Well, as a first blog entry from the two of us, we thought the honeymoon would be a fine place to start. Here is a link to a map of Kauai if you want to follow along. Everything on the linked page works just like Google Maps. We have marked certain points of interest that we mention in this blog. Click on them for a short description. For example: "Our cottage (A) was amazing." means look for marker A on the map at the linked site. Faster the internet speed, the better, of course, because some of the satellite images are very detailed.
Before we get started, though, thank you to everyone who attended the wedding for your support, kind words, ridiculous dancing, and plethora of gifts! We had an excellent time and couldn't have had it better without such a marvelous group of family and friends.
Well, it didn't take long for something to go awry during our first couple of hours in Kaua'i. After waiting far too long in the rental car line, and getting lectured about not knowing every detail of my car insurance policy at check-in time, I got our sweet ride and looped back around to pick up Tory with the bags. As we loaded the car, we realized we had left our packet of info (which included directions to the rental cottage and all of our return flight info) on the plane! Too late now, so we grabbed the Ultimate Kauai Guidebook (of which every tourist on the island has a copy. So much so that we even saw a sign reading something like, "trail now closed due to the Ultimate Kauai Guidebook." What??) and headed off to search for our place. I figured finding a 3 acre lot by random chance in the 398,720 acres that is Kaua'i wasn't too unreasonable a quest. I've seen worse probabilities than that in many a physics course.
It actually wasn't too hard since all we had to remember was the name of the bay and what the outside of place looked like. I had stared at the pictures on the owner's website long enough that I knew when we came to it.
Here are some pics of the cottage (A), inside and out. All to ourselves!
This was the most impressive (water-filled) cave, which was a short hike up a roadside hill. The water is behind us in the picture. Couldn't get a good snapshot.
Today, the Ultimate Kauai Guidebook led us to the adventurous Makaleha Hike, one of our favorite parts of the trip. This is an easy hike to describe because it came in several distinct stages, almost like levels of a video game, each more difficult than the last and with its own unique theme. Makaleha Hike trailhead (F) (best to look at the following waypoints with the topo map. Just click the "topo" button at the top right of the linked page).
Level 1: Bamboo Forest
After the first stream crossing, the trail entered a bamboo grove (G) and turned sharply up the side of the canyon. With plenty of bamboo-chute handholds, we were soon 60-80 feet above the stream walking through a corridor of the stuff. While the cliff was unnervingly close, you knew you the bamboo wouldn't let you go anywhere.
After successful completion of Level 1, we cross the stream to begin Level 2...The banks on the other side of the stream were immediately dense with criss-crossing Hau trees; so dense, in fact, that we hardly felt the pounding rain that fell as we walked. The path here was nearly invisible, the only trail markers being machete marks in the bark of select trees. At times our only option was to climb up, which took us ten to twenty feet off the ground.
The path through the jungle dumped us at the side of the stream with no choice but to walk straight up the middle of it. Fighting the current wasn't as hard as keeping our balance on the slick rocks, but after twenty minutes of walking we came to this vista (I) and the thought of turning back left our minds completely...
Back at the cottage that evening we scourged the grounds for some good fruit and ended up having Chris (construction guy and stand-in land manager for cottage owners) chop open a coconut for us. The milk inside was delicious and the meaty part tasted more like butter than anything else. -YUM-


Just a few more beauty shots...
At the three-and-a-half-mile mark (O) we decided to head back, as our feet were aching and the views were all beginning to look very similar. We got back to the trailhead an hour or two before sundown, and were able to snorkel off Ke'e Beach (P) a bit before cleaning up and heading back South for a nice dinner of seafood chowder and lobster tails at the Hanalei Dolphin. Double YUM.Day 6: We decided the best remedy for our sore legs from the Na Pali hike would be a relaxing morning on our own "private" Moloa'a Beach. (Though not actually private, we were often the only ones there...)
Later that afternoon we took the car South to a few waterfalls just off the main roads. Wailua Falls (R), with a 173 foot drop, was the most spectacular of the bunch...
Just to the north up Kuamo'o Road, was 'Opaeka'a Falls (S), another drive-up, park, and gawk-at waterfall. There was a very pretty valley just on the other side of the road as well. 'Opaeka'a Falls:Day 7: We couldn't leave the island without a visit to the vast Waimea Canyon, so our last full day was spent gawking from the various lookouts along the 18-mile-long highway that follows the rim of the canyon. (As is often the case, the photos here do little or no justice to the actual beauty of the landscape...)
The view from mile 10.5 (V):
The view to the east from Pu'u o Kila lookout:
3 comments:
Finally got to read through your blog. Sounds like you had very little time to put up your feet and relax. Glad to see the sunshine came out the latter part of the week. Loved it.
Mom
C, T,
Awesome.
Carl and Tory,
Great narrative of your honeymoon--as the owner (with my lovely wife) of Gilligan's Cottage, I enjoyed reading all that you did at the cottage and on Kauai--it is also one of my favorite places in the world, and it is a pleasure to share it with people like you two.
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