Kualoa Ranch Hawaii, Inc.

Kupukupu Internship - ʻĀina Intern

Kualoa Ranch Hawaii, Inc.  •  Kaneohe, HI (Onsite)  •  7 days ago
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Job Description

Join Kualoa Ranch Hawai‘i, where history, culture, and natural beauty come together in one of the most extraordinary places in Hawai‘i. With diverse operations and a deep commitment to our land, community, visitors, and each other, we honor our proud legacy while building an exciting future. Be part of our ‘ohana and share the spirit of Hawai‘i with the world.

Location: On-Site — Kāneʻohe, Hawaiʻi (Kualoa Ranch)
Relocation Package: None
Schedule: Full-Time. Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM
Internship Dates: July 6 , 2026 – August 14, 2026

ABOUT KUPUKUPU
Kupukupu is the name of a native Hawaiian fern that grows in wahi pana, sacred, storied places. It is one of the first plants to regenerate after disturbance, signaling that the land is alive and healing. Its root word, kupu, means to sprout, to grow from the earth. Kualoa Ranch named this program Kupukupu because it reflects exactly what we ask of our interns: take root in a place that matters, do real work, and grow. In skill, in knowledge, and in connection to this land and its people. Kualoa’s mission is to enrich people’s lives by preserving its sacred lands and celebrating their history. Kupukupu interns are not observers of that mission. They are living it.

Most Agriculture internships in Hawaiʻi stop at the field. Kupukupu Track 1 goes further: from seed to sale, from harvest to plate, from land stewardship to market strategy. Interns learn that a healthy farm and a healthy business are the same thing — and that Hawaiian values are what make both sustainable.

The Diversified Agriculture & Agro-Business Intern traces the full value chain across Kualoa Ranch’s agricultural operations. From soil preparation, planting, and cultivation, through harvest, food safety compliance, and post-harvest processing, into product distribution and direct-to-consumer sales through the Kualoa Grown Market and Food & Beverage channels. Each site is a different business unit. Each week adds a new lens on how the land generates real, sustainable value.

Interns do not observe this. They work it. Alongside full-time staff, they manage crops, process harvests, track yields, grade products, understand input costs, and watch how what they grow becomes what a guest eats. By the end of six weeks, a Kupukupu Track 1 intern understands Kualoa’s land not just as a place to care for, but as a living, operating agro-business rooted in Hawaiian values.

KEY RESPONSIBILITIES
Agricultural Production
• Execute daily farm operations across all site rotations: planting, transplanting, irrigating, weeding, pruning, harvesting, and post-harvest processing.
• Monitor crop health and document observations in a personal field journal: what you planted, what you observed, what you measured.
• Operate hand tools, power tools (weed whackers, pole saws), and light machinery safely per site protocols.
• Assist with aquaculture operations throughout the ranch.
• Apply Integrated Pest Management (IPM) principles; monitor and document pest and disease pressure across crop sites.
• Maintain irrigation systems: inspect, troubleshoot, and log any repairs or adjustments.

Agro-Business Operations
• Track and log harvest data across all sites in Excel, including yield volumes, product quality grades, and input usage.
• Follow full food safety compliance protocols: proper washing, sorting, packing, cold storage, and chain-of-custody documentation.
• Assist with product preparation and staging for the Kualoa Grown Market, F&B delivery, and distribution channels.
• Observe and document production costs and outputs at each site; develop an understanding of basic farm economics.
• Learn how each site’s product is priced, positioned, and sold — and how production decisions affect revenue.
• Understand the relationship between product quality, cultural authenticity, and market value in a premium Hawaiian ag business.

Cultural Stewardship & Brand Connection
• Approach every site through the lens of mālama ʻāina — land stewardship as both ethical responsibility and business foundation.
• Learn the cultural significance of kalo, loʻi systems, and traditional Hawaiian farming practices; understand why cultural authenticity is a market differentiator.
• Participate in Stewardship week as a business education: understand how conservation investment protects the land-based brand that drives Kualoa’s entire enterprise.
• Be able to explain, in plain language, how what you grew this week connects to what a guest will eat, experience, or purchase.
• Contribute to the ʻIke Board each week: one business insight, one land observation, one connection between the two.

Capstone Project
• Choose a business-oriented capstone pathway in Week 1: a market analysis, a cost/yield study, a go-to-market recommendation for a new product, or a process improvement for one business unit.
• Build your project from direct observations, data, and conversations across all five site rotations.
• Submit written milestones each week: topic (W2), methodology approved (W3), findings drafted (W5), full draft (W5 Thursday).
• Present completed capstone to KRH leadership panel in Week 6 with a clear recommendation and supporting data.
• Leave a legacy contribution for future cohorts: a yield data template, a product cost model, a distribution flow map, or a market-ready product description.

Professionalism & Cohort Culture
• Arrive on time, prepared, and ready to work. Your site team is counting on you.
• Communicate clearly with mentors and site leads regarding task progress, yield observations, and any safety concerns.
• Complete a written midpoint self-assessment in Week 4 and participate in a structured mentor feedback meeting.
• Model Kualoa’s values — Aloha, Mālama, Poʻokela, ʻOhana, and Laulima — in every interaction with team, land, and product.

PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS
• Ability to perform sustained manual labor outdoors in hot, humid, rainy, and muddy conditions.
• Ability to lift and carry up to 50 lbs. unassisted.
• Frequent bending, kneeling, squatting, and working in uneven terrain.
• Operate hand tools, power tools, and light agricultural machinery safely.
• Comfortable working around small livestock and aquaculture environments.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS
• Current college student or recent graduate. Kamaʻāina applicants strongly encouraged.
• Demonstrated interest in agriculture, agro-business, food systems, environmental science, Hawaiian studies, business, or a related field.
• Willingness to perform physically demanding fieldwork for the full 6 weeks.
• Strong work ethic, attention to detail, and ability to follow protocols consistently.
• Basic computer literacy for data entry and logging (Excel training provided).
• Valid driver’s license preferred.

Preferred
• Prior experience in agriculture, farming, food production, conservation, or a related field (paid or volunteer).
• Interest in food systems, supply chain, sustainable business, or market development.
• Familiarity with Hawaiian agricultural traditions, including kalo cultivation or loʻi systems.
• Experience with data collection, recordkeeping, or farm management software.
• CPR and First Aid certification (or willingness to obtain before program start).

Kualoa Ranch Hawai‘i is a proud equal opportunity employer and maintains a drug-free workplace. We provide equal consideration to all applicants in compliance with local, state, and federal laws.
Kualoa Ranch Hawaii, Inc.

About Kualoa Ranch Hawaii, Inc.

Kualoa is a family-owned enterprise dedicated to enriching lives through the preservation of our land and the celebration of its rich history. Our vision is to serve as a model for environmental stewardship by preserving, protecting, and enhancing Hawaiʻi’s natural beauty and cultural heritage while fostering sustainable recreational and agricultural enterprises that harmonize with the environment. We are committed to sharing our deep respect and care for the natural environment, the unique Hawaiian culture, and the sacred history of Kualoa Ranch.

Established in 1850, Kualoa Ranch spans 4,000 acres, stretching from steep mountain cliffs to the sparkling Pacific Ocean. Located on the northeastern coast of Oʻahu, just 45 minutes from Honolulu, Kualoa's diverse terrain ranges from dense rainforests and wide-open valleys to pristine white sand beaches and lush cliff faces. It is truly a paradise for outdoor enthusiasts, with many areas accessible only by horseback, all-terrain vehicles, or hiking.

Kualoa is also a renowned filming location for numerous television shows and Hollywood movies, including Jurassic Park, Windtalkers, Pearl Harbor, Godzilla, Tears of the Sun, and 50 First Dates. TV series filmed here include both the original and new Hawaii Five-O, Magnum P.I., NCIS: Hawaiʻi, and LOST.

The property is divided into two major areas: the northern section, which includes Kaʻaʻawa Valley, home to most of the movie locations; and the southern section, which features Hakipuʻu Valley, the 800-year-old Moliʻi Fishpond, and Secret Island.

Kualoa is one of Oʻahu's most historically significant destinations and was considered one of the island's most sacred places in ancient times. Come experience the aloha spirit and the unique sense of ʻOhana (family) that Kualoa employees embody.

Industry
Arts & Entertainment
Company Size
51-200 employees
Headquarters
Ka'a'awa, Hawaii
Year Founded
1850
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