Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hawaii. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Hiking in Hawaiian Gardens








On the South shore of Kaua'i, on the banks of the Pacific, are McBryde Garden and Allterton Garden. Two of five gardens comprising the National Tropical Botanical Garden (NTBG) network, the gardens are a dream for botanists. Thousands of species of plants make up the largest collection of native Hawaiian species with many threatened or endangered. The gardens are open to the public, but children under age 8 are not welcome at Allterton Garden (Hint to Allterton staff: put that in your brochure instead of showing pictures of kids crawling on the cool trees with amazing, giant roots!)

Since we couldn't get into Allterton Garden to see the cool trees where dinosaurs laid their eggs in the Jurassic Park movie, we went to McBryde Garden instead.  From the website: "McBryde Garden is nestled in the picturesque and historical Lāwa`i Valley. The site of the first garden of the NTBG, the Lāwa`i Valley was chosen for its diversity of climate, soils, and topography. The area affords a kaleidoscope of distinct micro-environments which are cool, hot, wet, dry, lake, cliff or meadow."

A tram escorts guests 10-15 minutes into the garden, where you can walk along a small, gentle stream for 90 minutes before the driver returns to take you back to the Visitor's Center. Alex loved it. He climbed along the rocks, threw stones into the stream, ran through the open meadow and declared it a "great hike." Serene loved it because she could follow her brother without getting into too much trouble. Other than enjoying the delight of the children, I was bored to death. Maybe February isn't the blooming season or I just don't have the passion for plants to appreciate the diversity of flora, but I've seen far better blooms at every other Garden I've ever visited -- ever! I expected more about of a Hawaiian tropical garden.  Shouldn't that be like the Garden of Eden, after all?

Trees we didn't get to see at Allterton Garden.

Monday, February 11, 2013

90+ miles of coasts and dozens of waterfalls




 





The Grand Canyon of the Pacific





 
Waimea Canyon State Park on the western side of the island of Kaua'i is often referred to as the Grand Canyon of the Pacific. The narrow, winding road is 18 miles with multiple turn-offs to photograph the beautiful vistas. Waimea is the Hawaiian word for reddish water which eroded the soil leaving the dirt looking very red. The small island of Niihau, a nearly uninhabited island of the state, can be viewed as the mountain climbs into the canyon. Its a must-see trip for Kaua'i tourists.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Swimming pools, beaches and ponds in Kauai

 


 






If this sounds like an advertisement for the Marriott Resort in Kaua'i, then so it be it. They deserve it. There is nothing special about the rooms. The food wasn't great. But, the 5 Star pools cannot be beat. The resort boasts the largest single level outdoor pool in the State of Hawaii. It is just foot steps from the Kalapaki beach, a small inlet cove surrounded by tall hills with a narrow opening calming waves so they ripple gently into shore.The views of the pools and the beach are stunning morning, new and night.

The children's pool is not quite 2 feet at its deepest, and even newborns can splash in about 6 inches of water at the shallow end. Its heated to nearly 90 degrees so even on a cool, winter February morning, children can wade and stay warm. Serene screamed, cried, fussed, and kicked for all 5 hours, 34 minutes of flying time en route from Los Angeles to the little island. One passenger offered me Benadryl to drug her and I buried my head in the seats hoping to never see anyone on the flight ever again. [That didn't quite work out when we ran into friends of friends in the row immediately in front of us.] But what made the whole miserable trip worth it was the slide at the kiddie pool. The perfect size for Alex and Serene, both kids took at least a hundred trips down the water slide during our four day stay. The rest of Kauai is over-rated. (I'm a Maui-girl at heart.) But, the smiles on the kids in swimming pools were as wide as Hawaii's endless horizons.

At the entrance to the hotel lobby is a giant pond fully stocked with hundreds of large Koi. At 9am daily, guests can watch and join in the feeding as the fish wiggle up the edges of the pond just inches from nibbling little toes.



The Fish Pond