The coincidence of Halloween landing on a Friday weeded out the people who hike with me regularly. I, too, had my fair share of drinks the night before, and I woke up with a slight hangover in the morning, but after a few cups of water, I felt better and picked up my friend John to accompany me on what the Hawaiian Trail Mountain Club calls a "lung-busting" hike.
The trail begins with a an easy walk through Niu Valley, paralleling a dry stream bed. After about a half-mile, the trail turns right and uphill until the Kulepeamoa ridgeline is gained. The rocky climb uphill was brutal. John and I topped out in a shady and breezy ironwood grove. We rested a bit and pushed on.
The ungraded trail was really nice. We passed groves of Sydney Blue Gum trees and ferns of all types. The uluhe fern sections were cleared out extremely well, too. A few hours into the hike we reached some dangerous spots. The ridge narrowed and became rocky. There was also a massive, vertical rope section with a huge drop on the right side of the ridge. Without the rope, the vertical section would have been a bitch to climb.
A couple more climbs and we finally reached the Ko'olau Summit. To the left we could see other hikers resting at the top of the Hawaii Loa Ridge trail. To the right was Pu'u O Kona. In front was Mount Olomana and the towns of Kailua, Lanikai, Waimanalo, and Kaneohe. After eating lunch, we headed back down. The trail took us a little over six hours, but it could be done faster; we took a lot of breaks along the way.
Here's how John felt after the first steep climb to gain the ridgeline.
The scheduled trail clearing by the HTMC was a successful one. Here the trail is wide and well-groomed. Uluhe fern sections like this one usually choke the trail and make the ridge difficult to hike.
Massive rope section. Notice the drop on the right side.
Looking back at the length of ridge we just hiked.
Here's the view to the right. The peak in middle-right portion of the picture is Pu'u O Kona: a fun, yet dangerous loop hike that I did in June of 2008.
And here's an awesome view to the left. I had originally planned to hike up Kulepeamoa and turn left to climb down Hawaii Loa Ridge, but we didn't have another car.
And here's looking back towards Aina Haina and Hawaii Kai.
6 comments:
hey man great blogs. i'm so looking forward to going home and doing some hikes.
what camera are you shooting with btw?
i'm using a nikon d40...
I just completed this hike to Hawaii Loa Ridge Trail on 01-18-2010. I didn't go down the make shift trail to niu stream after the fenced portion. Instead I jogged most of HLRT & down Pu'uikena Drive. Came about 6hrs give or take. Overall, awesome infos, videos & pictures! BIG HELP!! Mahalo!
Awesome pics and great info! thanks!
I did this hike in May 2012! My situation was very similar to yours. I ended up going on my own to get the Geocache at the summit! AWESOME DAY! Your pictures did the area justice. Absolutely amazing views at the top in so many different direction. THanks for posting this.
You can come down the Hawaii Loa trail and then near the end turn left and go down the steep slope covered in strawberry guava back down to the draw, turn right to follow it out and eventually you'll meet up with the original trail again. Ribbons mark the way. Awesome trail description and pics.
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