A garden starts with planting just one seed, but when Joyce and Ed Doty retired to Kilauea, Kauaʻi, and began their garden in the 1980s, they never imagined it would grow into Na ʻAina Kai, a 240-acre botanical garden and sculpture park that is now open to the public. Nai ʻAina Kai, meaning “land by the sea,” offers visitors the chance to explore a multitude of beautiful gardens and one of the largest collections of bronze sculptures in the United States. It also includes a koi-filled lagoon, a forest of 60,000 hardwood trees, miles of trails, and a beautiful secluded white sand beach.
Limahuli Garden
Limahuli Garden on Kauai. Learn more at
Limahuli Garden and Preserve
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Kauai
Kauaʻi or Kauai (/kə.ˈwaɪ.iː/; Hawaiian: [kɔuˈwɐʔi]) is geologically the oldest of the main Hawaiian Islands. With an area of 562.3 square miles (1,456.4 km2), it is the fourth largest of the main islands in the Hawaiian archipelago, and the 21st largest island in the United States. Known also as the Garden Isle, Kauaʻi lies 105 miles (169 km) across the Kauaʻi Channel, northwest of Oʻahu. This island is the site of Waimea Canyon State Park. The United States Census Bureau defines Kauaʻi as Census Tracts 401 through 409 of Kauaʻi County, Hawaiʻi, which is all of the county except for the islands of Kaʻula, Lehua, and Niʻihau. The 2010 census population of Kauaʻi (the island) was 67,091, with the largest town by population being Kapaʻa.
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Mayor Carvalho's State of the County Address 2016
Filmed by: Hawaii Stream The Original Local Streaming Media Team! CC-Closed captions available.