We flew into Hilo and drove to a B&B in Volcano Village on the first day. It was part of the Chalet Kilauea chain and we stayed in the Lokelani room at the Volcano B&B. The Volcano B&B is a hundred-year-old house. Three stories high, 6 bedrooms, and a large living area with kitchen and dining rooms. It sounds charming to stay in a hundred-year-old house, but it's not. A house that old smells funny. And the bathroom has outdated fixtures, and moths come into the shower with you. The man renting the bedroom next to ours had bronchitis and stayed in his room coughing at all hours of the day and night.
Hilo and Volcano are on the rainy side of the island. I think the usual rain is a little mist. Our trip coincided with an actual rainstorm. I know this because I checked Yahoo Weather before we left. So it was very soggy on our first day.
We got up early to get the "breakfast" part of the B&B. It wasn't very hearty. The landlord didn't stay in the hundred-year-old house with us. She just got there early in the morning and set out pineapple and boxed cereal and called it breakfast. We ate until we couldn't handle listening to the guy with bronchitis anymore. Then we headed out to the volcano.
The volcano is an active one, for those of you who don't know this by now. It erupts constantly, usually at a very slow rate pouring lava into the ocean. I was very excited to see lava. It was misty but not pouring rain, so we were lucky. We stopped at the visitor center and the docent or whatever was complaining about the weather, but we didn't mind it. He said we wouldn't be able to see lava flow until nightfall. But during the day we could drive around the crater and stop at various sights along the way.
The first stop was to view steam vents. And steam vents there were...hundreds of them. A sign pointed us to a trailhead. I wasn't sure where it went, but we followed the trail. At the end, there was a fence. It was only when you got to the fence and looked over it that you saw a big, giant, black crater. So huge I don't even know how many football fields would fit inside of it. And black, nothing growing in it, just black lava interrupted by holes in the ground with steam pouring out of them. It took my breath away and I even allowed myself to get tears in my eyes for a minute. Or maybe it was the sulfur that took my breath away and caused the tears. I don't know. We walked the trail for a long time. There were steam vents everywhere, but outside of the crater, near the vents, there was so much life growing on the volcano.
When we had our fill of the steam vents, we drove on to the next stop, which was an area where the earth had huge rifts torn into it. The landscape near the rifts makes Hawaii look like another planet.
We drove on around the crater to a place where you can actually go in and get right up close to the vents. There is a warning sign posted that says that breathing the sulfur can cause severe problems including death. That is something interesting about Hawaii. They warn you about danger but leave the choice up to you. If it were CA they'd have it enclosed and be charging people for gas masks. Anyway, we talked about it and decided to go in and risk it. Maybe 20 yards into the crater I started coughing like mad and couldn't even get whole words out. "Respa" "tory" "problem" was all I could say before turning tail and running. The trouble with running is that you are on a volcano and there really isn't any fresh air anywhere nearby. I went to the middle of the parking lot which is the furthest place I could find from the vents.
The last stop along the crater is the lava tube. I don't really have good photos of the lava tube on account of it is a very dark tube of lava. It is like walking through a sewer pipe, but it smells better. Not that I have ever walked through a sewer pipe, but I've seen it in the movies. The lava tube is very wet and there is moss growing everywhere and puddles on the ground.
Thanks,
Cathy
Leave early to go see the volcanoes it is 92 miles of driving and leave the volcanoes before dark, as the main highway does not have street lights and it is pitch dark. If you want to get a good scene of the volcano eruption take a helicopter at night which leaves from Kona.
Also, the farmers market in Kailua-Kona is the place to get good bargains on jewerly,clothes,and etc. I bought some bananas and they tasted so much better than we can get in CA. Stop at some of the coffee plantations in Captain Cook and try the Peaberry coffee. They have samples to taste before you purchase. They also will ship home. We discovered we could get souvenirs at Wal-mart as they have a regular souvenir shop at much lower prices than in town.
We went in March 2007 to Oahu and then Maui to see the whales have their babies.
While in Oahu we stayed on Waikiki Beach and discovered two days before we left dirctly across from the Hilton Hawaiian Village Hotel a good coffee house on Kalia Rd. with very low priced meals, The Wailana.
The Hawaiian Village Hotel has fireworks over the ocean every Friday PM at dark until midnight. Find a spot on the wall or on the sand. They also put on a fire ring show on the sand which was free to the public.
We stayed in Maui at The Royal Lahaina Resort with a partial ocean view. They were remodeling & our room had been renovated. The bed was very comfortable, plasma tv and good service.
From the hotel you can take a free shuttle to Whaler's Village. You also want to see the town of Lahaina Harbor, a small fishing village.
Best time to visit Maui is Jan through March or April when the whales come to the warm waters to have their babies. You can see the whales jumping up in the ocean from the shore. It is amazing to watch them.
We went in March when most kids are out of school for Spring break. Maui and Lahaina were both very crowded, especially Kaanapali Beach where most of the hotels and condos are located.
where can i get a great deal on travel plans