Hawaii News Now
North Shore farm invites public to smell world’s rarest plumeria flowers
Published: May. 21, 2023 HawaiiNewsNow
By Annalisa Burgos
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - Business is blooming at Little Plumeria Farms on Oahu’s North Shore.
“This one is actually called Hawaiian Rose for two reasons. The fragrance actually smells like a rose. And just the way it twirls open. It’s got that gold color. It’s super good for making leis,” said Clark Little, one of three generations who run the 20-acre Haleiwa farm.
This year, the family mark a big anniversary. For 50 years, patriarch Jim Little quietly cultivated a budding empire.
His son Clark, a renowned surf photographer, and grandson Dane convinced him to open up to public tours – sharing aloha for flowers fit for royalty.
“When King Kamehameha or Duke Kahanamoku when they put leis, they put plumeria, because it’s special, it’s fragrant, it lasts long. And so it has so much history, it’s not a native, but it has so much history in Hawaii, that it’s cool to be able to spread the aloha, share how we grow plumeria, agriculture,” Clark Little said.
Clark and Dane give HNN a tour of some of the rare hybrid varieties of plumeria they cultivate. It’s a labor of love. A typical plumeria plant can take 2-3 years before it begins to flower.
“He has hundreds of different hybrid trees. They’re called, you know, JL varieties, Jim Little right. So he puts his stamp on there for JL,” he said.
From Hawaiian Fire to Hawaiian Coral – Metallica to Makaha Sun – Ruffles to Lilikoi – each has its own unique colors, shape, smell, and texture.
Among the aromas of baby powder, cinnamon, perfume, peaches, even Pez candy, some aren’t so sweet.
“Sometimes you can get something a little bit pungent,” Dane Little said.
We smell one variety that has a sewer-like scent. The Littles say they likely won’t give it a name.
The family identify seven or eight new varieties each year and decide on names together. Each family member has their own rare hybrid named after them.