Molokai Accommodations
The following article, closely
adapted from an article provided by the
Molokai Visitors Association
in Hawaii, provides an overview of Molokai's laid-back personality,
along with detailed descriptions of some of the accommodations available
on the island. Read our overview of Molokai as a honeymoon destination
on our Hidden Hawaii Honeymoon page.
It’s dusk on the island
of Moloka'i. You pull your car out onto the main highway, heading to a
restaurant for dinner. This is the busy part of the island, near the
main town of Kaunakakai. Then you notice something strange and
marvelous—nothing.
The two-lane highway is straight as
a stick, and you can’t see a single car all the way down the road. No
headlights at all in your rear-view mirror. No tall buildings or crowded
luxury homes separate you from the lake-like sea, which is shining with
the last colors of the sunset. The emerging stars look close enough to
touch, and the sky is full of silence. You pass a huge plumeria tree
loaded with flowers and, even with the windows rolled up, the sweet
perfume fills the car and becomes a topic of conversation.
Yes, it’s true there’s “nothing” on
Moloka'i, lots of it—an abundance of the delicious “nothing” that busy
people crave when their jobs and lives crowd them. No red lights, ever.
On a drive like this, you feel
muscles unclench.
'We came back to Molokai'
“People come here for the vicarious
Robinson Crusoe experience,” say Akiko and Glenn Foster, who offer
secluded bed-and-breakfast accommodations under the name Kamalo
Plantation. “They’re people who like nature and want peace and quiet.
Many of them have seen the other Hawaiian islands, and they want to get
away from hotels and glitz. They want to do their own thing—buy a bunch
of groceries in town, then settle in for some privacy.”
The Fosters themselves found
Moloka'i through a boating emergency. Their sailboat dismasted, and they
had to limp into Kaunakakai Harbor for repairs. The people at the harbor
were so friendly and helpful that the Fosters decided to explore the
island a bit. Rather quickly, they changed their lives and retired from
their international Pacific-Rim business. “We came back to Moloka'i. It
gave us this uplifted feeling. More energy,” says Glenn. “People write
about this experience all the time in our guest book. They say you have
time here to regroup. To rediscover yourself.”
Kamalo Plantation’s two fully
furnished houses—one tucked in an ancient grove next to an old Hawaiian
temple of healing, and the other set above its own pocket-sized beach on
the island’s remote east end—make good examples of Moloka'i’s
out-of-the-ordinary guest accommodations.
Cozy cottages and beach houses
Here are some others. At the east
end, Pu'u O Hoku Ranch offers two large hand-crafted cottages, each with
a view that goes on for miles. Exactly opposite Pu'u O Hoku Ranch, at
the island’s dry west end with its huge beaches, travelers can rent
large homes that have swimming pools, hot tubs, and views across wild
land to a sandy cove. One of these, Papapa Plantation, is a beautiful
cedar home with four separate bedrooms. Next door, Miller Moloka'i has a
similar layout and rents its rooms separately to travelers who don’t
mind mingling in the spacious common areas.
Bed and breakfasts: Looking out for
guests
Central Moloka'i provides a variety
of bed-and-breakfast type accommodations. For example, at A'ahi Place,
just two miles from Kaunakakai, visitors can rent a furnished cottage
surrounded by fruit trees and tropical plants. The cedar-walled cottage
sleeps four and—typical of such places—comes with all the kitchen
basics, a washer, towels, and snorkel gear. Owner Steve Sears has added
a cut-rate “backpackers lodging” and an open-air communal barbecue area
with television, a dipping pool, an outdoor shower, and the occasional
Moloka'i-style jam session. Steve is a carpenter who happened to be
sailing past Moloka'i one day, stopped for supplies, and decided not to
leave. Keeping with the spirit of this island’s aloha, he’s happy to
meet guests at the airport or ferry landing and help them get oriented.
Says Steve: “That’s what B&Bs do—look out for people.”
Modest mini-resorts
Along its sheltered south shore the
island also offers three modest mini-resorts. Two of them—Wavecrest and
Moloka'i Shores—are condominiums designed for home-style living.
Ocean-view buildings enclose a central lawn, swimming pool, and
barbecues. These are quiet places where guests sit seaside watching the
sun set—or rise. (This is one of the few places in Hawai‘i where you can
watch both events from the comfort of the same park bench.) The third
such option is the likeable Hotel Moloka'i, a cluster of two-story
buildings designed like the classic South Seas “long-house.” The hotel
includes a very good restaurant and, on many nights, Moloka'i musicians
playing pool-side.
Condos, golf, and a view of the
beach
If you crave big, hot stretches of
sand, you’ll find them on the west-facing shore at Kaluako‘i. Three
excellent condominiums take full advantage of their beach-view
locations—the Paniolo Hale perched on a natural ledge, Ke Nani Kai with
pool, barbecue, and tennis courts, and Kaluako‘i Villas rambling over 29
acres. All three offer golf course privileges at the nine-hole course
nearby.
Moloka'i Ranch: Beachside camping
in style
For both comfort and novelty,
nothing on the island can match the Lodge and Beach Village at Moloka'i
Ranch. Based in the
small hilltop town of Maunaloa, Moloka'i Ranch offers two radically
different experiences. First, the Beach Village constitutes what must be
the most comfortable beach-side campground in the world. Guests stay in
two-bedroom “beach bungalows”—ingeniously designed canvas-walled suites
with solar energy, private bathrooms, and daily maid service—and they
eat at a restaurant pavilion next to the crashing surf. Second (and many Moloka'i
Ranch guests like to do them in this order), the Lodge provides the
island’s most luxurious hotel experience. Here, ‘30s-era ranch-house
meets spa, billiards room, and deep sofa. Moloka'i Ranch’s Cultural Center also offers a long list of opportunities to
hike, bike, ride horses, snorkel, surf, and practice marksmanship
(archery, clay shooting, pellet guns, and paint ball).
Molokai house rentals
Two companies provide information
and bookings for the dozens of Moloka'i homes, condos, and cottages that
are available for rent. Visitors who are planning a trip can learn a lot
at either of these websites: Moloka'i Vacation Rentals (www.molokai-vacation-rental.com)
and Moloka'i Resorts (www.molokairesorts.com).
None of these getaways is taller
than three stories, and all of them provide natural solitude. It’s the
same natural solitude you experience while kayaking along the island’s
reef-protected south shore, while finding an unpopulated beach, while
hiking to Moa‘ula Falls, while loafing.
It's not for everyone
For couples—especially couples who
love the outdoors or couples who like the simplicity of quiet
conversation—Moloka'i is wonderfully renewing, if not downright
romantic.
But Moloka'i is not for everyone. To
be frank, the drive from the airport is rather bleak, passing through a
parched landscape of abandoned pineapple fields. But when you get inside
Moloka'i, the riches unfold.
Says B&B owner Steve Sears,
“Moloka'i attracts independent travelers who don’t want to be isolated
in a hotel with other tourists. They want to see how people live. They
like the freedom and safety here.”
For Moloka'i visitors, it’s not
enough to trade the stimulation of a mainland city for the stimulation
of hotel lobbies, commercial lu’au, advertisements, attractions, and
traffic. What about no stimulation at all?
What about the sweet stimulation of
bird song on your morning lanai, surrounded by an island that will never
interrupt such an artful quietness?
Last Updated:
February 19, 2005
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