Saturday, April 16, 2011

Monday on the Western Shore

Day two, Monday, in Kauai was spent in exploring the comparatively arid western shore. It was a beautiful sunny day! We drove past fields of coffee plants along the Coffee Highway and stopped at the Hanapepe Valley Lookout. Amazingly this beautiful serene place was the location of the bloodiest battle known to have taken place on Kauai.

We drove through Hanapepe which once had the reputation of being Kauai's wildest town after being settled by opium smoking Chinese rice farmers in the mid 1800s. Our exploration took us to the mouth of the Waimea River and the spot where Captain Cook set foot on Hawaii in January 1778.

In the distance we could just make out the private island of Ni'ihau.

After much searching, we finally found the overgrown remains of a Russian fort built in 1816....

...before making our way to the impressive Menehune Ditch, a smooth, lined irrigation ditch built by the original "native Hawaiians" around 300 AD.


The stones which came from a quarry more than six miles away were cut to fit smoothly together.


We crossed the Waimea Swinging Bridge....


...lingering to view the Wiamea River. The river is full of sediment that dyes the water red.

These children weren't too happy to see us trying to photograph their warm up exercises prior to their river play. They were such cute kids we couldn't resist snapping a picture.

We took the steep Waimea Canyon Drive from Waimea, a 4,000-foot elevation rise to the summit.

The views were incredible!


Waimea Canyon


Waipo'o Falls

Our pet dragon.:)

Disappointingly, dense clouds blocked the views at Kalalau and Pu'u Kils Lookouts. The latter was supposedly one of the greatest views in the Pacific. I guess we'll have to go back.:)

We traveled back down the mountain and headed to the beaches of Polihale State Park. The muddy, potholed road we followed for the last four miles was not particularly pleasant but we made it!

What we could see of the fifteen miles of uninterrupted beach was spectacular--from the 100 foot high dunes to the magnificent Na Pali cliffs. The Hawaiians believed that the cliffs at the end of Polihale Beach were the jumping off point for spirits leaving this world.
The surf was wild.

On the way back to the B&B, we stopped at Jo-Jo's shack in Waimea for shave ice. It was deliciously refreshing!


By the time we got cleaned up it was late and we were hungry! We ordered takeout at No. 1 Chinese Food in Kaleheo. The Chinese woman who took our order didn't speak English very clearly. We understood her to say that macaroni salad and rice came with each entree. Macaroni salad with Chinese food? We turned down the macaroni salad but she insisted on replacing it with extra rice. We tried to explain that we didn't want extra rice either but to no avail. When we opened the boxes of food at the B&B, we discovered enough rice for nine of us! The food tasted great, however.

1 comment:

deej said...

Day two . . . fun! You two are quite the adventurers!! You inspire me . . . I must get my Hawaii blog up and going - have been trying to decide whether to do it as a smilebox or just bite the blog bullett (which I seem to not like!) Miss you girlfriend!!