Well, we aren't exactly "just" back but I had to have surgery on my foot so I finally have the time and energy to post. We had a great time. On O'ahu we hiked Diamond Head, loved the Hale Koa, meals and Luau, toured the battleship Missouri and then off to the Big Island. We returned to the Hilton Waikaloa Village where we stayed 6 years ago. It was lovely. The highlight of the trip of course was the Volcano National Park. We hit it while the lava was still flowing off of the pali and through the tubes into the ocean. It was a one mile walk from where we had to park to the lava fields and then a 1.5 mile hike over rolling pahoehoe. I was glad I wore jeans. I splipped and fell on both knees but no injuries resulted. The lava does get slippery when it rains, which it did. Great viewing at night. The glow of the goop dripping into the ocean was out of this world. On to Maui for seven days. Maui is always my favorite. We returned to the Marriott where we stayed 6 years ago and there have been stunning improvements. First of all, its no longer pink! The pool and common areas are outstanding and the rest is location, location, location. We were able to get a villa, two rooms with a mini kitchen which suited the five of us quite well. We could do breakfast although the only heat source was a micro wave. I twisted my DH's arm and got him to go to the timeshare presentation we were offered. One free night including taxes and parking. At those prices I grabbed the free offer. This was my best time share experience yet. We enjoyed the continental breakfast and got the free gift all within 45 minutes and with no hard feelings on the part of our salesman. Snorkeling was great at Black Rock, We made to Hana finally. It was our first ever sunny day en route to Hana and we continued all the way around on the "forbidden road", which was very narrow, one lane but not that bad. The kids loved Blue pool and Ohe'o Gulch. We did a sail and snorkel with the Scotch Mist, a 50 ft Santa Cruz mono hull sail boat. We loved it. There were 8 of us. So much better than being herded on Paragon and Trilogy with 50 other people and for the same price and same locations. Highlight of the trip by far was our day trip to Molokai and the mule ride down to Kaulapapa. It was raining which in many ways added to the sense of isolation and abandonment the patients must have felt as they were left at Kalawao in 1860. Sheriff Richard Marks was our tour guide and an outpatient who was quarantined at Kaulapapa with leprosy. He used the term leper and leprosy quite freely and I didn't hear him once refer to it as Hansen's Disease. I bought the book, "A Holy Man" about the life of Father Damien. I wished I had read it before. It was an almost spiritual experience to realize that 7000 men, women and children are buried there, all but forgotton. There are 35 residents left, the youngest being 65. When the last one passes, the pennisula will be turned over to the National Park System. When I got home, I called Damien Tours to ask about a more extensive reading list. Sheriff Marks answered the phone. He is 76 years old and organizes the tours and maintains the verbal history. While we were there he told us to stay out of the road because there were a lot of half blind drivers around and he would never take anyone's license away. I heard another tourist mention, when we got "topside" that he seemed like a "bitter man". Well duh! If you were snatched out of your life, you might feel that way too. On the other side of the coin, the Kingdom of Hawaii did more for their lepers than any other country has ever done in the history of the world. It was still a Lord of the Flies existance in the beginning, prior to Fa. Damien certainly. I thanked Mr. Marks over the phone for the reading list and I told him that as beautiful as Kaulapapa is, a guilded cage is still a prison. He responded; "Exactly". If you want to know more about this man who has met the Pope and Mother Theresa, google it" Richard Marks of Molokai. Our first class flights were first class. The boys sat in coach and there were no complaints.