As the oldest of the main Hawaiian Islands, time has allowed mother nature to create one of her most impressive works of art, with the wind, rain, and sea as her mediums. This island feels both ancient and yet almost impossibly alive. You can read the poetry of the ages across the vibrant layers of exposed rock and red soil in Waimea Canyon, along the peaks and valleys of the Nā Pali Coast, and within the earth itself, transformed over time from volcanic rock to rich, fertile soil.
On Mount Waiʻaleʻale, one of the wettest spots on Earth, rain feeds the waterfalls, the forests, the kalo fields, and our community… everything here exists in constant relationship with water, growth, and renewal.