Lighthouse locations

Hawaii is a beautiful place with astonishing beaches with white sand, blue skies, and lush greens, classic waterfalls and of course, the beautiful hula dancing girls. It has huge mountains that towers up around 13,000 feet. It has elegant blue water, incredible sand beaches, the jungles in the rain forest, ocean rock faces, grasslands, impressive tropical flowers, orchids, smattering of deserts and also a fearful active volcano. Hawaii also provides the tourists with some of the very best location for outdoor photographs that are rare to find anywhere in the world.


Lighthouses map


1. Light houses of Hawaii:

Hawaii is an island in the central North Pacific Ocean. Originally it was an independent Polynesian kingdom. Then later on, the islands were taken possession by the United States in 1898. After that it became the 50th state of the Union in 1959. The largest and easternmost island is called Hawaii but residents over there call it as Big Island. All the islands have the origin of volcanoes. Most of the active volcanoes on the Big Island are active. You cannot find any state lighthouse preservation society in Hawaii. Local preservation efforts were just started in the last ten years. The lighthouses are smaller concrete beacons. It is found in the islands and they are one of the most picturesque places that you can find in the island.

2. Secret Beach:

Secret beach can be reached by mountaineering a trail, at the end of a red dirt road, off of Kalihiwai. It is located at about half a mile north of Kilauea. It has become the Kauai's premier nude beach now in spite of the authorities of other countries attempting to enforce the nudity ban. This beach offers beautiful scenery. The secret beach is long and gives the ideal opportunities for photographs. It is a yellow sand beach and swimming in winter is generally neither suggested nor encouraged because of the high waves.

3. Honokohau Harbor Beach:

Honokohau Harbor Beach is situated in the Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park on the Kona Coast, north of Honolokohau Harbor off of Highway 19. This is also a yellow sand beach and it is considered to be a very popular gay beach too. Privacy is little difficult to get. Federal park rangers often patrol to implement a ban on nude sunbathing. But with its warm climate and good snorkeling, this Honokohau Harbor Beach remains as a very popular beach for that as well as for the amazing photographical conditions.




Lighthouses map