Find the best deal, compare prices, and read what other travelers have to say about vacation rentals throughout United States

Find the best deal, compare prices, and read what other travelers have to say about hotels throughout the United States

Home | PLUS | Travel Guidebooks & Resource Directories | Travel Article Archives | Receive Travel Newsletter |
| Add Your Information to the Travel Guidebooks and Resource Directories |

Search Guidebook America

New Share this on Facebook
Share


Guidebooks & Resource Directories


Site Menu:
Guidebook Home
Travel Articles
Directories/Guidebooks

Scenic Webcams
Newsletter Archives

Area Guide Books


Previous Page
Hawaii
Kauai
Maui
Molokai
Oahu

Advertise at Guidebook America




Like Us on Facebook

 


Scenic WebCams

Don't forget to check out our WebCams area for some really nice cams.  Two of our favorites: The "Hollywood Sign" Cam and the Grand Canyon Cam.

SPOTLIGHT:
Hawaii

 

 

Island Travel Directories:
Hawaii ] Kauai ] Maui ] Molokai ] Oahu ]


 

 

Kualoa Adventure - Oahu Hawaii ~ by Devin Graham





Hawaii Vacation Rentals
80 Mauds Pl,  Kula, Hawaii 96790
808-262-6967 | 800-853-0787

Stop Searching. Start Finding.

Browse thousands of vacation rental homes, villas, oceanfront condos, and beachfront houses in Hawaii.

Local agents help you find the perfect place to call home on your vacation to Oahu, Maui, Kauai and the Big Island.


 

Kauai - The Lost World ~ by Devin Graham


 

Lava from Kilauea Volcano flows to the Pacific Ocean.


Waikoloa Beach Resort
Kamuela, Hawaii
Luxury Vacation Rentals
at Waikoloa Beach Resort.


Hawaii Hotels by Marriott
Explore Hawaiian resorts and beach hotels in Maui, Kauai and Oahu and book online with confidence with Marriott's Best Rate Guarantee.



Hawaii condo rentals

Aloha Condos offers cheap Hawaii vacation rentals by owner. Find discounted condos in popular resorts such as Napili Bay and Hanalei Bay Resort.


Vacation Rentals - Ocean - 250x250


Hawaii Vacation Explorer
P.O. Box 356
Hanalei, Hawaii 96714
808-826-0026


Hawaii Villa and Condo Vacation Rentals
Hawaii Statewide

Check out Homeaway.com for Hawaii vacation rentals, including villas, condos, houses, and more.

You shouldn’t have to forego amenities like cable television, internet access and air conditioning on your vacation. Find a rental in Hawaii that offers all three. For a more luxurious vacation, choose a chalet with an infinity pool, gourmet kitchen, and a spacious screened-in lanai for watching those famous Hawaii sunsets.

Whether you’re looking to visit Hawaii for a solo surfing trip or a family beach vacation, you’ll find the Hawaii rental of your dreams on Homeaway.com.

Hawaii Guidebook (statewide info)

Geographical Description:

Hawaii is a string of 137 islands encompassing a land area of over 6,422 square miles in the north central Pacific Ocean, about 2,400 miles from the west coast of the continental United States.

Stretching from northwest to southeast, the major islands are:

  • Niihau
  • Kauai
  • Oahu
  • Molokai
  • Lanai
  • Kahoolawe
  • Maui
  • Hawaii’s Big Island

Climate:

  • Hawaii's climate features mild temperatures, moderate humidity, and cooling tradewinds.
  • The average annual temperature is 77 degrees.
State Resident Population (2000):
1,211,537 (Source: Hawaii State Department of Business, Economic Development & Tourism)

Area History:

  • Discovered by Polynesian settlers between the 3rd and 7th centuries A.D. and later by British Captain James Cook in 1778.
  • Hawaii became the 50th state on August 21, 1959.
Cultural info:
  • State Flower: Yellow hibiscus
  • State Bird: Nene (Hawaiian goose)
  • State Tree: Kukui (Candlenut tree)
  • State Song: Hawaii Ponoi
  • State Seal and Motto: Ua mau ke ea o ka aina i ka pono (The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness)

State/Area Trivia and Interesting or Little Known Facts:

  • Kauai has more miles of beach per coastline than any other island. No building on Kauai is permitted to be built over four (4) stories (roughly the height of a palm tree).
  • Iolani Palace on Oahu is the only royal palace in the United States.
  • The highest sea cliffs in the world plunge – some more than 3,000 feet – into the ocean off Molokai’s north shore.
  • There are no traffic lights on the island of Lanai. The Luahiwa Petroglyphs are considered among the best-preserved in all the islands.
  • Haleakala on the island of Maui is the world’s largest dormant volcano.
  • Ka Lae on Hawaii’s Big Island is the southernmost point in the United States. Kilauea is the world’s most active volcano and has been continually erupting since 1983.
Hawaii ~ A Place in the Sun An Overview of Hawaii's History



Lava Flowing into the Ocean
photo: HVCB/Kirk Lee Aeder

Colorful characters and momentous events give the Islands a storied past

Ever since a group of intrepid mariners arrived in Hawaii from the Marquesas 1,500 years ago, a successive stream of voyagers, warriors, settlers, missionaries, laborers and now tourists have been drawn to these beguiling islands.

However different their motives, these many travelers have had one thing in common: they stayed, creating a vibrant tapestry of peoples that is as much East as West, a place that is familiar yet foreign at the same time. The stories of the different peoples who make up modern-day Hawaii are as colorful as the Islands’ dramatic landscapes, which is fitting, because before any of them, there were the Islands themselves.

Buy GoPro HERO Camera at GoPro.com



Children of the earth mother, Haumea, and siblings of Pele, the Hawaiian goddess of fire, the eight main islands were born over the eons as volcanoes burst forth from the middle of a great tectonic plate. As the Pacific Plate continued to move in a northwest direction, each new island was born, so that today these “siblings” represent a different stage in island development; a living laboratory showcasing Pele’s power. Starting with the youngest island Hawaii’s, Big Island, and moving northwest to the oldest, Kauai, each sister island grows lower and more angular, forged and sculpted by time and the elements.

Qualifying as one of the world’s most remote island chains, Hawaii sat barren for millenniums, slowly attracting a variety of flora and fauna that arrived via the sea, winds and migratory birds. When the first Hawaiians arrived, they found the lush valleys, vivid green escarpments and pristine beaches we know today. What they didn’t find were many things we assume are native to Hawaii: pineapple, plumeria, orchids and mangoes – all of these came from somewhere else. And the same can be said for Hawaii’s people.

First were the Polynesians. Using the star Arcturus, legend says that the great chief Hawaii Loa guided the ‘ohana, or families, to the “heavenly homeland of the north.” Thought to have their roots in Southeast Asia, for 5,000 years these restless mariners migrated throughout the archipelagos and islands of Indonesia, Micronesia, Fiji, Tahiti, Samoa, among many others.

Without compass or sextant, the Polynesians braved rough open seas that would in later years overcome many larger European vessels, until they had settled virtually every inhabitable island in an area bounded by the Hawaiian Islands, Easter Island and New Zealand; an expanse of ocean roughly the size of the entire Western Hemisphere.

The Polynesian canoes were made only of wood, coconut fiber and pandanus leaves, yet the Spanish explorer De Queres remarked upon seeing one in 1606 that “Better could not have been made in Castille.”

A different type of ship sailed into sacred Kealakekua Bay on Hawaii’s Big Island in 1779, one that some say was mistaken for the “floating island” on which the god Lono would return to the Islands one day. But it was Captain James Cook who arrived with two ships during an important island festival honoring the god.


Spouting Horn
photo: HVCB/Ron Dahlquist

Generously received, Cook and his men used the opportunity to stock their ships with provisions and mingle with the natives. The British sailors left peacefully and without incident, although their behavior onshore towards the women and sacred spots and objects had left the Hawaiians with mixed feelings. When a storm forced Cook and his men to turn back to the island, trouble broke out. Returning to shore to settle some disputes, a scuffle broke out, taking the lives of Cook and five of his men.

A young ali‘i, or royalty, had been observing the foreigners during their visit, learning as much as he could about new weapons and battle tactics. Legends say he was also favored by the war god, Ku. His name was Kamehameha the Great, and he would go on to unify all of the islands under his rule, eventually subduing rival chiefs through battle and compromise. His reign ended tribal warfare and brought peace and prosperity to the islands.

Around the time of Kamehameha’s death in 1819, the seas brought visitors in the form of boisterous whalers in search of the valuable sperm whale. They used Lahaina, Maui and Honolulu, Oahu to gather provisions, refit and “raise some hell.”

Quickly following was another group of haole, or Caucasians, who saw themselves as heaven’s messengers. Discovering a vacuum created by the demise of the Hawaiian kapu system of conduct, missionaries converted the Hawaiians to Christianity. They built churches and schools, translated the bible into Hawaiian, and introduced a novel way of dressing in the tropics – long-sleeved woolens and ankle-length dresses!

Descendants of the missionaries became some of the most powerful families in the Islands, founding some of the sugar and pineapple dynasties that were Hawaii’s next great industry and source of trade. As whaling declined and the sugar and pineapple industries prospered (the American Civil War had cut-off the traditional sugar supplies from the South), a huge need was created for workers.

Beginning around 1850, successive waves of laborers and their families began arriving from China, Japan, Portugal the Philippines and other South Pacific islands, laying the foundation for the fascinating mix of cultures that make up modern Hawaii. Many other nationalities, including Koreans, Samoans and Vietnamese, have also come to the Islands in significant numbers.

The turn of the century brought many changes to Hawaii, including the overthrow of Queen Lili‘uokalani by business interests, effectively ending the reign of the Hawaiian monarchy. During the following years, the sugar and pineapple plantation economies grew, and more immigrants arrived to work and live on the Islands, further enriching Hawaii’s cultural tapestry.

Sunday morning, December 7, 1941 was another date that changed the course of Hawaii’s history. The entrance of the U.S. into World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor meant a great influx of servicemen and women from the mainland who would remember Hawaii’s beauty and welcoming climate and people. Many returned after the war to either make Hawaii their home or just as significantly – to visit.

Hawaii’s tourism industry really began at the turn of the century when the first hotels, such as the Moana, were built in Waikïkï. The Islands’ storied attractions and growing recognition on the mainland, fueled by movies, music and radio broadcasts such as “Hawaii Calls,” mesmerized travelers of the era.

Though the war brought things to a halt, with the arrival of the first passenger jet and statehood in 1959, tourism in Hawaii truly took off. By the mid-1970s, tourism was king, as millions of visitors from around the world came under the spell of Hawaii’s history, culture and natural beauty. It was also during this time that the Hokule‘a, a traditional double-hulled sailing canoe, sailed from Hawaii to Tahiti and back, recreating the incredible voyage of the first Hawaiians. This celebrated feat symbolically reestablished Hawaii’s traditional ties to her Polynesian neighbors, and stirred renewed interest in native Island culture.

Continuing a legacy that began when the first voyagers arrived seeking new lives, Hawaii remains today a destination where dreams are fulfilled. While initially many are drawn by the images of swaying palms and stunning sunsets made popular in magazines, television and film, as travelers have become more sophisticated, discerning guests are finding that diversions related to Hawaii’s past marks many changes, today’s visitors will still encounter a constant that has always symbolized Hawaii’s character – the Aloha spirit that affirms her as a place of welcome for anyone seeking his own place in the sun.


Two Girls with Lei on
photo: HVCB/Sri Maiava Rusden

Information and photos submitted by:

Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau
2270 Kalakaua Avenue, Suite 801
Honolulu, Hawaii 96815
808-923-1811

 

Search Guidebook America
New Share this on Facebook
Share
Add Your Information to the
Travel Guidebooks and Resource Directories

Guidebooks & Resource Directories

Home | Travel Guidebooks & Resource Directories | Travel Articles |  Receive Travel NewsletterAdd Your Listing to Travel Directory |

| Scenic Webcams | Contact UsAdvertise With Us | (Archive) 2010 Holiday Guide | (Archive) 2011 Holiday Guide | Plus |

Guidebook America Copyright © 2001-2012
All Rights Reserved. All trademarks, logos, photos and content
property of their respective owners.

Guidebook America is
MADE IN AMERICA

Find the best deal, compare prices, and read what other travelers have to say about vacation rentals throughout United States

Find the best deal, compare prices, and read what others have to say about hotels throughout the United States