So we landed at Kahalui, picked up our rental car, a Chevy HHR, and drove the 20-odd miles to Lahaina. Vicki had found a perfectly wonderful studio apartment in a nice residential neighborhood 5 minutes' walk from the beach. We spent our first evening and the next morning simply walking the beach and looking at older Lahaina, the 19th century capital. Lahaina is totally touristy--nearly everything in Hawaii is--but there are degrees of
touristy, I think, and, somehow, Lahaina is on the good side of the spectrum. Some history; some historical buildings; some natural interest; some interesting galleries; and also all the usual crap.
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We walked past the Feast at Lele, one of the many exorbitant
"luaus" around
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Alpenglow on a rampart of Mauna Kahalawai; interestingly,
to me, Maui is built on two shield volcanos, the much older
and now severely eroded Kahalawai (5000 feet), and the
younger, less eroded Haleakala (10000 feet), more about
which later
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Mauna Kahalawai the next morning; it was cloud-covered
every day of our visit
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The great banyan tree at Lahaina's center; it covers nearly a
city block, aerial roots capturing new ground, extending and
supporting the great lateral limbs; said to be the largest in
the Islands
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Thus
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And thus; it also supports and shelters a fine crafts market; one
of two in the world we have found in which there is NO CRAP,
only neat and fine stuff (the other is at The Rocks, in Sydney)
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One of the joys of grandparenthood is the
whole new dimension of humor and cuteness...
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Looking across the channel to Lanai
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I would bet real money that the "wreck" just off-shore here
has been planted and cemented into place by the chamber of
commerce...scenic, nonetheless
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