Kauai Trails. Kathy Morey

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to spend some time on Kauai, walk some time on Kauai, and let me know if I’ve done the right thing.

      Now, looking back in March 2002, I find that the more time I spend on Kauai—which I found spectacular to start with—the more wonders and pleasures I find there. You will, too.

      The Okolehao trail (formerly the Hanalei-Okolehao Route) was closed until 2000 by jurisdictional disputes. It is described as Trip 2 and is well worth taking for its great scenery. In previous editions of Kauai Trails, Trip 29 was listed as the “Northern Dam Side Trip.” Since the northbound segment of that trip has remained largely impassable above the junction where the trail splits near Poo Kaeha, the old Trip 29 has been deleted. Consequently, the numbering of these trips has changed from previous editions.

      One of the most exciting changes on Kauai is the completion of the boardwalk through the Alakai Swamp all the way to Kilohana, the famed but formerly all-but-inaccessible viewpoint over northwest Kauai, all the way to Hanalei Bay. I’ve added this extension to Trip 43, now Pihea trail and Kilohana, because the Pihea Trailhead is one you can drive to. (Personally, I think starting and ending at the Alakai Swamp Trailhead off the Mohihi-Camp 10 Road makes for a more enjoyable trip, but you can’t drive most rental cars to this trailhead.)

      The former “Mystery Trail” now ends at a wonderful educational facility, the Discovery Center, and that’s what I’ve renamed this trip. Also, the Puu Kaohalo Trail is now signed “Berry Flat,” so I’ve renamed the trip Berry Flat.

      Enjoy!

      Getting Information About Kauai

      The search for the perfect trail guide

      I wish I could be certain this was a flawless book. However, some things limit an author’s ability to produce a perfect, error-free, always up-to-date book. Here are some of the factors, and what you can do to help yourself (and me).

      Nature makes constant revisions; so do agencies

      Nature constantly reshapes the landscape across which we plan to trek. That’s usually a gradual process, but once in a while she makes drastic changes overnight. A landslide can erase a trail in seconds. Erosion can undercut a cliff edge and make last year’s safe hike an extremely dangerous one, so that the local authorities close a trail you’d hoped to ramble on. And Kauai’s fragile volcanic terrain erodes quite rapidly.

      Agencies in charge of hiking areas may close an area because they’ve realized it’s environmentally too sensitive to survive more human visits. An area once open to overnight camping may become a day-use-only area. Trails become impassable from lack of maintenance. Happily, agencies may open new areas because they’ve been able to acquire new acreage or complete a trail-building project.

      Since I first wrote this book, I’ve seen old trails close and new trails open on Kauai—and then vanish as the rainforest reclaimed them in the wake of a natural disaster. Other trails on public land have become inaccessible because to get to them, you have to cross private land, and the landowner no longer grants permission to cross the land.

      Change is the only thing that’s constant in this world, so that guidebook authors and publishers always play “catch up” with Nature and with agencies. We want to keep guidebooks up to date, but we are always at least one step behind the latest changes. The day when you’ll have constantly-revised books on-line at your wristwatch/computer terminal is not quite here, although it’s getting closer. It’s possible that a few trail descriptions are becoming obsolete as this book goes to press.

      Write for the latest information

      You should use this book in conjunction with the latest trail information from the agency in charge of the areas you plan to hike in (the Division of State Parks or the Division of Forestry and Wildlife). However, this book gives you a much more complete picture of Kauai’s principal hiking and backcountry camping opportunities than information available from any single agency can. And it describes those opportunities from a hiker’s perspective.

      It’s a good idea to write to these agencies as soon as you’ve read this book and decided where you want to hike and camp on Kauai. Ask them for their latest trail and camping maps, regulations, and permit-issuing procedures. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope for your convenience in getting the information you need as soon as possible. Their addresses and telephone numbers are in “Permits.”

      Prepare yourself with general information, too

      A generous source of a wide variety of useful information about Hawaii is the Hawaii Visitors Bureau. You’ll find it at (800) GO-HAWAI as well as on the World Wide Web at http://www.visit.hawaii.org, a site that offers colorful pages including “Vacation Planner” pages for the State of Hawaii and for each major island.

      Here are a couple of guidebooks I use. For all the Hawaiian islands, pick up the latest edition of J.D. Bisignani’s Hawaii Handbook (Moon Publications, Chico, CA). For an outstanding guide to Kauai, get the latest edition of Andrew Doughty and Harriett Friedman’s Ultimate Kauai Guidebook (Wizard Publications, P.O. Box 991, Lihue, HI 96766-0991, [email protected]).

      Let me know what you think and what you find

      I hope this book helps make your visit to Kauai even more enjoyable than it would have been otherwise. I plan to keep on updating it regularly, and you can help me. Let me know what you think of it. Did you find it helpful when you visited Kauai? Was it accurate and complete enough that you enjoyed the walks and hikes you took based on the book? Did you notice any significant discrepancies between this book and what you found when you visited Kauai, discrepancies that you judge are not just the result of two different perceptions of the same thing? What were they? The publisher and I are very concerned about accuracy. We’d appreciate your comments. I’d also like to know about it if you think there are ways in which the book can be improved. Write to me in care of Wilderness Press, 1200 5th Street, Berkeley, CA 94710, or send an email to [email protected].

      Spoken Hawaiian:

      An Incomplete and Unauthoritative Guide

      What, only 12 letters?!

      Nineteenth-century American missionaries used only 12 letters to create a written version of the spoken Hawaiian language. Superficially, that might make Hawaiian seem simple. But Hawaiian is a much more complex and subtle language than 12 letters can do justice to. However, we’re stuck with those 12 letters, the five English vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and seven of the consonants (h, k, l, m, n, p, w).

      Consonants

      The consonants have the same sound in Hawaiian as they do in your everyday English except for “w.” “W” is sometimes pronounced as “v” when it follows “a,” always pronounced as “v” when it follows “e” or “i.” (For example, the devastating 1982 hurricane’s name is pronounced “I-va,” not “I-wa.”)

      Vowels

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