Kauai Trails. Kathy Morey. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Kathy Morey
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Книги о Путешествиях
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780899975511
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Grove Backpack

       Trip 45. Pihea-Alakai Side Trip

       Trip 46. Kawaikoi Stream Trail

       Trip 47. Poomau Canyon Lookout Side Trip

       Trip 48. Kohua Ridge Side Trip

       Trip 49. Mohihi-Waialae Side Trip

       About Kee Beach, the Kalalau Trail, and the Na Pali Coast

       Trip 50. Kee Beach Stroll

       Trip 51. Kee Beach to Viewpoint

       Trip 52. Kee Beach to Hanakapiai Beach

       Trip 53. Hanakapiai Falls Dayhike or Side Trip

       Trip 54. Kee Beach to Hanakoa Valley Backpack

       Trip 55. Hanakoa Falls Side Trip

       Trip 56. Kee Beach to Kalalau Beach Backpack

       Trip 57. Kalalau Valley Side Trip

       Trip 58. Kee Beach-Haena Beach Park Walk

       Trip 59. Lumahai Beach Walk

       Bibliography

       Appendix A. Camping on Kauai

       Appendix B. Hikes You Won’t Find Here and Why

       Appendix C. How I Got Distances, Elevations, Times, and Trail Maps

       About the Author

      Introduction

      “Kauai….Oh, it’s just a little island. You can fly over it in an hour in a helicopter. Or you can take a half-day bus tour. Or you can rent a car and see everything in a day. It’s just a little island.”

      That became a standing joke in our house, a metaphor for a common misperception about Kauai. Kauai is a little island only from the outside. Kauai is big island on the inside, especially when you see it on foot. True, flying over Kauai or touring it with a guide may give you a different perspective on it or helpful information about it. And even a hasty visit like that will leave you with lasting memories of its beauty. But I’m convinced that if you’re at all able, you need to see Kauai on foot, too. It’s only when you get out of those metal-and-glass cocoons to touch Kauai with all your senses, to experience it at the slow pace of the walker, that Kauai can really touch you. There are rewarding strolls as short as a quarter mile, suitable for just about anyone who’s ambulatory; strenuous, multi-day trips like the Kalalau Trail on the Na Pali Coast; and everything in between. How do I know? I walked every trail that’s used as a trip in this book at least once in the winter and spring of 1990, for the first edition. I walked many of them again in the spring of 1993, in the wake of Hurricane Iniki (September, 1992), and yet again in the spring of 1995.

      When you’re on foot, Kauai’s rugged landscape seems to be faceted like a diamond, so that with every few steps you take, it reveals a new face to you. The rain may fill one face with rainbows, another with waterfalls flying down sheer cliffs. Where rain is abundant, as on the northern shore, luxuriant vegetation envelopes the landscape, softening its lines and muting its colors. Infrequent rain, as on the southwest coast, yields dry golden dunes stretching along the sea for miles and bare red cliffs soaring behind them. Inland, dense banks of ferns dotted with wild orchids set off abandoned roads whose eroded surfaces may display an astonishing array of colors. Cascades barely glimpsed from the highway show themselves to the hiker as immense falls, like Namolokama, the great waterfall that leaps down into Hanalei Valley. Dozens of unnamed waterfalls may be apparent, from broad ribbons of white to stairstep cascades to fragile wisps blowing in the wind. A stroll down a cane road shows you how the clipped, gray-green carpets of the canefields unfold across the plains and stop abruptly at the shaggy, dark green mountains of the forest reserves.

      Perhaps I should not have told you this. Perhaps I should have let you go unwarned, let you discover Kauai in your own way. You will have to spend some time on Kauai, walk some time on Kauai, and let me know if I’ve done the right thing.

      Now, looking back in March 2002, I find that the more time I spend on Kauai—which I found spectacular to start with—the more wonders and pleasures I find there. You will, too.

      The Okolehao trail (formerly the Hanalei-Okolehao Route) was closed until 2000 by jurisdictional disputes. It is described as Trip 2 and is well worth taking for its great scenery. In previous editions of Kauai Trails, Trip 29 was listed as the “Northern Dam Side Trip.” Since the northbound segment of that trip has remained largely impassable above the junction where the trail splits near Poo Kaeha, the old Trip 29 has been deleted. Consequently, the numbering of these trips has changed from previous editions.

      One of the most exciting changes on Kauai is the completion of the boardwalk through the Alakai Swamp all the way to Kilohana, the famed but formerly all-but-inaccessible viewpoint over northwest Kauai, all the way to Hanalei Bay. I’ve added this extension to Trip 43, now Pihea trail and Kilohana, because the Pihea Trailhead is one you can drive to. (Personally, I think starting and ending at the Alakai Swamp Trailhead off the Mohihi-Camp 10 Road makes for a more enjoyable trip, but you can’t drive most rental cars to this trailhead.)

      The former “Mystery Trail” now ends at a wonderful educational facility, the Discovery Center, and that’s what I’ve renamed this trip. Also, the Puu Kaohalo Trail is now signed “Berry Flat,” so I’ve renamed the trip Berry Flat.

      Enjoy!

      Getting Information About Kauai

      The search for the perfect trail guide

      I wish I could be certain this was a flawless book. However, some things limit an author’s ability to produce a perfect, error-free, always up-to-date book. Here are some of the factors, and what you can do to help yourself (and me).

      Nature makes constant revisions; so do agencies

      Nature constantly reshapes the landscape across which we plan to trek. That’s usually a gradual process, but once in a while she makes drastic changes overnight. A landslide can erase a trail in seconds. Erosion can undercut a cliff