The Best Beaches of Maui
The Best Beaches of Maui
Maui, also called the Valley Isle, is just a small dot in the vast Pacific Ocean, but it has the potential to offer visitors unforgettable experiences: floating weightless through rainbows of tropical fish, standing atop a 10,000-foot volcano watching the sunrise color the sky, and listening to the raindrops in a bamboo forest.
Whether you want to experience the “real” Hawaii, go on a heart-pounding adventure, or simply relax on the beach, this book is designed to help you create the vacation of your dreams. It can be bewildering to plan your trip with so many options vying for your attention. To make your task easier, this chapter highlights what I consider the very best that Maui has to offer
• D. T. Fleming Beach Park: This quiet, out-of-the-way beach, located north of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, starts at the 16 th hole of the Kapalua golf course (Makaluapuna Point) and rolls around to the sea cliffs on the other side of the cove. Ironwood trees provide shade on the land side. Offshore a shallow sandbar extends out to the edge of the surf. Generally, the waters are good for swimming and snorkeling, but sometimes, off near the sea cliffs, the waves are big enough to suit body boarders and surfers.
• Kapalua Beach: On an island of many great beaches, this one takes the prize. A golden crescent with swaying palms protected from strong winds and currents by two outstretched lavarock promontories, Kapalua has calm waters that are perfect for snorkeling, swimming, and kayaking. Even though it borders the Kapalua Resort, the beach is long enough for everyone to enjoy. Facilities include showers, restrooms, and lifeguards. • Kaanapali Beach: Four-mile-long Kaanapali stands out as one of Maui’s best beaches, with grainy gold sand as far as the eye can see. Most of the beach parallels the sea channel, and a paved beach walk links hotels and condos, open-air restaurants, and the Whalers Village shopping center. Summertime swimming is excellent. The best snorkeling is around Black Rock, in front of the Sheraton; the water is clear, calm, and populated with brilliant tropical fish.
• Wailea Beach: This is the best gold-sand, crescent-shaped beach on Maui’s sunbaked southwestern coast. One of five beaches within Wailea Resort, Wailea is big, wide, and protected on both sides by black-lava points. It serves as the front yard for the Four Seasons Wailea, Maui’s most elegant hotel, and the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa, its most outrageous. From the beach, the view out to sea is magnificent, framed by neighboring Kahoolawe and Lanai and the tiny crescent of Molokini. The clear waters tumble to shore in waves just the right size for gentle riding, with or without a board. All the beaches on the west and south coasts are great for spotting whales and watching sunsets, but Wailea, with its fairly flat sandy beach that gently slopes down to the ocean, provides exceptionally good whalewatching from shore in season (Dec-Apr), as well as unreal sunsets nightly.
• Maluaka Beach (Makena Beach): On the southern end of Maui’s resort coast, development falls off dramati-cally, leaving a wild, dry countryside punctuated by green kiawe trees. The wide, palm-fringed crescent of golden sand is set between two black-lava points and bounded by big sand dunes topped by a grassy knoll. Makena can be perfect for swimming when it’s flat and placid, but it can also offer excellent bodysurfing when the waves come rolling in. Vistas of Molokini Crater and Kahoolawe can be seen off in the distance.
• Waianapanapa State Park: In east Maui, a few miles from Hana, the 120 acres of this state park offer 12 cabins, a caretaker’s residence, a pic-nic area, a shoreline hiking trail, and, best of all, a black-sand beach (actu-ally small black pebbles). Swimming is generally unsafe, though, due to strong waves breaking offshore, which roll into the beach unchecked, and strong rip currents. But it’s a great spot for picnicking, hiking along the shore, and simply sitting and relaxing.
• Hamoa Beach: This half-moon-shaped, gray-sand beach (a mix of coral and lava) in a truly tropical set-ting is a favorite among sunbathers, snorkelers, and bodysurfers in Hana. The 100-foot-wide beach is about 900 feet long and sits below 30-foot black-lava sea cliffs. An unprotected beach open to the ocean, Hamoa is often swept by powerful rip currents. Surf breaks offshore and rolls in, making it a popular surfing and bodysurfing area. The calm left side is best for snorkeling in the summer.
• Hulopoe Beach (Lanai): This golden, palm-fringed beach off the south coast of Lanai gently slopes down to the azure waters of a Marine Life Conservation District, where clouds of tropical fish flourish and spinner dolphins come to play. A tide pool in the lava rocks defines one side of the bay, while the other is lorded over by the Four Seasons Lanai at Manele Bay, which sits prominently on the hill above. Offshore, you’ll find good swimming, snorkeling, and diving; onshore, there’s a full complement of beach facilities, from restrooms to camping areas
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