AN ONLINE PROJECT SHARING SNAPSHOTS & STORIES ABOUT LIFE IN QUARANTINE
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted everything we knew. Its impact on our world, our community, and our individual lives is profound. There's an indelible mark left on each of us as we continue to shelter safely in our homes and learn to be in this new world.
What is life is like where we are?
Is there anything we will miss when the mandatory stay-at home and safer-at-home orders lift?
Kona Historical Society wants to know. This is our history, our community's story. Everyone's story is important.
Kona Historical Society launched this special online project in the Spring of 2020. The Society is still collecting snapshots and stories about this moment in history. All types of contributions and all voices are welcome. The more stories and photos we have, the greater the picture of how this pandemic affected our diverse community and the more useful in the retelling and understanding for future generations. History, after all, can only be written based on the documentation that exists.
Jack’s Diving Locker is one of the oldest dive shops in the world and is the oldest here in Kona, proudly serving our community for 39 years! Through those decades, we’ve experienced numerous economic, natural disaster and pandemic crisis, but COVID-19 was the first time in JDL history that we had to close our doors for prolonged time. It is definitely the most unique situation we’ve experienced as a business.
Yes. It is true when they say we are all made of stardust. Elements in the human body, from hydrogen, to carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus, and more, come from remnants of supernovae - stars that exploded and ejected material out into space. In astronomy, one of the profound life lessons we learn from the cosmos is just how deeply we are all interconnected with the universe, the world, and each other.
This important connection has in many ways been magnified by COVID-19.
The Marine Mammal Center is committed to the conservation and care of endangered Hawaiian monk seals during the pandemic as an essential business.
I remember driving along Ali'i Drive and feeling like I was in a time warp. It was the first time I've seen so few people on the landscape. Everyone retreated in their homes, left town nearly empty. I remember wondering if this is what it was like in my parent's day.
Like everyone else, COVID has affected our lives in a multitude of ways. Luckily, neither of us was affected employment wise, and so weʻve been all to live a relatively normal life, albeit mostly at home. That has provided me with an opportunity to concentrate on trying to fulfill a goal that Iʻve aspired to meet ever since we moved to Captain Cook, and that is to grow at least five percent of the food we eat.
We will ALWAYS remember what we are here for: to provide the best in patient care no matter what.
I will always remember this honu finding refuge along the desolate shore of Kaloko-Honokōhau National Historical Park.
I remember this one day at school, while I was sanitizing my hands and cleaning my desk, a girl called me “over dramatic.”
What I will remember is that several hundred students were scheduled to visit our sites when the shutdown happened.
What I will remember are the total vulnerability and uncertainty locally, globally, and even in our own home.
In such a weird dark time, here is a ray of sunshine: Hulalimaikalā, the sun that sparkles and shines.
A couple of weeks ago, we signed refi docs at a notary’s house in north Kona with wild chickens running around, bottles of bug spray and hand sanitizer resting on the table.
Dear Amory and Alasdair,
Have you heard of something called the pandemic? Sometimes Nana and Papa call it Coronovirus or Covid 19.
In the midst of the pandemic, we moved our family and our household goods from the mainland to retire in Hawaii. There were periods of uncertainty and fear.
I will remember the onions. Up until very recently, I was the person who went to the store for an onion. This specific item was often needed, yet never purchased in multiples.
Coming from a dysfunctional family and growing up in a foster home on Oahu in the 1940s, mom never talked much about her early years. She vaguely talked about it but only when asked.
As a professional photographer, I'm always finding beauty in what surrounds me. But now in quarantine, I'm rediscovering the wonders and activities around my house.
With hours being severely cut at my job, I’m able to spend more time gathering fish for family and friends.
My daughter Kawaipōmaikaʻi was carried and born during the 2018 eruption of Kīlauea, when Kona’s clear blue skies were enveloped in thick, muggy, gray vog.
I was on a lifetime adventure when COVID-19 closed the world's doors. I had been at sea for 50 days. We saw the east coast of South America and the coast of Chile. Antarctica was a feast for the eyes; all 7 continents now visited.
Something I will remember from this time in history is delivering food for the #ShowAlohaChallenge.
Like many, this health crisis has turned my ohana's routine completely upside down. Working from home with our very energetic, daredevil 3-year-old son and our equally rambunctious, sidekick escape artist Jack Russell, without access to preschool, play dates, babysitters, and even grandparent dates is quite an adventure
Since moving to Kona, I have spent time pondering what my Great Great Grandma Lena might think of my life and how she might respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. She was born and raised in Kealakekua and left in 1918 at age 18 as a stowaway on a ship bound for San Francisco.
Over this time, I graduated college with two degrees! One in communication and the other in Spanish.
What I will remember most about my quarantine experience is being eternally grateful, every day, for living in Hawaii with my family. No two days are ever the same.
The memories that will likely stick with me will no doubt be the sensory experiences of fear and uncertainty that naturally bubbled to the surface during quarantine.
MAHALO!
We're incredibly grateful to all who have contributed so far to this project. We understand the vulnerability that is sometimes placed or felt in the act of storytelling, especially when sharing details from one's personal lives and during times of challenge. Your words, observations and emotions about your daily life during this time, as well as the images you've chosen to share, are meaningful, honestly beautiful, and powerful.
We hope all of the stories and photos shared here, as well as on the Society’s Facebook Page and in our newsletter, inspire you to record and preserve the events unfolding around you. If you would like to add your story, have a question, or need help with a submission, email Community Engagement Manager Carolyn Lucas-Zenk at carolyn@konahistorical.org.