donkthemagicllama
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2001
- Messages
- 328
Was at Aulani Jan 18-25, and quite literally stumbled upon something pretty cool.
If you follow the paved path along the beach as far west as it goes (to the right if you're facing the ocean), you'll get to a point where it ends. This is maybe a 2 minute walk from the Aulani beach gate.
From there, there is an unpaved, slightly rocky path through some bushes, go there. There's a beautiful natural beach. Probably too rocky for swimming, but it's beautiful all the same, and the waves crash up on it in way they don't in the sheltered lagoons. In Hawaii, all beaches are public, so you're not trespassing, even though it's not part of the resort (there's posted signage there telling you as much).
The really neat part, at least when we happened across it, was that Hawaiian Monk Seals sometimes rest there. We saw one there twice. Don't approach one if you see it (volunteers usually come and put a warning sign and fence around one if they are aware of them).
If you follow the paved path along the beach as far west as it goes (to the right if you're facing the ocean), you'll get to a point where it ends. This is maybe a 2 minute walk from the Aulani beach gate.
From there, there is an unpaved, slightly rocky path through some bushes, go there. There's a beautiful natural beach. Probably too rocky for swimming, but it's beautiful all the same, and the waves crash up on it in way they don't in the sheltered lagoons. In Hawaii, all beaches are public, so you're not trespassing, even though it's not part of the resort (there's posted signage there telling you as much).
The really neat part, at least when we happened across it, was that Hawaiian Monk Seals sometimes rest there. We saw one there twice. Don't approach one if you see it (volunteers usually come and put a warning sign and fence around one if they are aware of them).