Beaches are all over the place, but there's much more to do on Kauai than walk in the sand.
Kipu Ranch ATV Tour
Maree stands under Mt. Haupu near an area featured in Jurrassic Park.
From a pass near the top of Mt. Haupu we were able to see the private, hidden valley of Kipu Kai, where they filmed much of Six Days and Seven Nights.
On the way back down the mountain, this part was on a thinly paved road.
This is part of the hill in Indiana Jones and the Lost Ark, where Indy gets chased by natives in the first scene in the movie.

Above: After our tour we were pretty filthy.
Our guides told us this is how they season their pigs, with flavored soda. Like chickens, feral pigs are all over the island. With fish, pigs, and chickens running rampant, it would not be easy to survive here.
Hiking and Swimming
The ocean was pretty rough while we were there, as it typically is in winter, so we stuck with land activities for much of the time. Maui offers virtually no hiking at all, except in the National Park, and there are few trails even there, except at 13,000 ft. Kauai has lots of trails, and has some of the best scenery in the world to hike through. I had 4 or 5 hikes in mind, but only managed three. Two hikes were along the Na Pali Coast, but i'll get to those in the next blog post.
Part of the trail along the irrigation ditch. Nearby the ditch goes into a low 800 foot tunnel that you can walk through, bent over, if you desire.
In the distance is the mountain where the wettest spot on earth is supposed to be. It's normally covered in waterfalls. Our helicopter tour took us back there.
We did another short hike to a freshwater jungle swimming hole. Getting to the trail head in our crappy PT Cruiser was more of a challenge than the actual hike, and i ended up getting a flat tire. I didn't notice the tire until 6 hours later, but still, it's pretty pitiful since the road wasn't what i would consider a bad road.
The swimming hole. There's a concrete damn up there, and the irrigation ditch comes out of the tunnel on the left, then continues to a lock system off to the right. The water was incredibly cold, and a strong current would initially pull you quickly towards the little falls, then spit you out to the side.
The road that the Cruiser couldn't handle. On the way back we picked up a Canadian hiker and gave him a lift back to his car, about 4 miles down the road. He had just finished working on the Olympic preparations in Vancouver, and had decided to get out of town once the Winter Olympics officially began. He was a nice guy.
Another option for swimming. On the north end of the island are some large, ominous sea caves. Now after many years of changing tides and currents the caves are inland. Some are dry but this one was filled with deep fresh water. A sign claimed you would die from a cave in if you tried swimming.
Helicopter Touring
The helicopter, tour was a much better value for our money than the one we had on Maui. The helicopter will take you around the entire island, over and through remote canyons, past endless waterfalls, and along the entire Na Pali Coast. It was the most scenic flight tour i've ever been on (other than the Ruth Gorge in the Alaska Range), even though it was raining for much of the tour. This time our helicopter was smaller than the one we had on Maui, and it had doors on it. The windows go all the way down the side, offering great visibility, but as i feared, the reflections on the glass were out of control, even with a polarizer. And I had to bribe someone to get a front seat.
This is an area of immense scale, one of the most sacred sites to Hawaiians, where water gushes out from a huge overhang beneath immense cliffs on the wettest part of the island. It was dark back here.
Turning around from the waterfalls you can see the deep narrow valley we were flying through. This was my favorite part of the air tour.
We flew up a long steamy looking jungle valley. The rain may have made this portion of the flight more interesting.
I think this was over the Kipu Ranch area.
The National Botanical Gardens

We weren't originally going to go to the Botanical Gardens on the south side of the island (not the gardens to the North), but on our last day we had to burn up 7 hours after we checked out of our hotel before we could get on our plane. I didn't want to get dirty doing something like hiking or swimming, so we went to the gardens. I can't say i recommend the place. It's divided into two areas. A "good" area that costs $40 to get into, and a mediocre area, which still costs $20. Additionally you can't just drive up and walk in. There is no parking in the garden, and the 15 minute shuttle ride only goes in and out once every hour. I've been to several other botanical gardens that are of better quality and much cheaper to get into, and compared to the plants you can see everywhere else on the island, it's just not worth the money.
This was one of the prettier areas.
There's an area of the gardens that you also have to pay extra for for and be driven too, where there is a grove of very large versions of this kind of tree.
Next Time: The Na Pali Coast