Our hike today ranged from Plan A (Ohulehule) – bad weather, Plan B (Kolekole Pass) – no drop off, Plan C (Pueo Falls) – no flow, Plan D (Ma’akua Falls) – well some of us got to do that and finally down to Plan E (Pu’u Ma’eli’eli) and ended with us waiting more than hiking. A wonderful test of our patience and then some. Photo by Art Young.
Aida and I piled into Lilyn’s car and drove to the designated meet up spot which was Swanzy Beach Park. We caught the sunrise on our way. One of the few bright spots in our day. Photo by Aida Gordon.
We found out the goat was running late. Surprise. So we decided to scoot on a tree to kill time.
Time marched on, unfortunately we were not marching anywhere. Called the rest of the group to find out their ETA. Unanswered. Waiting turned into worrying. We drove to Kahana Valley to see if the others went there by mistake. Nada. We turned around and drove all the way back to Temple Valley to see if perhaps they got into an accident. Nada. Quan even dropped by Ferlino’s house to find out that Jasmin had already dropped them off. Calls still went unanswered. Photo by Lilyn Avendano.
Art, Ferlino and Tessa frolicking under the shadow of the 600′ falls. TFTI.
I’m a little confused here. Does meet up at Swanzy Beach Park sound like meet up at Ma’akua Falls? What we’ve got here is failure to communicate. Photo by Tessa Bugay.
Half the day was already spent and half of us still didn’t do squat. So we ended up eating an early lunch at the nearby eatery. Thanks to Jasmin for bringing us a Filipino dessert after she corrected her overshot to Laie.
Dumpster diving before they become finger lickin’ good.
When you go out on a limb and fail to meet somebody’s expectations of humping.
We decided to do the digging hills trail to salvage what was left of our day, along with Quan who joined our late hike.
Going up the slick and cloying mud that passed for a trail. Photo by Art Young.
Ducking through the corridor of trees and treading on the rooted path. Photo by Lilyn Avendano.
Rope? We don’t need no stinkin’ rope!
Group photo at the sign that also gives a short history of the place.
Exploring one of the two WW2 bunkers leftover from Camp He’eia.
Approaching the last bunker that affords one panoramic views of the Windward coastline.
Inside and outside.
Group photo left to right of the reunited group: Aida, Lilyn, Tessa, myself, Quan, Ferlino and Art.
To make the hike a tad more interesting, we all agreed to hike down the trail towards the ocean as none of us had done it before. Photo by Art Young.
Climbing down the steeply rooted section. Photo by Lilyn Avendano.
Passing underneath the low overhead trees and fern covered trail. Photo by Art Young.
Luckily, we don’t have any NBA players in our group.
We had to backtrack a bit as Art noticed we were going the “wrong” way and not the “right” way.
In over our heads. Photo by Aida Gordon.
Breaking out into an open spot with scenic views. Photo by Lilyn Avendano.
Following the ribboned trail on our way down the ridge line.
Skirting the fenced homes as we looked for our way out. Photo by Lilyn Avendano.
There’s always a swinger in the group. Photo by Tessa Bugay.
Excuse me, we’re looking for the open house? Luckily, a friendly neighbor allowed us safe passage while another not so friendly one scowled and yelled at some of us.
Walking out of the trail and back to pounding the pavement. Photo by Aida Gordon.
When you don’t have exact change for the bus. Photo by Tessa Bugay.
Walking on the highway where it was brought up that somebody’s acquaintance got run over on this same stretch of road not too long ago. Good timing to bring it up. Let’s get off this road.
Passing time as Ferlino went ahead to retrieve Quan’s car at the harbor.
When somebody thinks they’re driving their van, when they’re actually driving a compact car which can only hold five. We numbered seven. Photo by Ferlino Carinio.
Driving back to the harbor where we saw the shrimp boat with no fresh fish. No bueno on visiting the grass shack. Only for family and friends. We didn’t fall into either camp.
Our trying hike covered 2.5 miles with fun and forgetful friends. Post hike meal at Kenko-ya, one of the few spots that offered dine-in service.
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.
{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
Lmao… what a day that was!!! After done playing in the waterfalls the 3 of us hurried out of there thinking KENJI’s gonna k**ll us all. Whatta fun day regardless
Aloha Tessa,
Yes, what a trying day for some of us. Still a fun day. LOL.
Mahalo
Ahhh but we have stories to tell and fun times to remember!.????
Aloha Aida,
Yup, I guess the trade off was still imbalanced but not bad overall. LOL.
Mahalo