I recently drove up the east coast north of Kailua. It was mountainous in spots and dotted with beautiful beaches and parks. Here are a few pictures. Remember you can enlarge any of the pictures on this blog by double left-clicking your mouse. Also, I posted a blog on the Kahuku Village project earlier today but it was dated February 17th so you will have to scroll down to view it.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Rough Conditions on a Beautiful Day at the North Shore
I drove up to the North Shore on Tuesday. I took my body board and was ready to test the surf at Waimea Bay but despite the warm weather and lack of wind, the ocean was closed except to experienced surfers and experienced body boarders and body surfers with fins. I talked to a couple of guys who were body surfing with fins and took these pictures. Hope you enjoy them!
Saturday in the Park (Ala Moana Park II)
I introduced Ala Moana Park to you just after I arrived here as it is just across the street and the first Hawaiian beach I had seen. Since then I have explored the far reaches of the park and discovered just how popular it is with locals and tourists alike. Here are some snapshots taken with a digital camera on a recent Saturday afternoon to give you a better taste of what this park is all about.
These kids are trying to learn how to ride a Wave Runner which is much like a skateboard but has two swivels that make it a little more difficult to master but much easier to generate speed on flat pavement.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
The West Coast of Oahu
Yesterday was President's Day and though I started emailing early, thinking it was a work day, I looked out my window around 8:45 and saw hordes of sunbathers and snorkelers on the beach at Ala Moana and figured out it was a bona fide holiday over here. So, I decided it would be a good time to check out the beaches and surf on the west shore. I hit surfline.com and it looked like a very calm day for that area with most wave face readings at very low levels; generally, 3 feet or lower and almost no wind.
The drive to the west coast is not a long one and is mostly interstate (H-1). Within an easy half hour I was on the west coast highway at Ko Olina and heading north. The west coast highway tracks the beach the entire way until it ends at the Yokohama Beach park on the northwest corner of Oahu. The scenery is beautiful though not as stunning as on the east coast because it lacks the views from 500 foot cliff overhangs.
My first pullover was at a small public beach park where there were many families enjoying the holiday together (see below). The water was a beautiful blue-green and the surf was good with many surfers congregating 70 to 80 feet off shore, but I noticed that the ocean floor was mostly reef and decided it was not a swimming or body-surfing opportunity and so headed northward.
My next stop was at the Kani Kui beach park. I walked down to the water and the shoreline was very rocky (see below). No one was swimming but several were fishing. I caught a photo of a rather large girl pulling in a rather small fish (see below).
After 10 minutes or so I was back in my pick 'em up truck and driving northward. I stopped once or twice to photograph the mountain points that stop at the sea (see below). You can see the rain in the mountains but it was sunny and clear on the beaches all day. One of the towns I drove through was Maili and there were several sandy beaches that looked very inviting. I did not stop, however, as I decided to try and make it as for northward as I could on this trip to see what my options were for the next one.
I ditched that plan when I hit Makaha Beach and saw a lot of tents set up, heard live music and saw a number of videographers on the beach documenting the activity in the sea. As it turned out it was the 16th annual Makaha Beach surfing championships which take place over 6 weekends during the winter. On this day, the competition was limited to individual paddle surfers and 4-person outrigger canoe teams. The surf patterns were perfect for the competition and exactly the type I had been looking for; you can literally ride one wave from its initial swell all the way onto the beach which for the paddle surfers was for a distance of almost half a mile; truly awesome stuff. Unfortunately, because of the competition all onlookers were limited to a portion of the beach that had no wave breaks whatsoever but I did some swimming around for the fun of it (see photos below).
Another view from the beach at the competition - Though hard to see, this was a picture of a family of 4 (Dad, son and 2 teen-aged daughters winning the outrigger canoe surfing competition)
After an hour or so at Makaha Beach, it was back in the pick-up and all the way north to the end of the west coast highway that ended at a public beach park on Yokohama Beach. This turned out to be the most beautiful beach and water that I had seen yet on Oahu and the wave action was fierce but a lot of fun. Despite wave faces of 6 to 8 feet that land with a force previously not experienced by me there were many children aged 7 to 14 in the surf without any close supervision; by that I mean their parents were under a tent 100 feet or so from the surf and without any means of helping the kids if the had trouble with the surf. You can see from the photos below that the shoreline is fairly steep at its edge.
I am including a picture of one of the youngsters fleeing the surf (see below); she was well aware that if you are 10 feet or more out from the shoreline before one of the large waves comes in (even though you are only in 12 to 18 inches of water) that the pull is so strong that you will be sucked into the wave and at its mercy. At the end of a wave break from the large waves, the white sea foam is so plentiful that it covers up everyone that was caught by the wave and covers them up for a few seconds despite their bests efforts.
I tried several times to move toward the beach or just hold my ground before a big wave and was instead pulled backwards or knocked off my feet and pummeled by the wave. The good news is that these large wave sets do not come in regularly and can easily be anticipated so you can avoid them but I could easily imagine how incredible the force must have been before the big tsunami that killed some many several years ago near Thailand. The further good news here is that this undertow does not take you out to deep water; it only pulls you for a short distance into the wave and then the wave immediately propels you swiftly up onto the beach as your bathing suit and hair become filled with sand (see photos below).
The drive to the west coast is not a long one and is mostly interstate (H-1). Within an easy half hour I was on the west coast highway at Ko Olina and heading north. The west coast highway tracks the beach the entire way until it ends at the Yokohama Beach park on the northwest corner of Oahu. The scenery is beautiful though not as stunning as on the east coast because it lacks the views from 500 foot cliff overhangs.
My first pullover was at a small public beach park where there were many families enjoying the holiday together (see below). The water was a beautiful blue-green and the surf was good with many surfers congregating 70 to 80 feet off shore, but I noticed that the ocean floor was mostly reef and decided it was not a swimming or body-surfing opportunity and so headed northward.
My next stop was at the Kani Kui beach park. I walked down to the water and the shoreline was very rocky (see below). No one was swimming but several were fishing. I caught a photo of a rather large girl pulling in a rather small fish (see below).
After 10 minutes or so I was back in my pick 'em up truck and driving northward. I stopped once or twice to photograph the mountain points that stop at the sea (see below). You can see the rain in the mountains but it was sunny and clear on the beaches all day. One of the towns I drove through was Maili and there were several sandy beaches that looked very inviting. I did not stop, however, as I decided to try and make it as for northward as I could on this trip to see what my options were for the next one.
I ditched that plan when I hit Makaha Beach and saw a lot of tents set up, heard live music and saw a number of videographers on the beach documenting the activity in the sea. As it turned out it was the 16th annual Makaha Beach surfing championships which take place over 6 weekends during the winter. On this day, the competition was limited to individual paddle surfers and 4-person outrigger canoe teams. The surf patterns were perfect for the competition and exactly the type I had been looking for; you can literally ride one wave from its initial swell all the way onto the beach which for the paddle surfers was for a distance of almost half a mile; truly awesome stuff. Unfortunately, because of the competition all onlookers were limited to a portion of the beach that had no wave breaks whatsoever but I did some swimming around for the fun of it (see photos below).
Another view from the beach at the competition - Though hard to see, this was a picture of a family of 4 (Dad, son and 2 teen-aged daughters winning the outrigger canoe surfing competition)
I am including a picture of one of the youngsters fleeing the surf (see below); she was well aware that if you are 10 feet or more out from the shoreline before one of the large waves comes in (even though you are only in 12 to 18 inches of water) that the pull is so strong that you will be sucked into the wave and at its mercy. At the end of a wave break from the large waves, the white sea foam is so plentiful that it covers up everyone that was caught by the wave and covers them up for a few seconds despite their bests efforts.
This is that smart and speedy girl who appeared to be no older than 9 or 10 and was by herself in the surf
I tried several times to move toward the beach or just hold my ground before a big wave and was instead pulled backwards or knocked off my feet and pummeled by the wave. The good news is that these large wave sets do not come in regularly and can easily be anticipated so you can avoid them but I could easily imagine how incredible the force must have been before the big tsunami that killed some many several years ago near Thailand. The further good news here is that this undertow does not take you out to deep water; it only pulls you for a short distance into the wave and then the wave immediately propels you swiftly up onto the beach as your bathing suit and hair become filled with sand (see photos below).
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Kahuku Village
I came to Hawaii to assist in gaining governmental approval for Continental Pacific's proposed development plan for Kahuku Village. Kahuku is a region of Oahu on the northeast coast and part of the famed North Shore. Kakuku Village was originally a plantation town serving as home to the families of the sugar cane plantation workers.
Continental Pacific acquired the entire village in 2006. It consists of 72 occupied village homes and the Kahuku golf links plus a beautiful slice of Pacific Ocean shoreline.
The primary development proposal centers around an affordable housing plan as a quid pro quo for the development of 18 oceanfront lots and 12 adjoining country lots by which Continental Pacific proposes to sell the 72 homes to those occupying them for an average sales price of just $75,000 which is some $300,000 below market pricing even though many of the structures are substandard with cesspools, poor roadways and inadequate flood drainage.
Here are a few pictures taken at Kahuku:
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Sandy Beach
This is Sandy Beach - You will have to wash your swimsuit out with heavy detergent after hitting the beach here
Well, I checked out www.surfline.com for surf conditions at Sandy Beach today and got up the nerve to try a little bodysurfing there - It was forecast to be sunny with relatively little wind (7 to 10 mph from the SSE), water temperature of 75 degrees, air temperature of 80 degrees, surf at 1 to 2 feet with an occasional 3 foot face - I also checked out several other websites that report on Sandy Beach and decided (1) not to go near "the point" nor "the cove" due to rip tides even in calm conditions and (2) to check out the surf patterns and conditions before I went in - Here is what I found: Sandy Beach is public and on this Saturday afternoon it was packed; the drive from Ala Moana to Sandy Beach is about 30 minutes (probably 20 on a weekday) and the last 10 minutes are a lot like the Highway 1 scenery from LA to Santa Barbara (I drove that route to get to Reynolds an Stacy's wedding); parking spaces near the best part of the beach were non-existent and so I had to walk a little ways; the beach was crowded and the people on the beach were locals most of them between 16 and 25 and many actually quite attractive and fit; there were plenty local police on the grounds and they were actively looking for parking violators; the beach itself is 100% sand with no rocks though the sand is courser and a little darker than Destin sand; the water has a few stones in it but nothing too big; I threw down a blanket and walked down to the surf and started looking at the wave breaks and testing the currents; the waves ranged from 1 foot or so to maybe 4 feet or a little higher for the biggest; the water is a beautiful blue green and the wave breaks come quite fast with only 10 to 12 seconds between major breaks; there was a strong pull back toward the sea after a wave break but no cross currents; two things struck me - first, the force of the wave break on the shoreline was significant despite the relatively small size of the wave face and, second, the direction of the wave break is almost straight down rather than more forward as in most locations that I had surfed in. This is apparently due to the beach floor which slants downward away from a 1 foot lip at shoreline at a 20 degree or so angle for 15 to 20 feet where it levels off again; the good news is that there are many opportunities to catch a good wave; the bad news is that the "riding time" is very short (no more than 5 to 7 seconds) and the landing hard (no one ends up nicely on the beach but is thrown down and into the lip); I read that this has been the site of numerous world body surfing championships but for my money I want more of a ride like you get in Destin; I am going to check out beaches on the westside next week that do not have such sharp floor angles.Tuesday, February 12, 2008
A Winter Weather Advisory?
I was watching the news the other night around 10:00 and the top story was a Winter Weather Advisory issued for the big island and Maui. I was with a friend from Canada and we both laughed thinking it was probably a joke but, of course, we were mistaken. That night it snowed on the big island more than 2 feet and snowed on Maui for the first time in 4 years. The temperature here in Honolulu went down to 68 degrees that night and then was back up to 80 degrees by the next afternoon. After doing a little digging, I found out that Maui has a peak (Haleakala) that is over 10,000 feet above sea level and the big island has the highest mountain peak in the world (Mauna Kea) measured base to peak (over 30,000 feet) and one of the highest in the world from sea level to peak at almost 14,000 feet above sea level. I never would have guessed and would like to see them in person soon. Mauna Kea has a visitor center at 9,000 feet and offers snowboarding after big snows.
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