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Pahala has a dry-summer tropical savanna climate with hot daytime temperatures and mild nighttime temperatures year round and a summer dry season. [5] Precipitation peaks during the month of November. On April 27, 1931, the temperature reached 100 °F (37.8 °C) in Pahala, which is the highest temperature recorded in Hawaii.
Hawaii has the eighteenth highest per capita income in the United States of America, at $21,525 (2000). [ citation needed ] Its personal per capita income is $46,034 (2014). [ 1 ] The information is represented in the table below.
Map of the United States with Hawaii highlighted. This is a list of census-designated places in Hawaii. ... West Loch Estate: 5,523 Honolulu: 54 Kahaluu: 5,241 ...
The larger island (on the left when looking from Lanikai) is referred to as Moku Nui and the smaller is Moku Iki, which translates literally to big island and small island. Some Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners note that there was likely a non-generic name given to the islands that have since been lost because neither Moku Nui nor Moku ...
The quake, which occurred at 10:06 a.m. Hawaii time, produced "very strong" shaking in the town of Pahala, with a population of 1,900 on the southern side of the island, as defined by the Modified ...
Wood Valley Temple near Pahala, Hawaii. Wood Valley Temple is a Tibetan Buddhist temple located five minutes above Pahala [1] on the Big Island of Hawaii. [2] Its Tibetan name is Nechung Dorje Drayang Ling (Tibetan: གནས་ཆུང་རྡོ་རྗེ་བྲག་གཡང་གླིང, Wylie: gnas-chung rdo-rje brag-g.yang gling).
Corporate housing projects were built to provide living quarters for staff and added to the community of Pahala. The founders were Peter C. Jones, Charles R. Bishop, J.D. Brewer, and H.A.P. Carter. The Hutchinson Sugar Plantation Co was established in 1868 by Alexander Hutchinson and it was one of the oldest sugar companies on the Big Island.
Route 137 is a state highway in Hawaii County, Hawaii. The highway, known as the Kapoho-Kalapana Road, the Beach Road, or the Red Road, [2] travels along the eastern coast of the island of Hawaii between Kalapana and Kapoho. [1] It passes near Kīlauea and its lava fields, as well as Isaac Hale Beach Park and other protected areas.