The 10 Photos you must take in Kauai
Update: I’ve updated this post with new information and some photo improvements. The new version of the 10 best photo opportunities on Kauai can be found here on BackyardImage.com
I’m just back from a trip to Kauai (yes, again) and here are my top ten locations that you must visit and photograph if you are lucky enough to visit the island. Think of it as my top 10 instagrammable spots on an island full of them!
Kauai is the oldest of the Hawaiian chain of islands and so is rightly known as the Garden Island for its exuberant foliage and geology. It was not for nothing that both Jurassic Park and one of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies were filmed here – the whole island is magnificent. But where to start with the top 10? I decided not to rank them as I had already struggled to get this list down to ten and I decided to put them in the order of your drive from Lihue. You could theoretically do all the stops in 2 days, but of course, you would miss the best light! Incidentally, I’ve found this to be the best guide to Kauai if you want to find all the spots that would have made my top 100! And don’t forget that you can always visit some of the local photographers to get ideas for locations as well – the gallery and store in Kapaa also runs photo tours that will efficiently get you to the best locations and provide guidance and advice on how best to shoot them. They also rent out lenses if you need that long telephoto for the birds off Kilauau Lighthouse!
We will start with the counter clockwise direction towards Hanalei and the north. After a nice drive of around 30 minutes from Lihue on Kihue Highway (route 56) you will find my first gem. It is just after the sign to the Na ‘Aina Kai Botanical Gardens (which is worth a visit if you have time and it is open). After going up a short hill, look to the left and this view opens up in front of you. It is one of those less well known views on the island – a panorama of the gorgeous landscape that was a key part of the Jurassic Park movie. You can imagine the dinosaurs roaming through this countryside!
This is best shot early in the morning, not long after sunrise, so you get the striking side lighting. It would also be nice to have some clouds – which is more normal on Kauai – but you can’t have everything. There is a great shot just to the right of this one with the trees and a small pond reflecting the sky. I parked in the small road on the right directly opposite the view.
My next easy to reach spot is the Lighthouse at Kilauea. The small town of Kilauea is lovely in itself and has a great small bistro and a bakery that sells its own bread and pizzas. Well worth the stop! The lighthouse is now a nature reserve for sea birds, but the view of the coast here is magnificent.
You can get great shots of seabirds circulating above the point and whales out at sea if you are lucky, so don’t forget your telephoto lens!
Not in my top ten, but as you are driving through Princeville, it is well worth stopping in three places – the overlook on the left gives a great panorama of the Hanalei Valley. Again, best early in the morning to get some definition in the hills facing you. You might be lucky to get one of the famous Kauai cockerels providing some local color!
Then, about 2 minutes further is a view of Hanalei Bay on the right. Good for a broad view of where you are headed and sunsets can be great. You park by the side of the road on the corner. Then, at the bottom of the hill you cross the old Hanalei bridge and if you immediately turn left after it, you can get some striking shots of the taro leaves with the mountains behind. There is a similar view just as you are about to enter Hanalei itself – park at the Dolphin Center.
You may remember the very heavy flash flood rain storm that hit the north of Kauai in April 2018 where a US record of over 49 inches of rain fell in 24 hours. Well, that closed the road to everything north of Hanalei – which includes some of my upcoming photo gems at Ke’e Beach, Tunnels Beach and Lumaha’i Beach. The road is now open and you can drive all the way to Ke’e Beach BUT you need to have a prebooked parking reservation at the State Park at that beach. I found that you needed to reserve this 30 days before the day you plan to go – so plan ahead and perhaps book several slots to make sure the weather cooperates! There is also a shuttle that you can take along that stretch of coast.
Hanalei is open though (although the parking by the pier is still being repaired), and it is a place that I always come back to. Dawn here is to die for – the sun rises behind you when you are facing the ocean but as it rises it illuminates the distant mountains and there is a fantastic sense of peace on the large beach that is loved by surfers and boaters alike. I’ve got so many photos of Hanalei that it is hard to choose one, so here are two! Don’t forget to look for the unusual angles!
I love this one next gem early in the mornings. Lumaha’i Beach is just outside Hanalei and you park on a pullout on the right just before the beach and head down a forest path to reach the sand. This spot can change enormously from season to season and from day to day – my last visit in May gave me these views of a calm and peaceful crescent shaped beach:
But a couple of days later it looked more like this:
Be very, very careful if you ever think of going in the water here – it can be treacherous. Incidentally, for the film buffs, South Pacific was filmed partly on this beach.
Continuing north, the next must do spot is Tunnels Beach. Again, parking is difficult as you need to find a place in one of the narrow tracks leading from the main road to the beach. The guidebook I mentioned above gives specific details of the mile markers, but you will see the parking roads as you head north on the right.
The combination of the crystal clear waters and the dramatic headland makes this a perfect vacation shot.
Drive as far as you can travel in the north of the island and you will reach Ke’e Beach. This is a gorgeous sunset shot as well as the start of the famed Kalalau trail along the Na Pali coast. This shot is best taken in the late winter as the sun sets further out to sea as the season changes to spring and summer. Parking is sometimes difficult if you arrive too late in the day, but usually you can find somewhere even if you have to walk a bit!
Even if you are there in the summer, it is a great place for the view along the Na Pali coast, and the waves here tend to create amazing shapes as they crash against the cliffs and each other. I’ve never managed to capture a fantastic shot, but with a long lens and a bit of luck, you could do it!
Depending on where you are staying (I usually stay in Princeville because I love the beaches and views on the north coast), you might have a long drive back to Lihue to start the next leg of our tour of the best photo spots on Kauai.
New day, new opportunities!! Going clockwise from Lihue on Kaumualii Highway (50) takes you to the next must see spot. I didn’t mention Opaeka’a Falls on the first leg, because I find it a bit boring and difficult to take anything different than the standard overlook shot. But Wailua Falls on the right up route 583 are worth a visit. You park right by the falls and you have to sometimes reach a bit higher than normal to see the full extent of the waterfall. It is possible to climb down to the falls – I’ve never done it, and it is probably chained off, but check the guide book for more details.
Driving onwards, you will pass Gaylord’s at Kilohana – a great place for lunch in the garden courtyard. Peaceful and a reminder of what life was like for the plantation owners early in the last century. Going further, you will see the road to Poipu and the famous Tree Tunnel on route 520. Not one of my top ten, but worth looking at! Here is a photo done as a digital oil painting. The light is probably best in the late afternoon, but getting in the middle of the road on what is quite a busy route to the beaches on the south coast is tricky!
As we drive along the south coast, you will normally be in much drier and warmer weather. There may be clouds over the mountains, but don’t worry – they come and go and add a lot to the grandeur of what is to come. Hanapepe is off on the right and has some interesting galleries and a swinging bridge, so you may as well rest your legs here. I always look in photography galleries on every trip. Someone who lives there can get the best light (usually) and so it gives me something to aspire to!
Once you reach Waimea you are almost there! Waimea Canyon can be accessed directly via route 550 in Waimea, but if you drive further there is an alternative route up and you can come down on the 550. Waimea Canyon has been described as the Grand Canyon of the Pacific and there are several formal overlooks on the drive north, as well as a number of roadside viewpoints. It is worth stopping at all of them as the light constantly changes. Early morning is interesting as you get the sunlight coming up the canyon from the ocean, but later in the afternoon is great as well. The late afternoon is best for the final stop on this road, so that might be the deciding factor.
Continue further and there is a small shop and cafe before the road continues to rise towards its destination – the overlooks over the Kalalau Valley. There are two overlooks here – the Kalalau Overlook and the Pu’u O Kila Lookout. I think I prefer the second and you can hike from there to get different viewpoints of the valley 3000 feet below. You are probably only 10 miles from Hanalei here, but of course the mountain and swamp here is impenetrable. Mists and fog can roll into the valley and disappear just as quickly and the challenge is to get the right light for the composition you have in mind. Late afternoon and sunsets are great from here as the sun shines sideways up the valley, accentuating the folds in the mountainside.
Well, that concludes the top 10 (or so) photo opportunities on Kauai. However, I’m not done! I wanted to mention two things that are worth doing – one is the open door helicopter trip organized by Jack Harter. It isn’t cheap, but the helicopter only holds four people plus the pilot and everyone (except one poor person) has an open door to shoot from without any problems with reflections or windows getting in the way. I understand they choose the seating arrangement based on weight and the person in the front middle tends to be the smallest one of the group so pack on the pounds at some of the wonderful restaurants on the island. I strapped a GoPro to my leg for videos and my Sony A7R3 with a 16-35mm lens for my main images. The hour long tours run all day, but I think the afternoon is probably best because of the light on the Na Pali coast. Watch for the weather forecast to try to get a day with limited cloud cover although you will find the forecast changes regularly!
Finally, if you are there in the late spring and summer, you can take a boat trip down the Na Pali coast from Hanalei. I’ve also taken one from the south coast in the winter, but you spend for ever just sailing along a relatively boring bit of coastline and then you don’t have time for the full experience of the dramatic parts of the island. I don’t know what it is like, but I did see a small boat leaving Hanalei this past January on a tour, so maybe there is an opportunity if you do go in the winter. Otherwise I guess you will have to visit Hawaii and particularly Kauai more than once!
All my photos are available as prints – just click on the image to go to my store!
Thanks Steve, tons of really useful info!
Thanks Elijah! Now all I need is a good Google ranking for the article!
Great pictures thanks
Thanks!