A portion of Ala Kahakai – the King's Trail – winds through Waikoloa, offering a somewhat incongruous dose of ancient Hawaiian history and heritage within Waikoloa's pruned landscape and resort amenities. The trail is accessible via several points located along ‘Anaeho‘omalu Bay beach; note that sharp lava rocks start cropping up as the trail edges near the golf course. Any ruins you may spot along this area fall within protected federal lands.


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1. ʻAnaehoʻomalu Beach Park

0.18 MILES

Don't worry about that tongue twister of an official name; everyone on the island calls this beach 'A Bay.' 'A-plus' is another way of putting it: this…

3. Kuʻualiʻi and Kahapapa Fishponds

0.2 MILES

Physical evidence of the ancient aquaculture system that once formed a crucial component of Native Hawaiian foodways is located smack-dab behind…

4. Waikoloa Petroglyph Preserve

0.56 MILES

This collection of petroglyphs carved in lava rock is so easy to access that it merits a stop, although the Puako Petroglyph Preserve further north is…

5. Kalahuipuaʻa Fishponds

2.06 MILES

These ancient fishponds are among the island's few remaining working fishponds. As in ancient times, they're stocked with awa (Hawaiian milk fish). Water…

6. Kalahuipuaʻa Historic Trail

2.32 MILES

The first segment of this easy trail meanders through a 16th-century Hawaiian settlement, passing lava tubes once used as cave shelters and a few other…

7. Keawaiki Beach

2.34 MILES

Keawaiki is as isolated as Big Island beaches get, mainly because the quickest way here is via a 15 to 20 minute walk over an ʻaʻa lava trail that looks…

8. Hale ‘I‘ike

2.43 MILES

Part of the lobby space of the Auberge Mauna Lani resort is taken over by this museum, which showcases a wide range of royal artifacts, shark-tooth…