Kauai West Shore - Waimea
Island of Kauai
What to See - Hanapepe
Hanapepe Walking Tour. Hanapepe has a very rich history
that you can explore on your own. What’s great about going on your
own is that you can either get through the tour in an hour or you can
make a full day of it.
Quite a number of buildings (43 to be exact) in Hanapepe qualify to be
listed on State and National Registers of Historic Places, assuming they
are at least 50 years old, have a tie with significant historical events
or people and have high artistic values or display the distinctive characteristics
of a
type, period or method of construction.
You can purchase the Historic Hanapepe Walking Tour Map for
$2 at most shops in town, including Banana Patch Studio, Talk Story Bookstore,
Dawn Traina Gallery and Arius Hopman Gallery. You can pick up a Historic
Hanapepe Walking Tour rack card (you should be able to locate them on
the racks next to baggage claim). These cards contain information about
the tour and entitle you to a free map at shops in Hanapepe that sell
them.
If you’re going to spend the day here, the best time would be
Fridays, while business are open and setting up shop for the Friday Art
Night. Sunday is the worst day to go as most of the shops are closed.
It’s like being in an abandoned Western ghost town.
For more information about the walking tour, call the Hanapepe Economic
Alliance at 808-335-5944
or visit their website www.kauai.net/hanapepe.
Hanapepe
Valley Lookout, suspended bridge. Walk over this bridge for a
great view of the river. You can’t help but feel you’re in
an Indiana Jones movie when you cross this bridge. It’s pretty narrow,
and yes it does swing when you’re walking across it. There are fantastic
views of the Hanapepe River and Hanapepe Valley. Don’t wander off
when you get to the other side of the bridge. You’re actually entering
residential backyards, so it’s best that you make your way back
to town.
Photo Hanapepe Valley & Makawele River
Soto Zen Temple Zenshuji, 1-3500 Kaumauli’i Highway
Hanapepe, 808-335-3521.
Open to the public. This Buddhist Temple is quite exotic, with intricate
statues and altars in and around the temple. Buddhism was brought to the
Hawaiian islands when Japanese immigrants came to work in the sugar fields.
They brought their beliefs and built many temples throughout the island.
Robinson Family Adventures Visitor Center and Museum,
335-2824, Highway
50 at Kaumakani, mile marker 19, half-way between Hanapepe and Waimea.
Mon- day-Friday from 8 am-4 pm and Saturday 11 am-3 pm. Free admission.
wwwgandrtours-kauai.com. Along the way to Waimea, be sure to stop by Gay
& Robinson’s Sugar Plantation Visitor Center. This
is Kaua`i’s only remaining working sugar plantation. There are lots
of photo albums and other artifacts on display that depict plantation
life. Check out all facets of a working plantation, from cultivation,
irrigation, harvesting, to laboratory analysis and factory operations.
Daily guided tours are held at 8:45am and 12:45 pm.
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