BLUE HAWAII
We’ve
been busier than a one armed paperhanger traveling this year. We’ve been to England, Fort
Bragg, Oahu,
South Carolina, Italy,
back again to Italy and then
to Kauai and Maui.
We
spent a week in Waikiki at a time share condo.
I haven’t been to Oahu since my Navy days
which is about fifty years ago. Jamie wanted me to see the USS Arizona memorial
among other things. I’d been past Arizona
dozens of times on the aircraft carrier and destroyer but never stopped to see
the memorial.
Well
off we flew to Hawaii
and I was in for a surprise. Actually two surprises. The first surprise was how
much Waikiki had changed. The second was how
much was still the same.
We
did all of the tourist things. Coach tours around the island, foodie tours
around Honolulu, a big luau at the Hawaiian
Village, a catamaran sail around
Waikiki beach, a sunset dinner cruise on a very big boat and then a trip to Pearl Harbor to see Arizona.
We
bought the required tickets to take a boat over to the old battleship. After we
boarded the launch was announced that the dock at the memorial had been damaged
and therefore the memorial was closed. Thanks a lot bureaucrats. So I was
motored around Arizona
as I had dozens of times before. We were in Hawaii for a week and there was an ABC store
on the street level of the condo building so all in all, it was still a very good visit.
On
December 29 we boarded a Hawaiian Air jet and flew to Kuai’i. I had been to
Oahu and the big island
of Hawaii but never to
Kuai’i. Kuai’I was a blast. It wasn’t crowded like Oahu
and very green. In fact it’s called the garden island. We stayed in another
time share and drove all around the island in a rental car. As we were pulling
out of the Dollar Rent a Car place at the airport there was a chicken standing
right next to the security lady at the gate of the lot. I said “Oh look, a
chicken”. She gave me a funny look and off we drove. Little did I know that on
Kauai’I there are thousands of feral chickens running around. At no time is a
chicken not in sight. They are everywhere. Big really beautiful, colorful
roosters and their hens with their chicks. We drove all over the island and had
one hell of a nice time.
We
went to an old rehabbed sugar plantation and spent time there at a rum tasting
and took a ride on the old diesel powered narrow gauge sugar train. A stop at
Hanoi Hanna’s, AKA Hilo Hattie’s was a must. We spent six days in the town of Kapa’a.
A
quick fifteen minute jet flight took us then to Maui.
We stayed in a remodeled suite the was once an Embassy Suite. I love Embassy
Suites and stayed at one when I traveled when ever there was one located where
I had traveled so I was more than OK with it. We were in Kaanapali
Beach
and took walks down the beach, toured the Island
in our rental car and took the Holiday Express on the sugar train, an old
narrow gauge steam train complete to Santa’s village where we got cookies and
milk along with all of the other kids. A drive to Hana was a must do. The legendary road to Hana
is only 52 miles from Kahului, It's fraught with narrow one-lane bridges,
hairpin turns and incredible island views. The Hana Highway (HI-360) has 620 curves and
59 one lane bridges. We went to the town of Paia and strolled around town and ended up at
Mama’s Fish House and what a delightful experience that was.
There was a day trip to Lanai’I on a sixty two foot
catamaran. We spent the day on a beach and had a motor tour of the metropolis of
Lana’I City. Larry Ellison owns 98% of the island and since the pineapple
industry has collapsed, he has been the island’s sugar daddy.
We stayed in Kaanapoli Beach for six days and then moved to the
Pioneer Inn at the harbor in Lahina. The inn is in the National Registry of
Historic buildings. It was built in 1901 and is a three star Best Western
Hotel. It is literally feet from the harbor’s wharf.
Two day before Christmas, my son Dave and his wife Amy
flew in to Maui and we spent two days with
them. We went to another rehabbed sugar plantation for lunch and it was
fantastic. The next day we met at The Lahina Yacht Club for lunch. The LYC is
very exclusive but Dave is a member of the Long Beach YC we got in. Decent food
but another Maui great view. The same evening,
Christmas Eve, we had dinner at Duke’s back at Kaanapoli Beach.
Very good food and, guess what, another great view. We ate outdoors on the
beach.
At ten PM Christmas Day, we flew back to good old Long Beach.
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