Entries Tagged as 'hanapepe'

Glass Beach

March 15th, 2011 · 1 Comment


Tien, Rachelle, Shannan, Kristin, Jill (Photo by Jen)

After my we got shave ice, my brother guys went off on their own to go shopping at Aunty Lilikoi’s. I thought the rest of us were all just headed home, but then Shannan and I got to talking and somehow Glass Beach, a beach I’d never visited, came up. Shannan had read about it in a guide book and realized that we were not far away, so we telephoned Kristin and we all went on a detour.

Glass Beach is located in the Hanapepe Bay near Port Allen Harbor in a really industrial area. The beach gets its name because it is covered in sea glass, glass from bottles, windows, windshields, that has been tumbled and smoothed by the waves, water, and sand, creating smooth, frosted pebbles of glass.


(Photo by Kristin)

The reason for all the glass is that this was a dump site for many years. Around the corner, to the left, there still is a dump. And decades ago, locals used to dump their old cars and trash at this spot.

Next to Glass Beach there’s a stretch of rocky shoreline, called Swiss Cheese Shoreline, that is full of fused in metal auto parts, old appliances and industrial looking stuff. Jess G. was off exploring this while we were all marvelling over the glass. I didn’t really take any photos over there, but check out this Flickr set I found online.

I read on some message boards that most of the glass at Glass Beach has been picked over and removed. It’s said that a generation ago you could go to the beach with 5-gallon buckets and just scoop the glass up. That the glass was about 6-inches thick. Now, it’s just a thin layer mixed in with the sand. but we still had a fun time beachcombing and finding all sorts of colors of glass. Since it’s by a dump, glass is not all that washes up either. Watch out for garbage, metal.. I found a button. Who knows what all is out there in the water.


Kristin

Sea glass is getting to be a rarity these days. More and more, things are being packaged in plastic instead of glass, shipwrecks are rare these days, people don’t dump their garbage in the ocean any more. Also, a lot of beaches bring in sand to replenish the shore line, burying any sea glass that may have washed in. For this reason, I’m glad we stopped at Glass Beach. So we could see it before it’s gone.

Glass Beach is really beautiful, if you ignore the gas tanks that overlook it on one side, but it really is just a place to do some beachcombing. The lava rocks and surf make it unsuitable for swimming and it doesn’t seem like a place you’d really want to hang out all day at either. When you think about it, there must be so much junk off shore, it kind of grosses me out. Still, there’s a lot of beauty in the grit. I found the lava rock with the waves crashing in on it really gorgeous. And the sea glass is definitely something to see.

Sources: Washington Post, To-Hawaii, 43 Places, TripAdvisor, Sew Trashy.

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Shopping in Poipu & Lounging at Salt Pond Beach

July 30th, 2009 · No Comments

After checking out the Russian fort and Kauai Coffee, we drove to Poipu to go shopping at the Poipu Shopping Village. I’ve been shopping there a lot before, it’s mostly the same. I got Billy and Ging a baby gift for their first son, Damien, who was born a couple weeks ago. It was good to go down to Poipu, though, because even if the shopping village has not changed, Poipu has. There is a ton of development.. and a lot of it only half complete because of the poor economy. And, get this: There’s a roundabout in Poipu now. It’s kind of neat to see all this, but I can’t help but feel a bit nostalgic over seeing the small town blow up.

After shopping we had lunch at Joe’s on the Green (at the Kiahuna Golf Course).

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Joe’s on the Green, Koloa, Kauai

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Kalua Pig Sandwich :: Joe’s on the Green, Koloa, Kauai

And then after lunch, we headed back towards Waimea, but stopped off at Salt Pond Beach in Hanapepe. Again, a place I’d always wanted to check out, but never did. Aunty Cathy told me this is a popular beach for locals and not many tourists were there, and she was right. So we just lounged around and walked on the beach, swam out in the water for a couple of hours.

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Salt Pond Beach, Hanapepe, Kauai

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Salt Pond Beach, Hanapepe, Kauai

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Salt Pond Beach, Hanapepe, Kauai

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Salt Pond Beach, Hanapepe, Kauai

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Salt Pond Beach, Hanapepe, Kauai

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Lappert’s Ice Cream

July 28th, 2009 · 2 Comments

Usually Dallas and I spend the bulk of our Hawaiian vacations in Kauai, but this time we were only there for two days, one night. We stayed at the house he grew up in, sleeping in his childhood bedroom on his and his brother’s childhood beds.. which was.. interesting.

When we arrived in Lihue we ran some errands, went shopping at and around the Kukui Grove Shopping Center, and had lunch at Genki Sushi. Then we decided it was time to get going to Waimea, where we were staying. On the way I made Dallas stop in Hanapepe so we could get my favorite ice cream in the universe: Lappert’s Kauai Pie.

lapperts

My favorite flavor is Kauai Pie, which is Kona coffee ice cream swirled with chocolate fudge, coconut flakes, macadamia nuts and vanilla cake crunch. OMG. So good.

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Lappert’s ice cream is made right there in Hanapepe and the shop that we stopped at is the original. The ice cream is delicious. Dallas complained that it was expensive, which, it was, but this is a once a year (or more) kind of thing, so I don’t mind paying!

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