Poamoho to Pupukea Road

by kenji SAITO on December 21, 2024

It was our second attempt with the same crew for the same trail. The first one was aborted due to severe weather. This time around was different. We would finish, come hell or high water or mud.

Poamoho Trail

Poamoho Trail

Mahalo to Edgar for driving Aida, Jeremy, Roger and myself up the jeep road for our hike today.

Poamoho Trail

Poamoho Trail

Jeremy crossing the barely wet stream that was a marked departure from our last visit where the stream was flowing quite forcefully.

Poamoho Summit

Poamoho Summit

Group photo on the surprisingly still summit at 2,520′ elevation.

Cline Memorial

Cline Memorial

Leaving the summit as we stepped foot on the Ko’olau Summit Trail. Stuart Ball said “The Ko’olau Summit Trail is for experienced hikers only because it is overgrown, muddy, and sometimes narrow and obscure.” Truer words were never spoken for this day.

Ko'olau Summit Trail (KST)

Ko’olau Summit Trail (KST)

We stayed to the left of the fence line as we made our way past the snail habitat and opened the gate to where the country is still country, trails less traveled.

KST

KST

Contoured our way below the fenced ridge line and traversed across the old landslide until we regained the fence line.

KST

KST

Breaking free of the mud and overgrowth, we enjoyed a brief respite on an open section of the trail. Enjoy it while it lasts.

KST

KST

Climbing up the gradual slope where we soon regained the fence line again, a constant companion on the trails.

KST

KST

Following the fence line against the backdrop of Kahana Valley and the prominent peak of Ohulehule.

Boot Junction

Boot Junction

Group photo at the iconic junction, wondering when the boot will eventually fall off the stake due to constant exposure to the elements.

KST

KST

Roger going over the fence after crossing the spongy meadow.

KST

KST

Resuming our fenced walk.

KST

KST

Keeping the fence to our left and the views to our right.

KST

KST

Fences for daze.

Rabbit Hole

Rabbit Hole

Group photo at the sign that needed a new home or was it the home needed a new sign?

KST

KST

Roger and the rest of them did not want to get “baptized” by the deep mud at the foot of the gate. Sticks in the mud.

Papali Summit

Papali Summit

Taking a well-deserved break at the summit.

KST

KST

Resuming our hike on the trail. Roger was probably thinking “what trail?”

KST

KST

The group following in the footsteps of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) that blasted and carved the KST out of the mountains from Black Junction to Kipapa from 1933-1935.

KST

KST

The mostly young men lead by experienced engineers had to work in inhospitable terrain and often in grueling conditions that was marked by low hanging clouds, incessant rain, mud and heavy overgrowth.

KST

KST

The original purpose of building this trail was justified for invasive animal eradication, forestry management and later recreation.

KST

KST

Watching the fiery sunbeams as it slowly washed over the Waianae Mountain Range.

KST

KST

The group climbing in and out of the notch, which meant …

Koloa Cabin

Koloa Cabin

… which meant we were close to our cabin for the night. The door was unhinged and almost fell on me as I turned the doorknob. What a welcoming surprise. The rest of the group wanted to see the cabin from the top before coming down to dry out as best as we could for the night. No one wanted to be a Shithead tonight, so my deck of playing cards stayed in its pack.

Koloa Cabin

Koloa Cabin

Day 2
We woke up to starry skies which was a pleasant surprise to me as most of my overnighters were marked by gusting winds and rain and morning clouds.

Koloa Cabin

Koloa Cabin

Once a princess, always a princess in the mountains.

Koloa Cabin

Koloa Cabin

Group photo after we cleaned up the cabin, used the open air outhouse and got ready for another day of mud and more overgrowth.

KST

KST

Mud race anybody? Tradition dies easily in the mountains.

KST

KST

We all enjoyed the mud in our own ways.

KST

KST

The jarhead wanted to take point and show us that he still got it, in terms of land navigation skills. Semper Fi.

KST

KST

Let’s go this way as we don’t want to hike on the Kawailoa Trail. Not today.

KST

KST

Winding our way through the mountains as “The Eddie” was kicking off at Waimea Bay.

Laie Summit

Laie Summit

Celebrating Aida’s second KST finish with the non-traditional non-pouring of bottled water. Such a buzzkill.

Laie Summit

Laie Summit

Leaving the 2,240′ foxhole summit as we made our way to the trail.

KST

KST

Looking up at the satellite that keeps the tides and ecosystems in check on Earth.

KST

KST

Somebody didn’t believe me when I said the overgrowth would be worse than yesterday and the duration and distance longer. Seeing is believing.

KST

KST

Meandering through the mountains as we spied rows of the single trunked palm tree with fan shaped leaves below us, the endemic loulu palm trees.

Malaekahana Junction

Malaekahana Junction

There once used to be an HTMC green wooden sign that marks this spot, now only a friends glove marks the junction.

KST

KST

Round and round we go throughout the mountains. That is why this is called the Ko’olau Summit Trail and not the Ko’olau Summit Ridge Trail.

KST

KST

Disappearing into the overgrowth, only to pop up later like so many jack in the boxes.

KST

KST

Jeremy was just having a grand ole’ time, wallowing in the overgrowth.

KST

KST

Group photo at what I call the halfway spot on the trail.

KST

KST

Taking our lunch break, further down the trail and away from the mud pits.

KST

KST

Pays to be limber and flexible on this trail.

KST

KST

Who brought the machete? Crickets.

KST

KST

Crawling and scrambling our way through the often dense overgrowth.

KST

KST

Overgrowth all day and then some. No exaggeration.

Pu'u Hina

Pu’u Hina

Enjoying the city lights from the summit of Pupukea.

Black Junction

Black Junction

We reached the end or start of the KST. It also marked my #18 passage across the dormant fragmented shield volcano. Yes dormant, not extinct.

All pau

All pau

The yellow gates near Camp Pupukea did not mark the end of our hike. We still had another mile to walk to Jeremy’s car. 1.2 miles to be exact. Shall we call Uber? Don’t bother. Nobody’s going to come. Let’s start walking and get this night over.

GPS Tracks

GPS Tracks

Our weekend camping hike covered 19.46 miles through mud, overgrowth and mountainous scenery. Congratulations to Aida for finishing the KST for her second time. Fun times with a good group of friends. Post hike meal at Jack in the Box. In the parking lot.

Photos taken by Aida Gordon, Jeremy Cannone, Roger Schiffman, 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.

Leave a Comment

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Aida Gordon January 8, 2025 at 11:12 pm

So many things I never knew about the sections we hiked through. Even if this is the 2nd time. Thanks for guiding us through another multi day hike and also for my 2nd KST finish. I do not need a 3rd, tha k you very much! Lol.. Congratulations on your 18th although I don’t know how you keep doing it. My damp feet was so sore by the time we hit the road…so glad we got down safely that night with pr without going through the gulch! Fun times despite the mud and overgrowth.

Reply

Previous post:

Next post: