Skip to main content

Weekend in Waikiki

We took advantage of the lack of tourists on the island to spend a weekend at the Hale Koa in Waikiki.

We usually avoid Honolulu as much as possible because the traffic is horrible, streets are crowded, and the wait to get into any restaurant is interminable.  


But right now it's quite nice. 

We spent a nice weekend walking around, checking out places we don't normally visit, just being tourists while everything is slow.

On Saturday morning, Kerry and I got up and went for a walk, only to get caught in a sudden rainstorm.  All the normal paths back to our hotel were blocked off because they are limiting entrances to make sure only registered guests are on the grounds.  Where we normally could have scooted down a side path back to the hotel, this time we had to walk all the way around the hotel to the front entrance.

We got very wet.

Ben, Noelle, and Katie came down to have brunch with us.  
Katie stayed and spent the night with us.



We spent a lot of time just floating in the infinity pool at the hotel.  They've added a couple of water slides since the last time we were there.  We went down those a number of times.  

We would wait for the whistle for "adult swim" time.  No kids were in line for the slide then - they'd been banished to their lounge chairs, sulking about the unfairness of it all.  Then we would slide over and over with all the other adults who wanted to be kids for fifteen minutes.

We ate at Duke's Waikiki.  It's an iconic restaurant that we'd never been to.  Amazingly, we got in with only a short wait.  Check that off the bucket list.


It was July 4th and we had hoped to see some fireworks although we had already been warned that all fireworks shows had been cancelled to keep crowds from gathering and spreading the virus.

We saw two rouge fireworks set off by people on the beach.

It was really nice to see Waikiki the way it must have looked before tourism became such a huge industry here.  This is a beach we normally never visit because it is usually so packed with tourists you can't see the sand much less find a place to sit or enjoy the water without bumping into other people.  

It won't be long before it is back to being one of the most popular beaches in the world, so we are going to enjoy it while we can.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mammogram

I'm having my annual mammogram today. I always hear about how painful they are, but honestly, I've never thought they are that bad. Not the most comfortable, but not painful either. Every time I have a mammogram, I'm reminded of this story. It won the Erma Bombeck Writing Competition and I still get a kick out of it every time I read it. So I'm posting it here today for your reading pleasure: Erma Bombeck Writing Competition 1st place in Humor Category Winner Leigh Anne Jasheway of Eugene, Oregon "The First Time's Always the Worst" The first mammogram is the worst. Especially when the machine catches on fire. That's what happened to me. The technician, Gail, positioned me exactly as she wanted me (think a really complicated game of Twister - right hand on the blue, left shoulder on the yellow, right breast as far away as humanly possible from the rest of your body). Then she clamped the machine down so tight, I think my breast actually turned inside o...

Luau, Luau

This week we attended our first luau! We went to the luau at the Hale Koa hotel. The grounds were just incredible. There were men playing soft Hawaiian music, the plants and flowers were glorious. There were people in native costumes making headbands out of palm fronds, chopping up fresh coconut for us to taste, handing out flowers for us to put behind our ears and handing out seashell leis to each guest. It was very relaxed and peaceful. This was a Samoan man who kept us entertained during the cocktail hour. He was very funny! Check out those tattoos. He said the tattoos were part of a rite of passage that he had to go through. He said it took fourteen days to complete the tattoo and, yes, it hurt. And yes, everything was tattooed. He demonstrated how to climb a coconut tree using only a bandanna around his feet. They picked people out of the audience and gave them a quick hula lesson. Katie was thrilled to be one of the people chosen and of course it irritated Ben because he thi...

Japanese Fishing Shrine

Here's an interesting little spot we stopped to see. I'd passed this many times before and had never stopped to see what it was. Since GG and Sherry were here, we decided to check it out. There is a shrine of some sort with a statue and a carved rock. There was no information on sight as to what it is that I could find. There were flowers, food and incense left around the base of the shrine. There was a ceramic statue and a rock with a figure carved into it. None of the food was old or rotting (although plenty of it had clearly been pecked by birds) and the flowers were all fresh which made me think it must be cleaned and cared for on a regular basis. After we got home, I did some research and found this article about it from the Hawaii Star Bulletin, our local newspaper (I have edited out some bits, but otherwise the article is unchanged): "Maintenance" of the monument has been assumed by a group of Vietnamese Buddhists - Shingon Shu Hawaii, the Buddhist temple th...