Top 10 Hawaiian adventures
How to pack the heat into your island vacation
The water is blue, and the sand is soft—which is lucky, because that's what the newbie kiteboarder will be picking out of his cheekbones after getting dragged down Maui's Kanaha Beach behind a massive kite for what seems like an eternity. Long a favored haunt of windsurfers, the long stretch on Maui's North Shore now is the training ground for adventure wackos willing to strap their feet into a short, fiberglass board and strap on a billowing kite that can easily send them sailing 40 feet into the air above the pounding surf.
"Hang on and don't worry," the instructor shouts to the flailing student, "You almost got it. And look out for the rocks. Not that you are going to hit them."
The North Shore of Maui, where Kanaha is located, is the epicenter of the kiteboarding universe, home to wickedly strong winds that blow in a favorable direction parallel to the shore. Big surf also bashes this exposed stretch of coastline, which is also home to the legendary tow-in surf break Jaws. True, the kiteboarding crowd is far more mainstream today than a decade ago, when equipment was more finicky and basic safety measures such as quick release mechanisms for kites did not exist. But it still takes a special kind of individual to entrust life and limb to a kite as big as a small car, then pull an Icarus.
"Here, if you blink you are going to get seriously yanked. You have to have fast reaction times and really pay attention to what's going on," says Martin Kirk, owner of kiteboard instruction company KS Maui, who says clients come from all over the world to turn and burn at Kanaha.
They're not alone. Hawaii is a world-class destination for any number of watersports and the islands attract adrenaline junkies by the planeload. "It's just a place where there are so many things that you can do within a really small area that it's kind of overwhelming. You can go from massive surf to catching a huge fish to diving pristine reefs pretty much in the same day," says John Clark, an author of several beach guides and a respected local waterman. On the Kona Coast of the Big Island, the water is calm 350 days per year and the ocean depth drops from 50 feet to 2,000 feet within a mile of the coast.
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© Christian Wheatley / Shutterstock At Kanaha Beach on Maui, the tradewinds blow side-shore most days, pushing kites easily skyward and sending newbie kiteboarders up, up and away. A four-hour kiteboarding lesson will cost you $290. |
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© Annetje / Shutterstock Kona is the best place on Earth to watch the biggest of rays do their evening dance while chomping on plankton. A night manta ray dive ($145) gives you an up close and personal look at these amazing, graceful creatures. |
Spalding sees giant humpbacked whales in close proximity all the time, a normal part of life on the water in Hawaii, where they spend winters mating and frolicking. The islands also happen to be one of the only places on Earth where you can get within 10 feet of a manta ray on a regular basis. These shockingly graceful giant marine creatures congregate off of Keahou on the Big Island in shallow waters.
Says Keller Laros, the founder of the Manta Pacific Foundation and a divemaster who leads manta ray night dives, "People are completely blown away to see a wild animal with a wingspan of 12 feet fluttering inches away from their masks. It's like having a buffalo come up and rub against your leg." Where the manta rays roam and the big waves foam, Hawaii's got all your adventure needs covered—and then some.
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