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GUIDES

Trail Running in Hawaii: Best Routes and Races on Each Island

The Waihe’e Ridge Trail on Maui’s west side is one of the clearest illustrations of what trail running in Hawaii actually looks like: a well-groomed path climbing through West Maui Forest Reserve, dramatic ridgeline views over Waihe’e Valley, and enough technical terrain to sort out runners who showed up in road shoes. Hawaii has over 750 running routes across the islands, ranging from flat coastal boardwalks to volcanic ascents with nearly 4,000 metres of gain. That range is the point — each island runs differently, and the right choice depends on your fitness level, how much sun exposure you

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Best Sea Glass Beaches in Hawaii: Where to Hunt for Colorful Coastal Treasures

Glass Beach near Port Allen sits on Kauai’s south shore, and the first thing that surprises most people is the texture underfoot — not sand, but a dense carpet of frosted, marble-sized glass pebbles in brown, green, aqua, and occasional flashes of blue. According to research on Glass Beach’s concentrated sea glass deposits, this is considered one of the most concentrated sea glass deposits in the United States — which goes some way toward explaining why it draws collectors from across the islands. The glass got here through decades of industrial dumping. From the 1940s onward, the area west

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Hawaii Night Sky Photography: Settings, Gear, and Locations for Capturing the Milky Way

At Mauna Kea’s summit, standing at 13,796 feet means you’re above 40% of the Earth’s atmosphere and above 90% of its water vapor — the same conditions that led scientists to build some of the planet’s most significant observatories here. Stars don’t flicker the way they do at sea level; the absence of atmospheric interference makes them resolve into steady, piercing points. That’s a physical difference, not a perceptual one, and it changes what your camera is capable of capturing. Hawaii offers a wider range of night photography options than most visitors realize. The Big Island has Mauna Kea

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Best Tide Pooling Spots in Hawaii: A Family Guide to Rocky Shore Exploration

Shark’s Cove on Oʻahu’s North Shore is the kind of place that makes you realize how much you’ve been missing on the typical beach circuit. When the summer swell drops and the rocky shelves on the cove’s south side come up at low tide, you’re suddenly peering into dozens of interconnected pools dense with butterflyfish, wrasses, and sea urchins — all within a short walk of free roadside parking. Hawaii’s rocky intertidal zone holds a lot more life than the sandy shorelines most visitors default to, and it rewards anyone who times their visit around the tides. That said,

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Stand-Up Fishing in Hawaii: How to Catch Dinner from Your Paddleboard

The shallow water flats off Kailua Beach on Oahu’s windward coast are shallow enough that you can watch bonefish and trevally moving in from the board — but a kayak hull would spook them before you got within casting range. That’s the core argument for stand-up paddleboard fishing in Hawaii: the elevated sight line and near-silent approach put species in reach that a boat or kayak cannot touch. SUP fishing is growing fast as a sport. the inflatable board advantage over kayaks for reaching shallow coastal flats is one reason anglers are making the switch — inflatables pack into

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Freediving in Hawaii: Best Spots for Breath-Hold Diving Without a Tank

Off Makaha and Makapu’u on Oahu’s west side, local spearfishers hunt kumu and ulua along reef ledges on a single breath — no tanks, no regulators. That tradition is as old as Hawaiian fishing culture itself, and it’s the same practice that draws freedivers to these islands today. Freediving here isn’t an adventure sport imported from elsewhere. It’s woven into how people have worked the reef for generations. What makes Hawaii genuinely suited to freediving — beyond the history — is geography. The Big Island’s leeward Kona Coast drops steeply offshore, putting deep, clear water within swimming distance of

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Free Things to Do in Hawaii: The Complete Island-by-Island No-Cost Activity Guide

Kaena Point, on Oahu’s remote western tip, requires a 5-mile round-trip hike just to reach — no road access, no entrance fee, and on a calm morning you might watch a Hawaiian monk seal sleep through the whole thing. That combination of effort, wildlife, and zero cost is a decent summary of what Hawaii’s free activities actually look like: specific, logistically real, and sometimes genuinely better than the paid alternatives. Hawaii has five main islands that visitors can easily reach — Oahu, Maui, the Big Island, Kauai, and Molokai — and each one has a different free-activity profile. Oahu

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How to Plan a Hawaii Vacation for Under $2,500 All-In: A Realistic Step-by-Step Guide

A week in Waikiki at a mid-range hotel will run you $2,100 in room rates alone — before taxes, resort fees, or a single meal. That’s the trap most Hawaii budgets walk into: the base price is just the starting point. According to the Hawai’i Tourism Authority data compiled in a breakdown of average daily Hawaii spending, visitors pay an average of $112.40 per person per night on lodging, $51 on food, and another $22–24 on transportation — and those are the averages, not the worst case. For two people sharing a room on a seven-night trip, the math

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Do You Need a 4WD Jeep for the Road to Hana? A Maui Car Rental Reality Check

The highway officially begins in Kahului, but the road earns its reputation somewhere around mile marker 16, where the pavement narrows to a single lane and the canopy closes overhead. By that point, most drivers have already second-guessed their vehicle choice at least once. The question of whether you need a 4WD Jeep for the Road to Hana comes up constantly — and the short answer, backed by how the road actually works, is no. But the fuller answer involves a 64.4-mile route with over 600 hairpin curves and 59 one-lane bridges, a speed limit that rarely exceeds 25mph,

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Best Molokini Snorkeling Boat Companies on Maui: Operators Ranked by Price and Reviews

Molokini Crater sits three miles off Maui’s south shore, and the only way to reach it is by boat. That constraint shapes everything about the experience — who runs the tours, what they charge, and how much the operator choice affects what a snorkeler actually encounters in the water. A comparative analysis of 24 tours across 14 operators found prices ranging from $89 to $309, with the cheapest and most expensive differing by approximately 3.5 times — a gap too large to ignore and too nuanced to collapse into “spend more, get more.” The crescent-shaped volcanic remnant is a

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