LANA'I, THE SECLUDED ISLAND
Until recently, few visitors were likely to see more of Lana'i
than its mysterious volcanic silhouette framing the sunset from
the mai tai lounges of West Maui resorts. Some had heard of "The
Pineapple Island." Some sailed over for day trips, to enjoy
a remote beach or excellent diving. But most just passed it by.
Even Hawaii residents knew little about Lana'i, other than its
fame as the world's largest pineapple plantation and one of the
state's best hunting areas. In any event, only a handful of visitors
could be accommodated on the private island.
With the advent of two spectacular luxury resort hotels, there
is reason to stop and more ways to discover an island that's been
lost in time. This is a place for the people who seek the old Hawaii,
where there are few buildings and fewer roads, where deer out number
humans and beaches have no footprints. The pineapple plantation
of yesterday is becoming the exclusive resort of tomorrow, at a
prudent pace.
Lana'i is anachronistic in contemporary Hawaii, by virtue of its
isolation and unusual history, and visitors should be aware that
some things are lacking. Lana'i has no high-rise hotels or office
buildings, no traffic jams, no tour buses, no shopping centers,
no stop lights, no all-night discos, no golden arches and no crowds.
The inconveniences of modern life have been held at bay, allowing
visitors and residents alike to experience Hawaii as it once was,
on tropical time, to allow for enjoying life and one another. A
plantation speed limit sign admonishes, "Be Careful. Go Slow."
As a plantation population, Lana'i was aging dramatically. Children
reaching adulthood were encourage to leave the island and seek a
better future than the inevitable pineapple fields. Now a remarkable
transition has begun. Workers are leaving the fields, learning new
skills and becoming employees of the resorts or other new enterprises.
With more choices, some of those who left are returning home to
take some of the new jobs -- and enjoy the old lifestyle.
The lifestyle is family-oriented and out-of-doors. Lana'ians have
grown up enjoying the same gifts of the Island -- fishing, hunting,
riding, hiking, four-wheeling, golfing, swimming, beachcombing,
exploring --available to visitors. Some Lana'i City houses display
antler racks alongside marlin tails, attesting to the plentiful
bounty to be reaped from local hunting and fishing.
Visitors to Lana'i can also ride trails along the mountain ridge,
enjoy views of deep gorges below, challenge their golf prowess on
scenic championship courses, play on the beach, sail off to snorkel
or watch the whales in winter, or just soak up local color.
At the new Manele Bay Hotel, on a cliff overlooking Hulopo'e bay,
the path to the beach leads through an ancient Hawaiian village
site. Hulopo'e beach, with crystalline waters and white sand shaded
by palms, is shared by guests and islanders. Would-be country squires
will be in their element at The Lodge at Koele, a comfortable estate-like
hotel amid cool upland forests and broad green lawns. Accommodations
may also be found at the cozy Lana'i Hotel, a rustic eleven-room
country inn and at several bed and breakfasts.
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