Hilo Lei Day Festival Sponsors

Our Sponsors

Our programs are made possible by the following sponsors and supporters:

Our 2018 Fiscal Sponsor is Paradise Ponies, dba Carousel of Aloha

Carousel of Aloha

We receive major funding from:

Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority Kūkulu Ola Program

Experiences of Hawaii HTA
Kūkulu Ola helps perpetuate Hawaiian culture, traditions and language in communities statewide
LeiManu Designs and Malama Torches
LeiManu Designs and Malama Torches creates custom lighting fixtures for indoor and outdoor, for use with natural gas, propane, solar, and electric.

 

KapohoKine Adventures, is dedicated to using sustainable tourism to preserve and protect Hawaiian open space and legacy farm holdings, as well as maintaining a carbon-neutral footprint while still providing the best tour experience possible. By developing relationships with local farms and landholders, they have acquired access to special places normally off-limits to visitors.

And Additional Support from:

Basically Books
After 32 years in Downtown Hilo, Basically Books is proud and excited to announce our move to a new location. We haven’t moved far, only a mile and a half down the road. Now near Banyan Drive and Ken’s, Basically Books is offering the same great products and the same great service in a brand new location.
Ke Ola Magazine
‘Ke Ola’ is a locally owned bimonthly magazine for people who love Hawaiʻi Island—whether they live here full-time, part-time, or dream of being here some day soon. It is Hawai‘i Island’s only culture and lifestyle magazine—featuring inspiring stories about the art, the food, the land, the music, the people, the spirit, and more.
Friends of Liliʻuokalani Gardens
Friends of Liliʻuokalani Gardens was formed to improve and maintain a 24-acre cultural landscape in the heart of Hilo, Hawaii. Among the major goals of the organization are: to promote beauty through ornamental horticulture, floriculture, and arboriculture; to develop a program of education; to improve and advance the aesthetic and physical beauty of Hilo; to disseminate information in the fields of ornamental horticulture, floriculture, arboriculture, and botany; and to develop relationships with other non-profit public gardens in North America.