Hawai‘i Island

Ke Kani O Ke Kai summer concert series
Culture, Hawai‘i Island, Kauaʻi, Maui, Oʻahu, Travel Tips

Where to listen to Hawaiian music this summer

Summer afternoons are meant for lounging outdoors and listening to Hawaiian music at sunset, while eating ono (delicious) food and sipping on a tropical drink. Here are some events happening this summer to help you in your quest to live that dream.   HAWAII ISLAND An Evening with Cyril Pahinui and FriendsFriday, June 26 Slack key master Cyril Pahinui […]

Kamehameha Floral Parade
Culture, Hawai‘i Island, Kauaʻi, Maui, Oʻahu

It’s Kamehameha Day in Hawaii. Where to go for celebrations, lei-drapings and parades.

Today is King Kamehameha Day in Hawaii. The official state holiday honors and remembers King Kamehameha the Great—who established the Kingdom of Hawaii in 1810 and was its first monarch—with lei-draping ceremonies, parades and other cultural celebrations. King Kamehameha V began the holiday to honor his grandfather, King Kamehameha I, on June 11, 1872 and

honpa hongwanji
Culture, Hawai‘i Island, Kauaʻi, Lānaʻi, Maui, Molokaʻi, Oʻahu

What to know and where to go for this year’s summer bon dance festival season in Hawaii

Obon, a Japanese Buddhist season honoring ancestors’ memories and sacrifices, fills Hawaii event calendars annually between June and August. According to Japanese tradition, that’s when spirits return to visit family and friends. Photo: Alan Kubota. If you’re in the Islands this summer you should definitely participate in at least one. Looking for an event this

Kilauea Iki and Halemaumau_M
Hawai‘i Island, In the Magazine, Travel Tips

2 Great Hikes on Hawaii Island

Hawaii is hikers’ nirvana, with trails on every island for every level of hiking experience, over multiple varieties of terra firma (and not-so-firma), showcasing every measure of our Islands’ world-renowned diversity of landscapes, climate zones and unsurpassed natural wonder. Below you’ll find two great Hawaii Island hikes straight from the pages of HAWAII Magazine’s May/June

IiwiJJ
Culture, Hawai‘i Island

National Geographic Society and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park team up for species inventory and cultural festival this weekend

How many species of animals, plants, microbes and fungi currently call Hawaii Volcanoes National Park home? With 333,086-acres of barren lava rock, dry forest and rugged coastline, that’s a pretty challenging question to answer. But, after this weekend’s National Geographic Society-organized BioBlitz, it could get easier. Themed I ka nana no a ike (by observing,

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