The
Big Island of Hawaii
is well named - it could hold all the other islands put together, with
room to spare. The entire island has the population of a medium-sized
town, with 150,000 people (half what it was in Captain Cook's day) and
a low level of tourism compared to Oahu or Maui; despite its fair share
of restaurants, bars and so on, this is basically a rural community.
The development that will surely come may put an end to that, but for
the moment there are sleepy old towns all over the island, unchanged
for a century. The few resorts are in the least beautiful areas, built
on the barren lava flows of the
Kona
coast to catch maximum sunshine.
The Big Island is, in fact, growing, its southern shore inching ever further out to sea, thanks to the
Kilauea
volcano, which has destroyed roads and even towns, and spews out pristine beaches of jet-black sand.
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
, which includes
Mauna Loa
as well as Kilauea (though not
Mauna Kea
, which is further north and higher than either at 13,796ft), is
absolutely compelling; you can explore steaming craters and cinder
cones, venture into the rainforest, and at times approach within feet
of the eruption itself. The summits of Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea have the
clearest air on earth - and astronomical observatories to take
advantage of it - but down below, when the tradewinds drop, the island
is prone to a choking sulphurous haze known as " vog
."
As befits the birthplace and base of
King Kamehameha
, more of the ancient Hawaii survives on the Big Island than anywhere else in the islands.
Puuhonua O Honaunau National Historical Park
preserves a "place of refuge" for
kapu
-breakers and defeated warriors, and there are further temples north along the Kohala coast, while
Waipio Valley
, where Kamehameha spent his youth, remains as lush and green as ever.
Flights to the Big Island arrive at
Hilo
on the rainy east coast, or the much less genuine but inoffensive resort of
Kailua
(often referred to as Kona) on the west. If you don't rent a
car
, you may not get to the interesting sites; one bus daily links Hilo
and Kailua, and organized bus tours go to specific attractions, but
public transportation is all but nonexistent.