Learn about the "full circle" composting partnership between Māʻona Community Garden and the Hawaiʻi ʻUlu Co-op – and how you can get involved!  

Combat Climate Change with ‘Ulu Agroforestry

’Ulu is one of the most climate-friendly, nutrient-dense foods you can put on your plate. This is the unique carbon-storing nature of breadfruit agroforestry.

Turn our compostable insulation to animal bedding

Our products come in eco-friendly packaging with 100% compostable insulated liner. Using the liner as animal bedding is one of many ways to responsibly re-use.

Make your own hypoallergenic pillow, easy DIY

Have your own homemade pillow made out of Kodiakooler’s 100% compostable insulated liner-- perfect for sleeping, airplane travel, and as a seat cushion.

Kodiakooler - Eco-friendly insulated packaging

We use 100% compostable material when shipping our frozen ʻulu & perishable products. Learn how our shipping practices reflect our values of malama ʻāina.

ROOTS-TO-REEF: Breadfruit Trees Protect Our Oceans

Explore how regenerative breadfruit agroforestry can affect ridge-to-reef connections and protect our oceans.  
Back to top