For the environment
Advertiser Staff
HUI NALU RECYCLING — Bring scrap metal, appliances, car parts, newspaper, cardboard, HI 5¢ containers, car batteries, green waste, old tires, usable clothing and household items, and other recyclable items to Maunalua Bay boat ramp in Hawai'i Kai 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, to benefit Hui Nalu Canoe Club. Volunteers and van/tuck drivers are needed. Call Rene Mansho at 306-1876, Lyla Berg at 586-6510 or Alyssa Miller at 228-0027.
POUHALA MARSH RESTORATION — The Hawai'i Nature Center is restoring Pouhala Marsh in Waipahu. Volunteers are needed to pull pickleweed and mangrove 8:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday. Bring work gloves, water, hat, sunscreen, towel and change of clothes; covered footwear and long pants required. Contact Pauline Kawamata at 955-0100, ext. 18.
GET THE DRIFT AND BAG IT — Join beach cleanup efforts taking place Sept. 16 in observance of International Coastal Cleanup Day. The Friends of Hanauma Bay needs volunteers 8:30-11 a.m. to clean up the beach, park and highway from Keahole Street to the Blowhole. Meet at the upper picnic area next to the new visitors center. The East O'ahu Lifeguard Association will hold a cleanup at Waimanalo Beach Park 3-5 p.m., with community groups, families and individuals invited to participate. Bags, gloves and water provided; prize drawing to follow. To register, call Suzanne Frazer at (808) 393-2168 or Dean Otsuki at (808) 554-2902; or e-mail lifeguard_assoc @yahoo.com. The Sierra Club debris collection will begin at 8 a.m. at Campbell National Wildlife Refuge, Kahuku. Call Arlene Buchholz at 988-9806 or Gwen Sinclair at 753-0528. Maui's Community Work Day program is organizing volunteers to clean shorelines around Maui County and document what they find. Call (808) 877-2524.
MAKIKI WAI HELPERS — The Department of Land and Natural Resources and the Hawai'i Nature Center are looking for help 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Sept. 23 to make trail improvements, remove weeds and plant native plants along the Makiki trail, as part of the Makiki Wai (Watershed Awareness Initiative). Bring long pants, long-sleeved shirt, shoes or boots, gloves, insect repellent, water and lunch. Meet at the Makiki Forestry Baseyard. For directions and information, call 973-9782 or check the Web site www.hawaiitrails.org/trail.asp? TrailID=OA+19+004&island=Oahu.
ROAD TO HANA CLEANUP — The second phase of the Road to Hana Cleanup, from Kaupakalua Road to Kaumahina State Wayside Park, will be on Sept. 23, with volunteers picking up trash, trimming brush and doing other work. Contact Community Work Day Program at (808) 877-2524 or cwdkhb@pixi.com.
WEED & POT CLUB — Maui Nui Botanical Garden's Weed & Pot Club meets 8:30-10:30 a.m. Wednesdays at 150 Kanaloa Ave. in Kahului to work on nursery plants and perform other tasks. Tools, gloves and drinking water provided; bring sunscreen, wear shoes.
KANAHA POND — Join Native Hawaiian Plant Society volunteers at Kanaha Pond Wildlife Sanctuary 7:30-11 a.m. Thursdays for weeding and brush cutting; work also done at Maui Ocean Land Trust wetlands. (808) 572-6338.
MAUI TRAIL CREWS — Na Ala Hele volunteers meet Saturdays, Sundays and Tuesdays to build and clean Maui trails. Leave from Kahului Baseyard at 7:30 a.m.; bring lunch, water and sturdy shoes; tools and transportation provided. (808) 873-3509 or mark.a.peyton@hawaii.gov.
SHOW TURTLES ALOHA — Monitor and protect Hawaiian green sea turtles on O'ahu's North Shore as a volunteer with the Show Turtles Aloha program. Spend a few hours a week educating beachgoers and caring for honu; on-site training provided. www.turtles.org/laniakea.
WAIMEA VALLEY DOCENTS — The Waimea Valley Audubon Center is training volunteers to work as teaching docents alongside field educators in school programs. Must commit to 8:30 a.m.-noon one day a week through December. 638-9199, ext. 210.
Send listings to: For the Environment, P.O. Box 156, Wailuku, HI 96793; cwilson@honoluluadver tiser.com; or fax (808) 242-1520.