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Destinations / Oahu

Oahu

Overview

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The Hub of Hawaii
In the days when visitors to Hawaii arrived only by ocean liner, Oahu was Hawaii, a sleepy tropical paradise centered around Honolulu, Waikiki, and the timeless landmark of Diamond Head. Today, cosmopolitan Honolulu is the cultural hub of the Pacific, with world-class hotels and fine dining. You can take a leisurely drive around Oahu in a day, but getting to know the island takes time.


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ISLANDS contributing editor Edward Readicker-Henderson recently explored Oahu to uncover the attraction of that most iconic of island instruments, the ukulele. In hearing the musical renaissance going on now, Edward truly discovered what the ukulele means to Hawaii. Read the full story.

To find out more about the island of Oahu, see special articles, maps, videos, photos and more from ISLANDS' most recent trips:

The Real Oahu from the August 2009 issue
Oahu Revealed from the March 2009 issue
Road Trip Oahu from the March 2008 issue

Plan your trip

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Fly direct to Honolulu (HNL) from Seattle (SEA), San Francisco (SFO), Minneapolis/St. Paul (MSP) or Los Angeles (LAX) on Northwest Airlines. nwa.com

Stay in the heart of Waikiki at the Outrigger Waikiki on the Beach, which boasts huge rooms and views of the entire curve of the bay. Rates from $205, outriggerwaikikihotel.com. Or try the Ala Moana Hotel and choose a balcony with ocean or mountain views. Rates from $129, alamoanahotelhonolulu.com. The Kahala Hotel & Resort offers lei-making classes, ukulele lessons, surf coaching, dolphin excursions and hula aerobics, rates from $395. kahalaresort.com

Eat at Sam Choy's Breakfast, Lunch, Crab & Big Aloha Brewery. Papa's beef stew omelet could keep you running all day, samchoy.com. Roy's restaurant features Hawaiian Fusion cuisine at three Oahu locations. Go for the classic roasted macadamia nut crusted mahimahi with a lobster cognac butter sauce and melting hot chocolate soufflé, roysrestaurant.com. Alan Wong's Restaurant, winner of the prestigious James Beard award, is the place to go for poki-pines, crispy wonton ahi poke balls on avocado with wasabi sauce or Kona coffee crusted Maui Cattle Company striploin, alanwongs.com. For a casual evening, Kona Brewing Company's Koko Marina Pub features tasty beer-infused dishes and fresh, local ingredients. konabrewingco.com

Listen to ukuleles. The very best time to visit is in July for the Ukulele Festival at the Kapiolani Park Bandstand. A free two-hour concert by professionals, celebrities and even an ukulele orchestra of more than 800 students, roysakuma.net. The non-profit Ukulele Guild of Hawaii brings together players and builders each year in November, capping off with a concert of the next generation of Hawaii's musicians, ukuleleguild.com. Duke's Waikiki, the Moana Surfrider resort and Tikis Grill & Bar has nightly Hawaiian music, dukeswaikiki.com; moana-surfrider.com; tikisgrill.com. Or go to the House Without a Key, where the music starts nightly at 5:30 p.m, halekulani.com. To hear samples of ukulele music, check out these Hawaiian artists: Jake Shimabukuro, Brittni Paiva, Genoa Keawe and Israel "Iz" Kamakawiwo'ole.

Tour the KoAloha Ukulele Factory as part of your Red Line historic Honolulu trolley tour. See how the custom shop makes its instruments and end with a song, koaloha.com; waikikitrolley.com. Kamaka Hawaii Inc., home of the original pineapple ukulele, offers free tours Tuesday-Friday. kamakahawaii.com

Learn more at gohawaii.com/oahu.

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