Poamoho Ridge Trail to Manana

by kenji SAITO on October 8, 2022

Hiking Poamoho Ridge Trail to Manana

We spent a camping weekend in the mountain and defied the weather predictions of rain all weekend.

Poamoho Trailhead

Poamoho Trailhead

Thanks to Renato for picking Alexis, Quan, Tessa and myself up and shuttling us to the Poamoho trail. He also managed to finally break in his 4×4 on the jeep road and get a taste of what’s it like to carry a heavy backpack.

Poamoho Trail

Poamoho Trail

Passing the halfway mark, thankful that we no longer have to worry about cannibals. Just have to read about them.

Poamoho Trail

Poamoho Trail

Headed into the gully where we soon passed two other kids who had spent the night at the cabin and were making their exit down the trail we had just come up from.

Poamoho Summit

Poamoho Summit

Group photo at the 2,520′ grassy summit with some of the best views on the island.

Poamoho Trail

Poamoho Trail

Leaving the summit for the boardwalk.

Poamoho Cabin

Poamoho Cabin

We filtered water to stock up our water supplies, signed the log book and poked around the cabin. Clean as a whistle.

Poamoho Cabin

Poamoho Cabin

I think not many hikers know you can reserve this cabin in advance. But I’m not sure how that would play out in real life. Would a group that had no reservations but were already staying in the cabin vacate for an arriving group with reservations? We had no reservations so we took a group photo and shoved off.

Ko'olau Summit Trail (KST)

Ko’olau Summit Trail (KST)

Making our way towards the man-made notch in the mountains.

KST

KST

The group crossing one of many meadows in the mountains.

KST

KST

Hiking on the trail that was blasted and dug out the side of the cliffs back in the 1930s.

Pauao Junction

Pauao Junction

Looking down at the ridge that drops down into Kahana Valley.

KST

KST

Alexis staying hydrated on the trail. A good practice that would result in running low on H20 later in the day.

KST

KST

Looking back at the lush and verdant valleys separated by multiple peaks.

KST

KST

Weather forecast had shown a 40% chance of rain today. The KST weather in the mountains is always unpredictable and rewarding at the same time it seems.

KST

KST

Tessa petting the last known specimen of the Ko’olau Goose. Looking rather long in the tooth.

KST

KST

Background view of the valleys with the three peaks of Kualoa, Manamana and Ohulehule.

KST

KST

Leaving the fence line and taking the lower trail.

Schofield-Waikane Summit

Schofield-Waikane Summit

Quan picked up a leaf hitchhiker that stayed with her for some time. I think she is taking the green movement a bit too seriously.

Schofield-Waikane Summit

Schofield-Waikane Summit

Panoramic view of the mostly undeveloped valleys from the 2,360′ summit.

KST

KST

Heading towards the split in the trail that was visibly etched into the mountains.

Waikane-Waiahole Junction

Waikane-Waiahole Junction

Going up the higher trail to stay in the mountains. Taking the lower trail will descend down into Waikane valley.

KST

KST

Traversing over the well-trodden landslide.

KST

KST

Contouring on the Leeward side as we rounded hill after hill.

KST

KST

Taking a break in the mountains. Miles away from civilization. Many miles.

KST

KST

Resuming our contouring below the ridges. Are we there yet?

KST

KST

Hiking by the city lights.

KST

KST

Following the fence line down as it dropped us into the valley for the night.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

We set up camp in the dark on the grassy slope and ate our dinner in compartmentalized solitude.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

The bee that proved science wrong, as it hung outside her tent all night after being swatted by Alexis. Science claims that insects do not possess such high order intelligence to harbor anger or vengeance. I guess this bee was literally just dying to prove that theory wrong.

Schofield-Waikane Campsite

Schofield-Waikane Campsite

Meanwhile, a couple clicks over, Chris had finished work and ran up the Schofield Waikane trail to camp at the summit for the night.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

Day 2
Catching the cloudy sunrise the next day from our campsite.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

Tessa standing in front of the horizontal leaning sugi pine tree that seems to be slowly creeping up the hill.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

Some wanted coffee for breakfast. No water. No coffee. Time to break down camp and take our leave.

Tree of Life Campsite

Tree of Life Campsite

Climbing out of the valley to regain the trail.

KST

KST

Looking out towards the other and older mountain range of Waianae.

KST

KST

One of our last of multiple fence crossings on the trail.

KST

KST

Hugging the uluhe carpeted mountain as we made our way on the trail.

KST

KST

Picking our way through the trail riddled with false holes and shin and ankle high branches and roots.

KST

KST

When you got to drink, you got to drink. Can you filter water from the leaves?

KST

KST

Arriving at the notch that marked our descent down into the grove of pine trees.

KST

KST

Looking back at Quan and Tessa at the notch.

KST

KST

Walking through the grove of Japanese sugi pine trees under the shadow of Waiahole summit.

Camp Rusty

Camp Rusty

Taking a break at the former site of Kipapa Cabin.

KST

KST

Climbing our way out of the grove of pine trees.

Kipapa Summit

Kipapa Summit

Where the KST becomes the KSRT.

Ko'olau Summit Ridge Trail (KSRT)

Ko’olau Summit Ridge Trail (KSRT)

Chris the goat, soon caught up with the group on the trail.

KSRT

KSRT

We left the mountain meandering behind us, as it was just straight up hiking on top of the mountains from this point on.

Waiahole Middle

Waiahole Middle

Chris expressing his feelings about this windward ridge that we had climbed over five years ago.

KSRT

KSRT

The walking wounded.

KSRT

KSRT

Looking down at another cabin off the KST sitting on a spur ridge. Hmmm.

KSRT

KSRT

The trail soon turned into a cardio rollercoaster. Big hills. Up and down. Repeat until finished.

KSRT

KSRT

Chris going through the gate that leads to the saddle known as Waiawa Gap.

Waiawa Gap

Waiawa Gap

Dropping down into the saddle.

Waiawa Gap

Waiawa Gap

Climbing our way out of the low point. No bees reported.

KSRT

KSRT

Hills. Let’s take a break. Drink water. Don’t tell me what to do.

KSRT

KSRT

More hills.

KSRT

KSRT

Looking down at a broken spectre, a natural phenomenon that happens when one is looking down from a misty ridge with the sun behind their back.

KSRT

KSRT

Quan pointing to our water filling station in the mountains.

KSRT

KSRT

Alexis passing through the tree tunnel that leads down to the creek.

The Corner

The Corner

For some of us, reaching the water source couldn’t have come soon enough.

The Corner

The Corner

The rest of us making our way towards the upper creek, one soggy step at a time.

The Corner

The Corner

Replenishing our water stocks. With increased water comes increased weight.

The Corner

The Corner

What’s for lunch? Saimin with chicken is what’s for lunch.

The Corner

The Corner

Sun worshippers.

The Corner

The Corner

Climbing out of the creek bed with water in our tummies and on our backs.

KSRT

KSRT

Hiking up and around what can be a confusing junction when socked in. Not so much today.

KSRT

KSRT

Tessa hanging a shaka towards the cloud frosted peaks and valleys we had left behind.

KSRT

KSRT

Yes, I know I can take my own shadow picture. But I would like you to take it. Aye aye Captain.

KSRT

KSRT

Chris catching a clear and cloudy view of the corner.

KSRT

KSRT

Tree hugger.

Kaneohe Bay

Kaneohe Bay

Looking out towards the largest sheltered body of water in the islands.

KSRT

KSRT

Hiking towards our last summit of the weekend.

KSRT

KSRT

Heading to the summit. That is the summit. I don’t care what you say.

KSRT

KSRT

Scrambling the last few hundred feet to the top.

Manana Summit

Manana Summit

A rather dramatic expression of how we all felt after arriving at the 2,660′ summit that marked the end of our KST weekend traverse.

Manana Summit

Manana Summit

Our last group photo after somebody regained their composure from overacting.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

Catching the golden hour as we left the massive knob.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

Shedding light on our way down the 5.5 mile ridge trail.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

Looking back at the mountains as the moon began its rise towards the heavens.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

The arachnid burning the midnight oil as it instinctually weaved its geometric web, that is considered a engineering marvel that serves as its home and a food trap.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

A big thanks to Art who had hiked up the trail to meet us with pork hash and assorted drinks. I think I want a soda. Oh, was I thinking out loud?

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

Wakey wakey, eggs and bakey. Don’t hit your head on the way down from the bench.

Manana Trail

Manana Trail

Looking up towards a moon ring, which is another atmospheric optical phenomenon that is formed by moonlight being refracted from suspended ice crystals. There was a planet in the orbit of the moon ring, not sure if it was Mars or Venus. I flunked astronomy.

All pau

All pau

We came down to the trailhead in the dead of night with no chance encounter with the resident homeless who supposedly likes to get too close for comfort.

GPS Tracks

GPS Tracks

Our weekend hiking covered almost 17 miles through the country country of the Northern KST with fun company.

Post hike meal was at the Pearl City Drive-Thru McDonald’s. That’s what happens when you finish late. You can’t be picky about your food choices.

Photos taken by Alexis Catarina, Chris Bautista, Quan Haberstroh, Tessa Bugay and yours truly. Not necessarily in order.

Note: I have been made aware that some hikers have been using my blog as a hiking guide and getting lost on the trails. Please note that this blog was made to document the hike for the crew(s) that did it. That is why some of my comments will seem to have no relevance or meaning to anybody outside of the crew(s) that hiked that trail. My blog was never meant as a hiking guide, so please do not treat it as such. If you find inspiration and entertainment from these hikes, that is more than enough. If you plan on replicating these hikes, do so in the knowledge that you should do your own research accordingly as trail conditions, access, legalities and so forth are constantly in flux. What was current today is most likely yesterdays news. Please be prepared to accept any risks and responsibilities on your own as you should know your own limitations, experience and abilities before you even set foot on a trail, as even the “simplest” or “easiest” of trails can present potential pitfalls for even the most “experienced” hikers. One should also always let somebody know of your hiking plans in case something doesn’t go as planned, better safe than sorry.

Cancel reply

Leave a Comment

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Wahinee01 October 30, 2022 at 2:54 am

Whoah! That was a longggg, tiring and fun hike… But with the awe inspiring views along the way, I not complaining LOL
Thank you Kenji

Reply

kenji SAITO October 31, 2022 at 9:18 am

Aloha Tessa,
Yup long weekend tempered by great weather.
Mahalo

Reply

Previous post:

Next post: