waipio_valley

Morgan Brown

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Books that Morgan
Recommends...

Hawaii the Big Island Revealed: The Ultimate Guidebook
By Andrew Doughty and Harriett Friedman. Excellent guidebook. Much better than the Lonely Planet series, since it gives opinions. Good, detailed information for hiking and snorkeling.


Waipi'o Valley is the easternmost, and most famous of the steep north-south valleys (TopoZone.com Map) that incise the rainy northern slopes of 5505-foot Kohala Volcano. To get there from Kona, drive to Waimea, then toward Hilo on Highway 19, then cut back west in Honoka'a along Highway 240. Waipi'o Valley overlook is at road's end, in the town of Kukuihaele, and is the sight of many postcard views. A paved road, with a 25% grade, descends 900 feet to the floor of the valley, but a 4x4 vehicle is strongly recommended for the descent, though from my personal experience, judicious lowest-gear driving in a 2WD vehicle would also get you there. Of course, most people wonder aloud at what all those other gears are for in an automatic transmission car, so maybe the 4x4-only rule should apply.

On 23 March 2003, Kim and I first hiked a fantastic trail around the headwall of Waipi'o Valley, before clouds inundated us, then drove down to Kukuihaele and hiked down the 4x4 road, where we enjoyed the spectacular views and pleasant waters of Waipi'o Bay. A odd collection of people seem to live in the valley. Before a 1946 tsunami ruined the cultivation here, Waipi'o Valley provided considerable food for the island, and was populated by thousands of residents.

Our guidebook, Hawaii: the Big Island Revealed, notes that after the tsunami of 1946, "most people moved away and the valley was left mostly wild for two decades. Then in the '60s and '70s people started trickling back in. Most were "hippies" and recently discharged veterans...[today] Waipi'o is populated by a colorful assortment of 40 or so characters...The residents here range from the friendly to the grouchy to the very weird. We've found that we are less likely to get a smile or a wave in this valley as anywhere else on the island, in sharp contrast to the friendly folks in Kukuihaele and Honoka'a above. Stink eye and overall unfriendliness from some residents is common."

We too noted the hippie-types here. Lots of squalor and unchecked animal reproduction (we were astounded to see a foal being born by the side of a dirt road). Kim described it as "fecund". It reminded me of a California "music festival". But the visitors from "above", driving back and forth along the narrow beach at 30+mph in 4-wheel all-terrain vehicles, certainly made a worse impression than any white California burnouts. It astounded me that this place hadn't been made a state park. It was pretty crowded--expected for a weekend day. The crush of random civilization still couldn't detract from the place's unique beauty.


Click on small images to start "slide show"
wa01-kim-trailhead.jpg (144 KB)


Kim at the trailhead for the h...
wa02-irrigation-ditch.jpg (156 KB)


Sugar companies diverted some ...
wa03-water-bridge.jpg (154 KB)


In some places, the aqueduct m...
wa04-water-bridge.jpg (138 KB)


In some places, the aqueduct m...
wa05-irrigation-ditch.jpg (164 KB)


Sugar companies diverted some ...
wa06-valley-head.jpg (143 KB)


First views of the head of Wai...
wa07-blast-cave.jpg (126 KB)


In some places the aqueduct ha...
wa08-down-valley.jpg (120 KB)


First views down (north) Waipi...
wa09-water-tunnel.jpg (141 KB)


Aqueduct emerges from a tunnel...
wa10-kim-foggy.jpg (50 KB)


We beat the fog by about a hal...
wa11-foggy-trail.jpg (119 KB)


The trail foliage took on an o...
wa12-mauna-kea-fog.jpg (33 KB)


Mauna Kea, 15 miles to the sou...
wa13-waipio-valley-overlook.jpg (99 KB)


If the weather is foggy at the...
wa14-waipio-bay.jpg (66 KB)


Views of Waipi'o Bay as we des...
wa15-sea-cliffs-waterfall.jpg (64 KB)


The whole north coast from Haw...
wa16-beggar-horse.jpg (96 KB)


This horse was cute for about ...
wa17-stream.jpg (102 KB)


This strong, cool freshwater s...



© 2006 , Stanford Exploration Project
Department of Geophysics
Stanford University

Modified: 05/07/06, 19:23:18 PDT , by morgan
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