[Composed 1/4/2026]
I was psyched to learn over breakfast that we were a mere 15 minute drive to the Kapalua Tidepools. While we had plans to hit up the aquarium and other sites today, I couldn't resist starting our day with a detour to the North.
I have a special affinity for tidepools, as in the past, I've found them to be little wonderlands. The idea is that as the tide recedes, it leaves behind small pools teeming with marine life.
Accessing the area around the Kapalua Tidepools was straightforward. At a couple of points, I feared we were entering resort or private property, but that never happened. We found public parking and a well marked path that took us down to the cliffs, ocean and tidepools.
As tide pools go, the area was a bust. Perhaps we caught it at the wrong part of the day, or season. We found some small pools, but they were empty.
What the area lacked in marine life, it more than made up for in unique geology and views. The area is the result of an unstoppable force meeting an immovable object, that is, a lava flow meeting the ocean. Between the unique rock formations and the pounding sea, the scene was stunning.
From what I can tell, this unique shaped rock is known as dragon's teeth. That's when hot lava met wind and waves, and was shaped into sharp, upward formations.
I'm not sure what made these patterns in the rock. But it's a cool effect, nonetheless.
The lava flow also gave Shira and me the perfect opportunity to recreate this photo which we captured some 25 years ago:
Hawaiian lava: check. Goofy hat: check. Belt pouch: check. Smoking hot wife: check. I'd say the important stuff has remained unchanged.
Pro tip: we couldn't tell if Kapalua Tidepools would be best explored wearing beach or hiking footwear. Definitely, hiking. I had on flimsy sneakers and Shira had on flip flops, and while we made do, we should have been wearing our trail runners. The area may butt up to the water, but it's the farthest thing from beach-like.
Overall: the Kapalua Tidepools are a hit. This is a quintessentially Hawai'ian landscape and a joy to explore.
Creatures Of Note
This guy here is a Brown Anole:
Alas, he's an unwelcome invader to the islands.
These guys here are common mynas:
They're also unwanted guests, but unlike the Anole, they were invited here. They were introduced in the 1860s to control, among other pests, armyworms in sugarcane fields. In 1885, they were hailed as heroes:No more useful bird has ever been introduced into this country. Where they are numerous, they have all but exterminated the army worm which, before their introduction, destroyed pasture and good cattle feed every year of greater value than all the ducks and chickens in the Kingdom. Let the mynahs be protected, despite their pugnacity and occasional mischief. They are the friends of graziers and market gardeners.
34 years in, these heroes were now considered a self-inflicted plague:
The lantana was introduced into this country from tropical America in the year 1858, and the mynah bird in the year 1860. The one might not have proved so great a curse without the other, but the two combined have already rendered almost worthless thousands of acres of pasture land, and if some prompt, vigorous methods are not adopted by the next Legislature and enforced to the strict letter of the law for the extermination of these two great evils, the day is not far distant when there will be no pasture land in the Islands upon which to raise either horses or cattle.
To this day, they remain on the list of the top 100 invasive species in the world. They're one of only a few birds to make the list.








































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