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Keahua Forestry Arboretum Kauai |
All My Condos in Kauai
Follow My Blue Hole Blog
Heading inland from Wailua on Kuamoo Road (580) past Opaekaa Falls and the Wailua Reservoir to the Keahua Arboretum.
Keahua Arboretum is home to mango, monkeypod, eucalyptus trees. The streams are filled with life, and there are pools in which to swim. Picnic tables are scattered here and there and just beyond is access to the sacred area of Mt. Waialeale.
From the Arboretum, fasten your seat belts because we are going on a bumpy ride, further into the heart of Kauai. At the end of Highway 580, Kuamo'o Road will end abruptly at a spillway. The drive beyond the paved highway is very rough, bumpy, often muddy, and the second water crossing can be swift at times.
The trail crosses streams and winds through the dense forest to the, "Gate", used in Jurassic Park.
You are traveling across the Wailua Forest Management Area.
The 'Blue Hole' is at the base of Wai'ale'ale, which is known as the wettest spot on earth. Locals refer to this location as the Wailua river headwaters; it's where you see the falls coming down the wall.
Mount Waiʻaleʻale in Hawaiian, literally, "rippling water" or "overflowing water" and also often spelt Waialeale in English without the ʻokina), elevation 5,148 feet (1,569 m), is a shield volcano and the second highest point on the island of Kauaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands. Averaging more than 426 inches (10,800 mm) of rain a year since 1912, with a record 683 inches (17,300 mm) in 1982, its summit is considered one of the rainiest spots on earth.
GPS Road to Blue Hole
All My Flickr Pictures of the Second Water Crossing
All My Flickr Pictures of the Jurrasic Gate
All My Flickr Pictures of the Mt Waialeale
The road to Blue Hole on YouTube
Follow My Blue Hole Blog
Heading inland from Wailua on Kuamoo Road (580) past Opaekaa Falls and the Wailua Reservoir to the Keahua Arboretum.
Keahua Arboretum is home to mango, monkeypod, eucalyptus trees. The streams are filled with life, and there are pools in which to swim. Picnic tables are scattered here and there and just beyond is access to the sacred area of Mt. Waialeale.
From the Arboretum, fasten your seat belts because we are going on a bumpy ride, further into the heart of Kauai. At the end of Highway 580, Kuamo'o Road will end abruptly at a spillway. The drive beyond the paved highway is very rough, bumpy, often muddy, and the second water crossing can be swift at times.
The trail crosses streams and winds through the dense forest to the, "Gate", used in Jurassic Park.
You are traveling across the Wailua Forest Management Area.
The 'Blue Hole' is at the base of Wai'ale'ale, which is known as the wettest spot on earth. Locals refer to this location as the Wailua river headwaters; it's where you see the falls coming down the wall.
Mount Waiʻaleʻale in Hawaiian, literally, "rippling water" or "overflowing water" and also often spelt Waialeale in English without the ʻokina), elevation 5,148 feet (1,569 m), is a shield volcano and the second highest point on the island of Kauaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands. Averaging more than 426 inches (10,800 mm) of rain a year since 1912, with a record 683 inches (17,300 mm) in 1982, its summit is considered one of the rainiest spots on earth.
GPS Road to Blue Hole
All My Flickr Pictures of the Second Water Crossing
All My Flickr Pictures of the Jurrasic Gate
All My Flickr Pictures of the Mt Waialeale
The road to Blue Hole on YouTube
15 photos
| 693 views
items are from between 11 Jan 2007 & 26 Jan 2011.















