Author Archives: Aaron

The Pacific Golden Plover

One of Hawaii’s most commonly seen seasonal visitors is Kolea, The Pacific Golden Plover. These birds migrate from Alaska and spend their winters in the Hawaiian islands. Adults arrive in August, juveniles arrive in October. Plovers are extremely widespread and their arrival in Hawaii marks a seasonal change and to many locals watching the plovers […]

Read More

Na’alehu

The center of activity in Big Island’s Ka’u district, Na’alehu is best known to non-locals as the southernmost town in the United States, but to those who live in Ka’u Na’alehu is known simply as “town”. Na’alehu is tiny, but this small town far away from the big cities is the best place to experience […]

Read More

Pahala

The Northernmost town in Big Island’s district of Ka’u, Pahala is much smaller and quieter than it once was. Originally the center of a bustling sugar cane plantation, Pahala’s location was chosen for three reasons: It sits on a flat plateau on the side of the mountain, it has direct access to a water well, […]

Read More

Namakanipaio Campground

For those who want to experience Hawaii Volcanoes National Park while camping, Namakanipaio campground is the easiest and most convenient way to do so. Sitting 31.5 miles south of Hilo, Namakanipaio is only a 1/2 mile walk from the Jaggar Museum on the edge of Kilauea’s Halemaumau crater. Volcano sits at an elevation of 4000 […]

Read More

Akaka Falls State Park

Fifteen miles northwest of Hilo, tucked away in the heart of Hamakua is the most accessible large waterfall found on the island: Akaka Falls. Far from being the largest in the state, (that title goes to the 2,953ft Olo’upena Falls on Molokai) Akaka falls is still a massively grandiose sight with a plunge of 442 […]

Read More

Mark Twain’s Monkeypod Tree in Waiohinu

In 1866 a 31-year-old Mark Twain spent four months in Hawaii. Three of those months were spent on the Big Island where Twain rented a horse and “Ransacked the island” for his dispatches back to the Sacramento Daily Union on the mainland. In June of 1866 he visited Ka’u and planted a Monkeypod tree in […]

Read More

Punalu’u (Black Sand Beach)

For those that have never seen a black sand beach, Punalu’u is an eye-opening stop on the road from Volcano to south point. However, if you’ve seen other black sand beaches you may be unimpressed by this, the most heavily touristed area in Big Island’s Ka’u district. Unlike other often remote black sand beaches this […]

Read More

Waiohinu

Sitting just 2 miles west of Na’alehu, the historic town of Waiohinu is a mere shell of its former self. Driving through this miniscule community one would have no idea that this area has supported human activity longer than anywhere else in Hawaii. It’s believed that the polynesian settlers made their first landfall near Ka […]

Read More

Big Island Coffee

Hawaii is the only state in the U.S. that grows coffee and Big Island produces more coffee than anywhere else. Most coffee consumed on island is grown here as well. The high cost of living and operating a farm in Hawaii has kept large coffee companies out. Because small farms can’t compete with low-cost bulk […]

Read More

Ocean View

Hawaiian Ocean View, referred to by most simply as Ocean View, sits on the southern coast of Hawaii’s Big Island. Deemed “The world’s largest subdivision”, it hosts more than 10,500 1-acre lots and over 150 miles of paved roads. Ocean view is the fastest growing community in Ka’u. Cut through the lava desert and ohia […]

Read More