Big Island, Hawaii
If you want to encounter the full range of local Hawaiian marine life, including many endemic species, come to Kealakekua Bay. The sheltered bay is only about 12 miles south of Kailua Kona on the Big Island and is home to green sea turtles, spinner dolphins and, from about December to May, humpback whales. Even if you don't go eye-to-eye with the gentle giants -- an experience that will rock your world – you will defi nitely feel and hear their haunting whale song. There's also a nearby lava tube to snorkel, which fills with streaks of sunlight at certain times of the day and sometimes houses napping whitetips. Because all the marine life has become accustomed to the presence of people, nothing's skittish. The hoards of butterflyfish, surgeonfish, wrasse and hawkfish go about their daily business of eating and trying not to get eaten right in front of your eyes. Stay at the Outrigger's Keahou Beach Resort, where dozens of green sea turtles come to nap in the lagoon below. outrigger.com


