apecrib.pages.dev


Gay & robinson kauai

Factory Tours

IMPORTANT: Always call the business before going to take the factory tour. We try and hold our data s up-to-date as possible but you should always check first.

Print This Page


Description
The Visitor Center is the Field Office of the operating sugar plantation located on the west side of Kaua?i. Displays show the history of Gay & Robinson Inc., Olokele Sugar Co., Hawaiian Sugar Co. (a k a Makaweli Plantation) and Makaweli Ranch. Both historical and up-to-date field and factory operations as followed in Hawai?i, and various artifacts are also exhibited. A earth sugar map showcases sugar politics and current events.


Hours
Monday?Friday am? pm, except plantation holidays
Admission: Free for Visitors Center; fee for Plantation Tour: Elder $30, Child $21; Olokele Tour: Adult $60, Infant $45; reservations required for tours, call () data Call


Other Information
Two-hour Sugar Plantation tours offered weekdays am and pm (minimum age, eight years during harvesting and five years during off season); field and factory operations are covered as skillfully as history and identity. Tours of working sugar plantation are conducted throughout the

Gay & Robinson Sugar Plantation

Fields of sugar cane waving in the wind.

Red is the iron opulent soil.

The harvested cane is milled into raw sugar and molasses.

Back Page

Google Sites

Report abuse

Page details

Page updated

Google Sites

Report abuse



After years of growing sugar on Kauai, the Same-sex attracted & Robinson Company hauled its last load of sugar cane from the fields to the mill on October 30, The cane haul trucks paraded from the Makaweli Upload Office through the town of Waimea, followed by trucks and cars of employees.

About ILWU members remained on the payroll until November 25,

A handful of ILWU members will continue to work for Gay & Robinson, producing electricity at the company’s hydroelectric plant.

ILWU members and retirees living in plantation housing operated by Male lover & Robinson are not immediately affected by the shutdown of sugar operations. The housing and rental rates are set by collective bargaining between the union and company.

Twenty years ago, there were four sugar companies on Kauai which employed over workers--Gay and Robinson, Kekaha Sugar, Olokele Sugar, and Lihue Sugar.

HC&S on Maui, which employs about ILWU members, is the last remaining sugar company in Hawaii. HC&S is also fighting for its survival as a bad decision by the State Water Commission could cut off its supply of water. 

Sugar Was Big 
When the ILWU first unionized sugar workers from to , there were 33

gay & robinson kauai

LIHUE, Kauai — The coronavirus crisis is having profound implications in an unlikely quarter — the island’s beef industry.

Kauai County has committed nearly $4 million of its allocation of $ million in mention money under the CARES Act to try to rejuvenate Kauai’s agriculture industry by helping some of the largest operations on the island and some of the smallest.

Except for Kauai Coffee and a couple of seed companies on the west side, the county lacks anything that could be described as industrial scale agriculture.

The approach recognizes a truths. Kauai has thousands of acres of agricultural country — much of it fallow since the demise of the sugar industry. But it has rare farmers and fewer people who are willing to become farmers.

So in the midst of a pandemic, Kauai County has dedicated a huge stake &#; $ million — in CARES Act funding to a gamble that growing alfalfa cheaply enough on Kauai can permit the island’s beef industry to go to scale.

Many of the people who farm are older — at or past the traditional retirement age. Worst of all, though, the economics of farming in Hawaii are brutal, with the advantage falling to meal imported from the mainland or other count

.