Showing posts with label oahu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oahu. Show all posts

Monday, September 27, 2010

Travel: I Need A Trail of Breadcrumbs Back to Oahu

Sunset Beach Oahu Hawaii North Shore
Sunset Beach, approaching the North Shore. Renting a car to get here is a must.

You knew it was coming: the inevitable comparison between Miami Beach and Hawaii. I wasn't your typical tourist as I was staying with locals in Kaneohe, which is about twenty minutes from Honolulu.

The first thing that comes to mind is what seemed like an immense respect for the earth, which stems from old Hawaiian beliefs that seem to still hold fast -- an innate sense about the interconnectedness of all things, including the land and the people who live on it. Even the motto on the royal Hawaiian coat of arms spells it out: Ua Mau ke Ea o ka ʻĀina i ka Pono roughly translates to "the life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness."

Punchbowl Cemetery Memorial Walk Lookout
As seen from the Punchbowl lookout, Honolulu and Waikiki are dense urban areas. That's Diamond Head in the background.

Outside of popular Waikiki, which is crowded with high-rise hotels, condos and shopping malls, you'll see no tall buildings anywhere. Seriously! On mile after mile of the scenic Kamehameha Highway that leads to the world famous North Shore beaches where surfers congregate in the winter, you'll find nothing but mountains and ocean without a building or billboard in sight. Try doing that on A1A -- I drove yesterday from Boca to Fort Lauderdale and couldn't see the damn ocean once, my view blocked by miles of endless ugly condos and timeshares.

It took me a few days to realize how wonderfully underdeveloped everything was beyond Honolulu -- if you want to stay there, you're shit out of luck unless you find a B & B, vacation rental or book a room at fancy Turtle Bay Resort.

And the beaches were clean. Oh-my-god clean. I had to look for the occasional cigarette butt on sand and was hard pressed to find one. While it is a Hawaiian tradition to picnic in grand style with the whole family on the beach, sometimes even overnight, you won't see the garbage from such weekend-long feasts on the beach.

And that's perhaps why these beaches really are like paradise -- not just because they're postcard perfect, but because the humans who enjoy them don't leave their trash behind. Locals in Miami who trash the beach make our ocean side playground feel like a cesspool.

There is a certain grace and elegance about the landscape in Oahu that's hard to explain; after all, it's not like those areas beyond Honolulu are deserted. Some towns are quite urban even yet the beaches are unspoiled. Maybe it's the love of the land that I was sensing. Or maybe it was the beautiful, spiritual words like aloha and mahalo that were spinning their magic in the air as I dozed off in my brother's house, with no air conditioning and fresh tradewinds lulling me to sleep.

Coconut Island
A random flower found on the deck at Coconut Island.

But enough about comparisons! Things are what they are. Here are some tidbits that you'll hopefully enjoy if you are blessed with the opportunity to visit.
  1. Eat shrimp in the Kahuka area.
  2. Visit Chinatown on a busy Sunday morning.
  3. Take in the sweeping views at the Punchbowl Cemetery lookout (and honor the military service men and women, too).
  4. Stop at Buzz's for a wickedly strong Mai Tai and calamari "steak" after strolling and bathing in Kailua Beach Park (the "steak" is unbelievably tender, served panko-coated and with beurre blanc and capers).
  5. Visit the Makapu'u lookout and hike to the lighthouse for a breathtaking sunrise.
  6. Have a picnic at Ho'omaluhia Botanical Garden (pick up some Huli Huli chicken at the local Foodland at the Windward Shopping Center on the way).
  7. Eat Vinha d'Alhos (roasted marinated pork chunks) for breakfast at Koa Pancake House.
  8. Kayak in Kaneohe Bay and laugh your ass off every time you tip over.
  9. Visit the 'Iolani Palace, Bishop Museum and Mission Houses in Honolulu.
  10. Appreciate the Hawaiian language; it's so beautiful, melodic and rhythmic.
  11. Enjoy words like aloha and mahalo ... the former means thank you and embodies gratitude (you'll hear it a lot, people are friendly) and the latter is used as a greeting; ha means "breath of life" and combined with alo it signified affection, love, compassion, peace and mercy.
  12. Visit the Nu'uanu Pali lookout for great views and fresh air in the Ko'olau mountain range.
  13. If you walk around Waikiki at night, try to catch performer Troy Fernandez on the sidewalk and maybe even see some spontaneous hula dancing.
And last but not least, the flights are long ... pick up Oahu Revealed by Andrew Doughty to read on the way there. You'll get great suggestions from locals who review restaurants, properties and activities anonymously.

It's a good thing I have family in Hawaii. I was so lucky to not have to do the hardcore touristy thing. I can't wait to go back! As my brother put it while we were driving to Honolulu through the mountains one morning: "I have to pinch myself sometimes. I can't believe this is my commute to work."

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Travel: On a White Sandy Beach of Hawaii

I'm not even back a day and I already miss Oahu! As a beach culture, there is such a respect for nature there that puts Miami to shame. This classic song by Israel Kamakawiwo'ole is going to linger on my mind ... enjoy.



I saw you in my dreams
We were walking hand in hand
On a white, sandy beach of Hawaii
We were playing in the sun
We were having so much fun
on a white, sandy beach of Hawaii

The sound of the ocean
soothes my restless soul
The sound of the ocean
rocks me all night long

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Travel: From Here Till I Have A Beachgasm

Halona Cove Oahu Hawaii

Sex and the Beach just had to stop at this spot yesterday! Halona Cove, located next to the Halona Blowhole where the ocean sprays up through an opening in the lava rock, is on the east side of Oahu. This was the location for the famous make out scene in the 1953 film From Here to Eternity, which won eight Oscars. Actors Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr kissed and rolled around in the surf; the scene seems tame and utterly classy by today's standards, but in the fifties it was risqué.

Regardless, this cove is so beautiful, who wouldn't want to have sex on it? Just make sure you don't get any sand up your various blowholes. And watch for the surf ... it can get rough!

Travel: Lady Gaga Has Nothing on Mother Nature

Ho'omaluhia Botanical Garden

She's flamboyant, outrageous, and ornate; sometimes she's so garish it's impossible not to gawk at her. She's a diva and she's all about the dramatic display. She's a master in the arts of seduction, showing off her colors and shapes to attract sex.

Mother Nature must surely have been singing when she created the flora of tropical regions.

See Mother Nature put on her best act for free at the Ho'umaluhia Botanical Garden in Kaneohe, Oahu. More at Tripatini.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Travel: Saucy and Sensual Oahu Shrimp

kahuku shrimp hawaii oahu
You take the scenic seaside Kamehameha Highway to the Kahuku area, flanked by a flat, marshy terrain. You stop at Fumi's food truck and shack. You order locally farmed, live cooked fresh water shrimp served with garlic butter sauce. You peel. No, no, wait ... it's too good. You suck before you even peel. Then you peel a little more, but it's too damn good. You gotta slurp. Then you bite a little. Then you slurp some more. Then you roll it around on your tongue. Then you chew a little. Suck, bite, slurp and chew. Good lord at some point when your tongue has had enough you give in and finally swallow. But no, that's not enough. Then you lick your fingers and stick them in that glorious garlicky buttery mess some more, only to start the whole thing over again until the last shrimp is gone.

You bite your lip because you want to lick that plate. You want to drink that sauce in complete, unabashed shamelessness. You know you want to. But even though you're sitting under a tent, you mind your manners. And then you look over at your lover, wondering if you can kiss him just to get your lips on that last drop of it on his chin.

Yeah, it was so worth crossing the continent and half of the Pacific for this!

Follow me at Tripatini for more details: Oahu's Kahuka Shrimp Shacks: Cheap and Great Eats on the Road.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Travel: Aloha from Oahu

kailua beach oahu hawaii sexTwo lovers enjoy the late afternoon in Kailua Beach, Oahu.

Sex and the Beach has come a long way in terms of beaches ... five years ago it was South Beach and now it's a bazillion miles away in the Pacific! I'll be traveling here for part of the month.

Yes, it's idyllic as it looks. Were these two inspired by the famous kiss scene in From Here to Eternity?