Hawai‘i Gives Back: Finding Peace and Waves with AccesSurf
For more than a decade, people have been able to found joy in the waves through the work and assistance of a dedicated group started by a recreational therapist and adaptive athlete.
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For more than a decade, people have been able to found joy in the waves through the work and assistance of a dedicated group started by a recreational therapist and adaptive athlete.
We asked our readers and searched the island for the best of everything—beach cleanups to land restoration, fishing equipment to surf shop, free gym to yoga studio—all so you can live better in Honolulu.
Here’s a look back at a story that ran in the magazine in July 1921.
Summer’s still in session. Continue the season with an immersive art show, a music festival and a street art exhibition.
Outdoor adventurer, indoor enthusiast, stand-up comedy admirer, Hawaiian music lover, yacht appreciator: Whoever you are, get ready for an action-packed start to the summer.
Here are 20 great adventures that offer beautiful vistas and waterfalls, steep climbs and relics of the past.
It's never been open to the public, but now everyone can appreciate this new view of history.
The granddaughter of internment camp survivors talks about what’s next for Hawai‘i’s largest internment camp site, her own journey through history and how an order at a Honolulu Starbucks helped the Idaho native feel at home in the Islands.
If you can only plant one tree, make it an urban one.
“I’m a gardener, I love gardening and I love saving the world one garden at a time. That’s my motto.”
This year, we can see a lunar eclipse. We’re just saying.
We talk with Desiree Page about how criminal statistics pushed her into arboriculture, how HECO manages power lines and trees, and why trees grow up so fast in Waimānalo.
Big Island Bike Tours offers an e-bike ride around the historic property.
The 1,875-acre ahupua‘a is open for swimming, picnicking and exploring.
Heidi Bornhurst talks about designing a zoo habitat for elephants, using a forklift to pick up her future husband and why grass is a super alien.
We spent weeks contemplating some of Honolulu’s oldest, biggest and most impressive trees to capture their natural magnificence.
Inside a caldera, this 300-acre ranch offers tours of its dozen or so trails.
Hikers can help the public-private partnership with repairs now.
Life on a steamship headed to Hawai‘i in 1921, from our files.
The emergency order set to expire this Thursday will last another two weeks, though some new solo activities will be allowed.
The 14 editorial and reader picks for the best ways to get out and active.