Halawa Valley Cultural Hike

A guided cultural hike through the ancient Halawa Valley to a beautiful 250-foot double waterfall (Moa ula Falls). Access to the valley trail is only through a guided tour with a local Hawaiian family who shares the valley history, culture, and legends along the way. Kids learn about taro farming, Hawaiian plant uses, and valley life. The waterfall pool at the end is deep enough for swimming. The valley itself is stunningly beautiful with the green walls rising on both sides. This is an authentic Hawaiian cultural experience, not a tourist operation.

April 10, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

Kalaupapa Lookout

A lookout point at the top of the world highest sea cliffs (nearly 3000 feet) looking down onto the isolated Kalaupapa Peninsula far below. The view is staggering and gives kids a sense of scale that is hard to find elsewhere. The peninsula was the site of the famous Hansen disease (leprosy) settlement led by Father Damien. The lookout is accessible from Palaau State Park and requires just a short walk from the parking lot. The mule ride and hiking trail down to the peninsula are for those 16 and older.

April 10, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

Papohaku Beach

One of the longest white sand beaches in Hawaii stretching nearly 3 miles along Molokai west shore. The beach is vast, wild, and almost always deserted giving families an experience of having an entire beach to themselves. The scale is impressive with wide golden sand and crashing waves. Swimming can be rough in winter but calmer in summer. The empty expanse is perfect for long walks, sand castle building, and just feeling the freedom of wide open space. Sunset here is spectacular with views toward Oahu.

April 10, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]