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GUIDES

A Perfect First Week in the Bahamas for Total Beginners

Nassau’s airport is the busiest in the country, with non-stop flights from American, Alaska, and Delta, which makes it the obvious place to land if this is your first Bahamas trip. Everything else in this itinerary radiates out from there — a short hop to Paradise Island, a longer one to the Exumas, and a couple of day trips that show you what the country looks like beyond the capital. This is a 7-day itinerary built for first-timers who want Nassau’s history and food alongside two of the country’s most talked-about excursions: the swimming pigs of Exuma and the

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A 4-Day Honolulu Itinerary That Feels Nothing Like a Typical City Trip

Oil still seeps from the sunken USS Arizona at roughly 2,000 litres per year — a detail that turns Pearl Harbor from a checkbox stop into something you actually sit with. Honolulu doesn’t behave like a normal city trip. There’s no museum-hopping density, no single walkable core that covers everything — instead you’ve got a royal palace a few blocks from a plate lunch counter, a sunken battleship 30 minutes one way, and a completely different coastline an hour the other way. This 4-day itinerary uses that spread deliberately: downtown history and food on Day 1, Pearl Harbor on

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How to Plan a Surf Trip to Hawaii That Goes Beyond Just One Break

Kauai alone holds over 300 separate surf breaks — which means a trip built around a single famous wave is leaving most of the state’s surf on the table. Most surf trips to Hawaii follow the same script: fly to Oahu, surf the North Shore in winter or Waikiki in summer, go home. That’s not wrong, but it’s one wave out of hundreds, and Hawaii’s swell patterns mean a different island — or a different coast on the same island — is often working better on any given week. This guide covers how to plan a surf trip that

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How to Plan a Surf Trip to Hawaii That Goes Beyond Just One Break

Pipeline gets all the attention, but it’s one wave on one stretch of one island’s North Shore. Hawaii’s surf culture actually spans a chain that sits more than 2,330 miles from the nearest point on the US mainland — isolated enough in the Pacific that it picks up swell from both hemispheres almost year-round. Planning a surf trip around a single famous break means missing most of what that isolation actually delivers. This guide covers how to build a Hawaii surf trip across multiple islands and skill levels rather than fixating on one bucket-list wave. It’s built for surfers

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The Hawaii Itinerary That Solves the Most Common Rookie Planning Mistakes

Most first-time Hawaii trips go wrong before anyone even boards a plane. Visiting three islands in one trip is almost always a mistake, because travelers end up spending more time in airports than on beaches. That single decision — how many islands to attempt — sets off most of the other problems: overpacked days, missed reservations, and a car rental scramble that could have been avoided months earlier. This is a 7-day, single-island Maui itinerary built specifically to sidestep the mistakes that trip up most first-time visitors. It suits couples and families who want the classic Maui experience —

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A Multi-Generation Hawaii Itinerary That Works for Ages 8 to 78

Hapuna Beach on the Big Island’s Kona Coast is often described as the most accessible major beach on the island, with paved parking, accessible restrooms, and a gentle slope into the water — the kind of detail that matters when you’re planning around a knee replacement and a toddler in the same week. Multi-generational Hawaii trips fail for a predictable reason: someone plans it around either the kids or the grandparents, and the other group spends the week compromising. This 5-day Big Island itinerary is built around neither extreme — it alternates active mornings with rest afternoons, and every

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How to Spend 3 Days on the Big Island’s Kona Side Properly

Manta ray night snorkel tours off Kona often offer free re-rides if you book in advance and the mantas don’t show — a small detail that tells you a lot about how Kona operators handle a genuinely wild, not-guaranteed experience. Three days on Kona’s side of the Big Island is enough time to do it properly — not a rushed loop trying to also hit Hilo and the volcano, but a focused stay covering Kona town, the beaches north of it, and the history-dense coast to the south. This itinerary keeps you based in Kona for all three days,

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The Off-Resort Hawaii Itinerary for People Done With All-Inclusive Thinking

On the Windward Coast of Oahu, a nonprofit called Pae Pae O He’e I A runs Saturday Community Workdays on the second and fourth Saturday of each month, where visitors help restore the He’eia Fishpond — no resort itinerary anywhere puts that on the schedule. If you’ve done the resort pool, the buffet breakfast, and the pre-packaged luau, this is the alternative track. This guide covers off-resort experiences across Oahu, Maui, Hawaii Island, and Kauai — working farms, guided backcountry hikes, fishpond restoration, small-town art nights, and food that isn’t plated for a tour group. It’s built for travelers

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A 6-Day Maui Itinerary That Includes Upcountry and the South Shore Equally

Upcountry Maui sits on the upper slopes of Haleakala and is often compared to the Scottish countryside — a world away from the beach towns most Maui itineraries default to. Most 6-day Maui plans give you one token Upcountry stop — a quick pass through Kula on the way to Haleakala — and spend the rest of the week on the South Shore beaches. This itinerary splits the difference on purpose. You get a real Upcountry day with lavender farms and ranch towns, and you get a real South Shore stretch with Wailea’s beach path and Molokini-adjacent snorkeling, without

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How to Build a Hawaii Trip Around Cultural Experiences Over Beaches

Waimea Valley on Oahu’s North Shore has been an important place in Hawaiian culture for more than 700 years — and it’s one of dozens of living cultural sites you can visit without stepping on a single beach. Most Hawaii itineraries are built around the water. That works for a lot of travelers, but if you’re more interested in the monarchy, the plantation era, Polynesian navigation, or the spiritual landscape of the islands, there’s a different kind of trip available — and it’s genuinely absorbing. This guide covers how to structure a Hawaii trip around cultural experiences on Oahu,

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