Image of Mount Waiʻaleʻale
Photo: Lacy Varner/Hawaii.com

Beautiful, Green Garden Isle

While Kauai’s reputation as home to the wettest spot on Earth — Mount Waiʻaleʻale, averaging 485 inches of rain per year — has led to its popular designation as “The Garden Isle,” the island has another, older name: “The Separate Kingdom.”

History

In part this is because Kauai may have been the first of the Hawaiian Islands to be settled by Marquesan seafarers, somewhere around 750 A.D. Combined with its remoteness from the rest of the island chain, this may also have led to the belief that Kauai’s royal bloodline was the purest in the Islands. Kauai was also the only island in the chain to withstand the army of Kamehameha the Great as he swept through the rest of the archipelago in the late 1700s, on his quest to unify Hawaii under one king. (Kamehameha would eventually have his way, however, when Kauai’s chief Kaumualiʻi peacefully ceded authority over his island to the king in 1810.)

Point of “Discovery”

Kauai was the first Hawaiian Island English explorer Capt. James Cook stumbled upon in 1778, while sailing from Tahiti toward North America. While it has long been believed that Cook was the first European to set foot in the Islands — he first did so at Waimea, on Kauai’s southwest coast — recent evidence has some historians claiming that Spanish sailors may have visited the Islands more than a century earlier.

Geography

The oldest of the main Hawaiian Islands, it is believed the volcano that created Kauai first began erupting some 10 million years ago. Once rising more than 10,000 feet above sea level, Olokele Volcano has since eroded down to two main peaks — Waiʻaleʻale (5,148 feet) and Kawaikini (5,243 feet) — with the rest of the mountain sinking to form the crater that is home to Alakaʻi Swamp. Alakaʻi Swamp is the largest high-elevation swamp in the world and the starting point for Waimea River, the longest river in the Islands. The 3,000-foot-deep Waimea Canyon, dubbed “The Grand Canyon of the Pacific,” is also the product of these erosive forces.

Kauai’s age has also led to something of a geographic anomaly: Although it is one of the smallest of the main Hawaiian Islands, the forces of nature have had more time to break the island down and produce more sand beach around its 110-mile coastline than any other island in the chain. Meanwhile, it remains the least populated of Hawaii’s four counties (with roughly 56,000 permanent residents), and both development and tourism have been concentrated in relatively few locations. All of which furthers the sense that Kauai is, in fact, a separate kingdom.

What’s More…

  • The average temperature at Lihuʻe Airport ranges between 70 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit year round.

  • Waiʻaleʻale is aptly named — the word translates as “rippling or overflowing water.”

  • Kauai plays host to several major events each year, including the Waimea Town Celebration in February; the Prince Albert Music Festival in June; the Kauai Mokihana Festival in September; and Kokeʻe Museum’s Emalani Festival in October.

  • Kauai’s official flower is the mokihana (green berry)

  • The island’s official color is purple