The Island Story
Still being born, endlessly wild


Hawaiʻi Island — the Big Island — is unlike any place on Earth. It is the youngest of the Hawaiian Islands, still actively growing as lava pours from Kīlauea, one of the world's most continuously active volcanoes, adding new land to the island's shores. To stand at the edge of a lava flow and watch the planet being made is an experience that rewires something deep in the human spirit.


Yet the Big Island's drama extends far beyond its volcanoes. Its extraordinary size — larger than all the other Hawaiian Islands combined — has allowed it to contain eleven of the world's thirteen climate zones within a single coastline. You can snorkel in warm tropical waters in the morning, hike through a cloud forest at noon, and watch the sun set from the summit of Mauna Kea — a dormant volcano that, measured from its base on the ocean floor, is the tallest mountain on Earth.


As your travel advisor, I design Big Island itineraries that honor this island's scale and complexity — making sure you experience both its volcanic fury and its extraordinary gentleness: the manta rays off the Kohala Coast, the coffee farms of Kona, and the waterfalls of the Hāmākua Coast that pour directly into the sea.

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