“Intimate WV Corps lake in rolling central Appalachian highlands; Little Kanawha River valley; authentic rural West Virginia character; quiet mountain setting”
About This Location
Kona Coffee Living History Farm in Captain Cook, Hawaii is the only working coffee farm in the National Park Service—a 1920s–1945 Japanese immigrant agricultural homestead depicting the experience of Japanese American families who cultivated Kona coffee through the challenging WWII incarceration era. The authentic tin-roofed farmhouse, vintage Japanese American domestic interiors, working coffee mill, and lush Big Island tropical landscape create rare Pacific American agricultural heritage atmosphere for documentary, drama, and productions exploring Japanese American immigrant life in Hawaii. Both interior farmhouse and exterior working farm filming available with NPS authorization. The Big Island's dramatic landscape of volcanic hills, coastal forest, and Pacific Ocean views extends the visual palette. A premier Hawaii film location for Japanese American Pacific heritage storytelling. Filming permits available through Pu'uhonua o Honaunau NHP Superintendent. NPS Special Use Permit required; active agricultural harvest season August–December.
Permit Information
Permit Required
Type
Huntington District - Burnsville Lake Resource Manager
Fee
Huntington District manages. Smaller intimate lake. Rural central WV character. Little Kanawha River valley. Remote from major urban centers.
Contact
(304) 853-2371
Contact Permit Office
📞 LRH-Burnsville@usace.army.mil✉️ https://www.lrh.usace.army.mil/Locations/Burnsville-Lake/Save this to your scout list
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