From Our Magazine
In sacred Waipio Valley, along Big Island’s wild coast, water is everything.
Touring Oahu only requires $5 and a little bit of patience.
The Hawaii Cat Café on Kapahulu Avenue lets customers sip away on a coffee or latte in a room full of adorable cats.
Hawaiian cacao crop and its delicious chocolate is capturing the attention of Hawaiʻi’s small farmers, and the appetites of everyone else.
The Hawaiian Legacy Reforestation Initiative started a project to reforest more than 500 acres of land at Gunstock Ranch
These trails are great ways to explore the tropical outdoors—and tire out the kids, too.
A stay in Hana, Maui, uncovers hidden gems, historical architecture and rich cultural stories.
Nestled along the rugged Hamakua Coast is a fantasy forest of native and international flora with an ocean view.
For a unique and delicious food adventure, track down these hidden gems all over the island of Maui.
The Oahu restaurant is open again with a new name, new menu and a new calling to help the community.
Nonprofit group Smart Trees Pacific is mapping trees around Hawaii, resulting in a growing appreciation for these island canopies.
Kauaʻi Beer, open since 2013, is expanding its brewery, seating area and menu, but the spirit behind it remains unchanged.
His mission is sourcing as much as he can from local Hawaii farmers and producers.
Fun and unique ways that families can get their hands (and feet) dirty exploring a different side of Hawaii.
The veteran brewer is bringing Hawaii-made beer back to Honolulu's Kakaako district.
Amid the coffee fields in South Kona, Hawaiʻi Island, a simple church exterior hides a cathedral covered in colorful fresco paintings.
Native Hawaiian-owned Makana Charters shares stories abundant in cultural history with visitors.
Her whirlwind success includes website crashes, celebrity endorsements and one very memorable helicopter ride.
Step into another world at Maui’s Haleakala National Park.
This Kula farm pairs the meditative practice with adorable miniature goats—and it’s awesome.
The town of Volcano, right on the slopes of Hawaii Island’s Kilauea volcano, is easy to miss if you don’t know it’s there.
For many Island families, mochi, whether hand-pounded or store-bought, signifies the start of the New Year.
The community tradition started with one woman’s eco-creativity in the 1950s.
The dedicated forest preserve is also an AirBnB.

