BIRTH PLACE OF HULA
The fifth largest and least developed of the Hawaiian
Islands, Moloka'i is only 20 minutes by air from Hawaii's
most populous islands, Oahu and Maui. Here there are
no buildings taller than a palm tree. Even the island's
hotels and condominiums blend with the rural countryside.
Peaceful and uncommercialized, Moloka'i rewards visitors
with such scenic wonders as the world's highest sea
cliffs rising majestically to meet the clouds along
the north coast, one of the world's great wilderness
regions; Papohaku, Hawaii's largest white sand beach,
stretching three miles along the western coast; waterfalls
cascading from nearly 2,000 feet to the sea; and rain
forests with plants and birds found nowhere else on
earth.
Moloka'i is an island where the past and present mingle,
where the traditions of the Hawaiian culture have been
preserved and are yours to share. Moloka'i is the traditional
birth place of the hula. Here, tradition holds, the
goddess Laka first danced the hula, then traveled throughout
the Hawaiian Islands teaching others the graceful movements
and chants that have been passed down through generations
to today's kumu hula (hula teachers).
At the same time, Moloka'i can satisfy the most energetic
traveler with an amazing variety of sports, tours and
outdoor adventures.
For golfers, there's the 18-hole championship Kaluakoi
Golf Course. Tennis is available at various locations
around the island. Watersports enthusiasts will find
a complete slate of activities to choose from including
sailing, kayaking, surfing snorkeling, skin diving,
and sportfishing. Explore Moloka'i's "outback"
on horseback or mountain bike, or with custom tours
operated by local guides.
Moloka'i is a hikers' paradise. There are mountain,
valley, and shoreline hikes to choose from, with trails
leading to spectacular scenic overlooks, historic sites
and secluded forest pools.
Historic Kalaupapa, an isolated peninsula jutting rom
the north coast and cut off from the rest of the island
by a 1,600-foot cliff, is now a National Historical
Park. Kalaupapa is the site of Father Damien's ministry
to Hansen's Disease sufferers in the late 19th Century.
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