The Hawaiâi Department of Land and Natural Resources has apologized for cutting down a stand of coconut trees in Kalalau Valley on Kauaâi.
On August 21, Kauaâi resident Skylar Mallas-Darby met a woman crying in Kalalau Valley.
âWe had heard saws and thought that was weird,â Mallas-Darby told Aloha State Daily. âThen we see this woman in tears saying they destroyed these coconut trees.â
Soon, Mallas-Darby found the aftermath of what DLNR would later call an âunfortunate and grievousâ action: about 14 coconut trees felled and left strewn about the valley, including several lying across the Kalalau Stream.
âIt looked like an act of violence,â Mallas-Darby said, expressing shock that the trees had been left discarded instead of being properly disposed of.
DLNR State Parks Assistant Administrator Alan B. Carpenter told ASD that staff had indeed cut down âapproximately a dozen young coconut treesâ in NÄpali Coast State Wilderness Park.
âThis was a well-intentioned action taken by staff who were trying to address several long-standing problems related to people illegally camping, building and planting in the valley,â Carpenter said via email. âHowever, the execution was unfortunate and grievous.â
Mallas-Darby said some of the trees served as a memorial for a woman who had died in the park, and said DLNR had been on a âpower trip.â She said DLNR agents â presumably of the departmentâs Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement â were conducting permit checks, looking for people camping without permits.
âThe destruction of the valleyâs getting worse and worse,â Mallas-Darby said. âThis is one of the natural wonders of the world.â

Mallas-Darby said the incident has generated public outcry on social media, and Kauaâi County Councilwoman Fern Holland told ASD she has also reached out to DLNR for answers.
âRegardless of the intentions, there are far better ways to address the important issues of public health, safety, and protection of park resources than to cut down trees in a wilderness park,â Carpenter said. âResponsible staff has been reprimanded and counseled, and State Parks administrators will reinforce policies to prevent such incidents from recurring.
âOur mission is to protect and share Hawaiâi's natural and cultural resources, and this was a failure in that regard,â Carpenter said.
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