Hawaii
Runnin’ with Rani: Big Island’s Century Ride – West Hawaii Today
Hawaii
The 7 Friendliest Little Towns In Hawaii
The Aloha Spirit is codified as state law in Hawaii under section 5-7-5 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, which gives residents a real charter for how they treat each other and visitors. That ethic shows up across the Hawaiian Islands in both coastal communities and inland mountain villages. Paia leans into Maui’s surf-and-art identity on the North Shore. Pahoa preserves one of the largest concentrations of historic wooden buildings in the state. Waimanalo holds a quiet beachfront on Oahu’s windward side. Each of the seven towns ahead has its own version of the welcome.
Paia, Maui
Paia is as well known for being a hippie surfer town as it is for its art. Visitors looking for a laid-back experience find just that on a walkable downtown grid. Kaulahao Beach is one of the better stretches for walking along the shore and spotting green sea turtles resting on the sand. Nearby, Baldwin Beach offers golden sand and volcanic mountains in the background, with a small cove at the eastern end that’s safer for swimming and seeing turtles.
Art-focused travelers should visit the Kim McDonald Art Gallery to see paintings depicting Hawaiian landscapes, with appointments bookable in advance or during a stay on Maui. Anyone in Paia during July can join one of the multiple Obon celebrations held over consecutive weekends. The events include community dancing, Japanese festival food, and a steady current of Aloha spirit throughout.
Pahoa, Hawai’i
Pahoa sits on the eastern tip of the Big Island and holds one of the largest concentrations of historic wooden buildings in Hawaii. The local Puna lifestyle has earned residents the nickname “punatics,” and the community takes real pride in the unconventional character of its slice of the Big Island.
The heritage sites include the Akebono Theater, which served sugar cane workers more than a hundred years ago, and the Star of the Sea Painted Church, built between 1927 and 1928 and later moved to Kalapana to save it from lava flows. Father Evarist Gielen hand-painted the church’s upper interior with devotional and scriptural scenes, and the building is on the National Register of Historic Places. Pahoa Village Road still consists largely of 20th-century wooden structures and false-front storefronts.
Visitors who want to meet the “punatics” can head to Isaac Hale Beach Park, where a new beach was formed by the 2018 lava flow, or stop by the Maku’u Farmers Market on a Sunday, where vendors are happy to talk over tables of fresh fruit and vegetables.
Honoka’a, Hawai’i
Honoka’a is a slightly out-of-the-way destination on the Big Island that justifies the drive. The pretty town features the Waipio Valley Lookout, where visitors can take in the black-sand beach, distant waterfalls, and the valley once dominated by taro fields. After grabbing a malasada at Tex Drive In, visitors can continue to the Waipi’o Valley (now accessible only via authorized tour) to learn about Hawaii’s early history and see the Valley of the Kings, where King Kamehameha the Great was raised. Some authorized shuttle tours approach the black-sand beach, but swimming is not recommended due to strong currents, high surf, and rip currents.
In Honoka’a itself, the late-May Western Week features parades and rodeo events and is one of the busiest weekends in town. The Hamakua Harvest Festival in the fall celebrates local agriculture with food, music, and produce stalls.
Waikoloa, Hawai’i
Waikoloa’s friendly guides know where the adventure and relaxation are. Day visitors looking to relax have A-Bay and Hapuna Beach State Park. A-Bay (Anaehoomalu Bay) features a wide beach and ancient Hawaiian fish ponds that are a real source of local pride, with calm water that’s well-suited to snorkeling and paddleboarding. Hapuna covers a long stretch of white sand a short drive from town, with conditions that work for boogie boarding, swimming, and seasonal whale watching.
For something more active, the Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail follows in the footsteps of Native Hawaiians, with petroglyphs and open ocean views along the route. The Waikoloa Petroglyph Preserve holds hundreds of carvings depicting early Hawaiian life. The annual Waikoloa Lei Day Festival in May celebrates the lei-making tradition at King’s Shops and Queen’s Marketplace.
Hanalei, Kauai
Hanalei on the island of Kauai is known for its hula shows and island hospitality. Visitors can reserve a session at 1 Hotel Hanalei Bay to learn hula basics and experience the tradition in its home context. The Hanalei landscape supports plenty of outdoor options, with choices that include hiking the Napali Coast and taking a boat tour for snorkeling or sailing. Ke’e Beach is one of the better spots for snorkeling and swimming, with a protective reef that keeps the larger waves at bay.
Surfers have Hanalei Bay’s consistent waves running in sizes for both beginners and experts. Anyone wanting to spend more time with locals can stop by the Hanalei Pier to join the fishing scene or settle in for the sunset over the water and the surrounding mountains.
Haleiwa, Oahu
One of the most distinctive things to do in Haleiwa is paddle the Anahulu River under the Rainbow Bridge. The river is scenic, framed by palm trees, and offers regular sightings of sea turtles. Night paddling on the river is also available, with paddleboards lit by LED lights underneath.
Next to the Rainbow Bridge, Hale’iwa Beach Park has calm waters for wading. The beach is one of the most-visited stretches on the North Shore for a Hawaiian sunset. Catamarans depart Hale’iwa Harbor for sunset cruises and seasonal whale watching in winter. Arts-focused visitors can plan a Haleiwa trip around the Annual Haleiwa Arts Festival, with the 2026 event scheduled for June 13-14 at Hale’iwa Beach Park, featuring live performance art, food trucks, and a juried art market.
Waimanalo, Oahu
Waimanalo Beach is one of Oahu’s quieter stretches of sand. Visitors can take a long walk on uncrowded shoreline and enjoy the warm water. Snorkelers and turtle-watchers can head to Kaiona Beach Park, where the water holds colorful corals and green sea turtles glide in the shallow waves. The Sea Life Park on Makapu’u Point lets visitors swim with dolphins and watch sea lion shows at the Hawaiian Ocean Theater.
For an extended stay, Waimanalo Beach has plantation-style cottages that go back to an earlier era of Hawaiian travel. To get to know residents, the Sunflower Spring and Summer Event runs June through July at Waimanalo Country Farms, with sunflower fields, sweet cornbread, and Nalo Made lemonade as the calling cards.
Hawaii Offers Experiences Beyond the Postcard
Community comes first across the Hawaiian Islands. Locals are warm and welcoming, and they make room for visitors to participate rather than just observe. That allows people to meet the “punatics” first-hand and to pick up activities like lei-making or hula dancing in the settings that made them famous. Across these seven towns, the goal is connection: with the people, with the islands, and with the long tradition of Aloha that runs through everything.
Hawaii
Alameda asks state for help in wake of recent traffic deaths – West Hawaii Today
Hawaii
Spotlight Now: Exploring Hawaii’s economy from strain to solutions
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Economist Paul Brewbaker said Hawaii’s economy will worsen this year as inflation pressures continue to build.
On “Spotlight Now,” Brewbaker said Hawaii took a major hit during the pandemic — bigger than many other states — and has not fully returned to its pre-pandemic trajectory.
“That’s sort of a definition of resilience: getting back to not just where you started, but getting back to the path you were on before. And adaptation is the key to doing that. The difficulty Hawaii is having is making the necessary adaptations,” he said.
Brewbaker said higher inflation expectations are pushing borrowing costs up, pointing to the 10-year Treasury note moving from about 4% at the end of last year to about 4.6%. He said mortgage rates and other borrowing rates are also being pushed higher.
Brewbaker said housing costs are the biggest driver of Hawaii’s high cost of living, and said the housing portion of the consumer price index has pulled overall costs higher. He estimated the cost of living in Hawaii is about 25% higher than the national average, a gap he said has not changed much since statehood, but said housing costs have climbed.
Sherry Menor, president and CEO of the Chamber of Commerce Hawaii, said running a business is “getting increasingly challenging,” pointing to high costs and ongoing uncertainty that make it difficult for companies to plan ahead.
Menor said some small businesses have reached a tipping point and decided to close because “there’s only so much cost they can absorb.”
Asked what factor weighs most on businesses beyond items like tariffs and minimum wage increases, Menor pointed to “uncertainty of everything,” calling conditions fluid and changing. She said the lack of stability makes it harder for businesses to plan, and added that no sector is immune.
Menor said small businesses feel the impacts most acutely because “each dollar counts,” while larger companies may be able to redirect resources.
Menor encouraged residents to “buy local first” to support local businesses and keep money circulating in Hawaii.
With health care systems facing staffing shortages, leaders with the Academy for Healthcare Innovation (AHI) say short-term certificate programs can help get local residents into stable, in-demand jobs.
AHI offers certificate-based training and entry-level programs such as medical assistant, nurse aide and surgical instrument processing.
AHI has graduated three nurse cohorts and one group of surgical instrument technicians.
Executive director Bridget Lai said each had a pathway to employment, including through employer-sponsored tuition or clinical externships that led to recruiting.
“The students who complete, certify and work for employers in the community are able to meet the workforce needs,” Lai explained. “We’re able to partner with hospital systems and other partners, like Arcadia and Ohana Pacific. We review our curriculum to see that the program we’re designing is meeting their needs.”
A nurse aide salary can range from $46,000 to $51,000, and said benefits can bring compensation into the $60,000 range, and surgical technology can pay over $100,000, Lai said.
Kimberly Gonzales is a recent graduate who wanted more experience while working at Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children.
Her manager suggested the Academy for Healthcare Innovation program, where she completed eight weeks of training and a clinical externship.
She said she loves the work and is transitioning into being a medical assistant.
Learn more and apply: ahihawaii.org
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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