Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Hawaii Volcano, Mauna Loa Volcano, Kilauea Volcano, Volcano House Hotel, Home > Destinations > North America > United States > Hawaii > Big Island > Halema Uma U Crater Halema Uma U Crater Hawaii Volcanoes National Park is the state's premier natural attraction, containing tow of the most active volcanoes in the world, Kilauea and Mauna Loa. The park extends for 377 miles from the 13,777-foot summit of Mauna Loa down to the Pacific, where Kilaluea, the youngest of the volcanic mountains, has since 1983 been pushing into the ocean from a vent, creating new land. Compared to more active volcanoes around the Pacific Rim and in other areas, Hawaii's volcanoes are fairly benign, so you can pass eruptions and lava flows in relative safety. No matter where you look, you'll see volcano views from a range of perspectives. Much of the park is preserved as wilderness, but it does provide 150 miles of trails, two visitor centers, and two scenic drives with a wealth of volcano views An 11-mile drive, called Crater Rim, passes by many rising steam vents. The Chain of Craters Road, a 46-mile round trip journey, goes by historic pit craters and heads down toward the ocean. Along the way you can see lava flowing like molasses. Three days has been suggested as a good time frame for exploring the park if you're not taking extensive hikes that eat up more time. Among the top hikes is the trail to Halemaumau Crater, emitting steam and sulfur. It's a moderate 3 1/2-mile hike and goes down 500 feet to the floor of Halemaumau Crater. You can also get a view and walk into a lava flow on a 10-minute walk from Crater Rim Drive. The Volcano House Hotel and Restaurant and the Kilauea Visitors Center and Park Headquarters are where you'll learn a great deal about the park and where you can get permits for overnight camping. They're all just inside the park's gate. There's no way to predict exactly what you'll see at the park. With luck, you'll view streaming rivers of red lava and you might see fountains of lava shooting hundreds of feet into the air. Or, the volcanoes could be completely still and silent. 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New York City, NY HOME MY MENUPAGES RESTAURATEURS SUBMIT A MENU BROWSE CHANGE CITY LOGIN -- -- Restaurant Name Search Find-a-Food Search Advanced Search How to Use This Site Now Serving: 4540 New York City (NYC) Restaurant Menus Home >> Midtown South / Chelsea >> L&L Hawaiian Barbecue Not logged in Go To >> My MenuPages Cuisine American (New) (30) American (Traditional) (40) Argentinean (1) Asian (3) Bagels (8) Bar Food (20) Barbecue (10) Belgian (2) Bistro (6) Burgers (10) Cajun & Creole (2) Caribbean (13) Chicken (6) Chinese (44) Coffeehouses (1) Cuban (6) Delis (117) Desserts & Bakeries (7) Dim Sum (1) Diners & Coffee Shops (34) Eastern European (1) Eclectic & International (3) French (14) Greek (2) Hawaiian (1) Health Food (6) Hot Dogs (4) Indian (14) Irish (8) Italian (62) Jamaican (2) Japanese (18) Korean (18) Kosher (10) Latin American (13) Mediterranean (11) Mexican (26) Middle Eastern (10) Moroccan (2) Noodle Shops (8) Other (3) Pan-Asian & Pacific Rim (4) Pizza (79) Sandwiches (159) Seafood (11) Soups (11) South American (2) Southern & Soul (3) Southwestern (3) Spanish (10) Steakhouses (13) Sushi (34) Tapas (8) Thai (12) Turkish (1) Vegetarian (4) Venezuelan (1) Vietnamese (7) Wild Game (6) Wings (5) L&L Hawaiian Barbecue ($) Hawaiian, Barbecue 535 8th Ave, New York 10018 Btwn 36th & 37th St Phone: 212-629-9708 Fax: Menus On Screen Menu Printable Menu(pdf) Add to My MenuPages Email this page Report menu problems -- Report menu problems Menus Not Displaying? More Restaurant Info... User Ratings and Reviews Food Click here to Rate and Review Service Value Atmosphere Posted by Anonymous on 12/21/2005 Perfect Plate Lunch Hawaiian Plate Lunch at its finest. If you have ever been then you would know EXACTLY what to expect - inexpensive, tasty and plentiful portions of Asian inspired dishes. YUM! Posted by Anonymous on 08/17/2005 Ordered Delivery The food was good and the price was great... Posted by ed on 07/06/2005 Just fair Ate at this location july 3. Mediocre at best. This is just a fast food restaurant. Posted by Boy Bunny on 07/05/2005 Paradise Pig Out Don't let the fast food decor fool you--the food is delicious AND cheap! I had the kahlua and lau lau combo--any restaurant that allows you to double up on pork is all right in my book. It was served with rice AND macaroni salad--two carbs instead of just one! Along with the usual ketchup, mustard, and relish, there was a very good Vietnamese hot sauce on the condiment stand. Lest you think I'm totally unhealth conscious, the taro leafs and cabbage that came with the kahlua and lau lau were tender and flavorful. The staff was friendly, helpful, and genuinely concerned about my dining experience. Posted by islander on 06/18/2005 Gotta love it Finally, authentic tasting island style bbq...cheap and does the trick. Having been away from the islands for a while, it's nice to know that I can still get a taste of home here in NYC. BBQ chicken, kalbi and mac salad just as I remember it. I was surprised they even had spam musubi! Read More ... Other Restaurant Info -- www.hawaiianbarbecue.com Map Cross Street Btwn 36th & 37th St General Comments DeliveryTake OutCatering About Us | Contact Us | Advertise with us | Restaurateurs | FAQ's | -- Privacy Policy | Legal Notices 2002-2005 Slick City Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. MenuPages is a trademark of Slick City Media, Inc. Disclaimer Hawaiian Reciperecipes Hawaiian Food Local Recipes Luau & Imu Cooking Mainland Sources Pacific Rim Shop Online More Food & Dining Links from the Hawaiian Style Web Directory . Hawaii School Reports is sponsored by: Quick Facts | People | History | Language | Nature Hawaiian Food: Local Recipes Aunty Leilani's Favorites & Weekly Recipes - A collection of local favorites and a weekly special recipe. Electric Kitchen - A variety of recipes from seasonal to ethnic, to quick and healthy, or just basic, ono (delicious) dishes, from Hawaiian Electric Company. Guide to Hawaii Fish - Sorted by local Hawaiian name with characteristics and cooking tips. Hawaii's Kitchen - Recipes from the KHON FOX 2 TV show indexed by date featured. Japanese Recipe Collection - Miso soup and shabu-shabu head the list, plus a lot more good recipes from the Tokyo Food Place. Even a recipe for homemade natto! Local Kine Recipes - A BIG list, well indexed from Art Pollard, University of Hawaii. Requests and additions welcome. Manapua Recipe - Aunty Leilani's `ono recipe for real kine manapua. MCC Recipe Files - Large selection of recipes indexed by main ingredient and type of cuisine, from the Maui Community College Food Service Program. mixed-plate.com - Great stop for foodies! Find a new recipe in the database , check out the list of eateries in the Food Mall , or vote for your favorite SweetStop . Rice Stories and Rice Recipes - The origins of rice and a nice collection of rice recipes from the About.com Guide for Chinese Culture. Also check the food & recipe links Jun Shan has collected. Rusty Thomas Menu Collection - Local restaurant menus from 1946 to around 1982, collected by former food editor and maintained by KCC. Only the menu list is available online. Nostalgic photos. Sam Choy's Weekly Recipe - From Sam's TV show. Complete list for the past year. Sushi Vocabulary - As complete a listing as you're apt to find online, from The Tokyo Food Place. Takahashi Market - Asian and Pacific Island recipes from this San Mateo store. Usenet: alt.recipes.hawaii - If all else fails, someone here may help! Vegetarian Society of Hawaii - Information on membership and resources, including Vegetarian Restaurants, Natural Food Stores and Vegetarian Catering. Return to Hawaiian Food Index Visit our other sites Island Options | My Hawaii Online | OhanaNet all part of The 'Ohana Network, Hawaii's Online Community ('ohana means family in Hawaiian) Home | About Us | Privacy Policy | Sponsors | Ask Aunty Kat! Graphics used on this page courtesy of: ClipsAhoy.com ; WorldAtlas.com 1998-2002 OhanaNet Corporation. All rights reserved. Molokai. Shaped somewhat likeKalaupapa, Molokai, Hawaii - Father Damien. Some 2,200 miles (3540km) southwest of California, in the heart of the Hawaiian islands, is the island of Molokai. Shaped somewhat like a fish (the locals say a shark) with its head facing east, its tail in the west and a dorsal fin rising from its back on the north shore. That dorsal fin is the nearly flat, ten-square-mile (25.9 sq km) Makanalua Peninsula which juts into the Pacific below the world's highest sea cliffs. A place of stunning beauty, it's been blessed by nature's grandeur, and cursed by humanity's ignorance and fear. While this area is generally referred to as Kalaupapa, in fact, Makanalua Peninsula is divided into three districts: The Kalawao district on the eastern edge; Kalaupapa and the settlement of Kalaupapa to the west; with Makanalua in the center. Inhabited from about 650 AD, the Hawaiians fished the rough surrounding ocean by outrigger canoe with nets and spears for over 1200 years . They also farmed the land, coaxing sweet potatoes, onions and taro from the harsh volcanic soil. With the vines of the sweet potato, their main vegetable, they fed their pigs, which in turn they used to barter with other villagers in the eastern valleys. While the peninsula was not largely settled, it was traveled much and used extensively. The entire area is divided and subdivided by low rock walls that continue for mile after mile, creating thousands of small lots of every imaginable shape. There is no written history of the people who built them; historians theorize that they were constructed as pens for raising pigs, as windbreaks for growing crops and possibly as property boundaries and land divisions. The early Hawaiians built fishing shrines called heiau as places to make offerings for their safety while fishing in the rough waters that surrounded the peninsula. These heiau were platforms built of stone in circular and square shapes. Some of their surfaces are filled with coral, while others have elaborate enclosures lined with flat rocks on which offerings of fish or shells were placed. Today, the trail from Topside Molokai to Kalaupapa is traveled by mule, by hikers, and on foot by some of the workers at the settlement. Hugging the nearly perpendicular cliffs, the trail is over three miles (5km) long and descends 1,600 feet (488m) to the peninsula. Along its course are 26 switchbacks that corkscrew in and out of canyons and ravines. There is also a small airstrip at the northern edge of the peninsula, used daily to bring in food, supplies and visitors. Once a year in the summer, when the seas are calm, a barge from Honolulu anchors at Kalaupapa, delivering thousands of pounds of rice, cases of beer, drums of gasoline and supplies to stock the grocery store and hospital. More Kalaupapa photos . Kalaupapa's reputation as a leprosy colony is well-known. Hansen's disease, the proper term for leprosy, is believed to have spread to Hawaii from China. The first documented case of leprosy occurred in 1848. Its rapid spread and unknown cure precipitated the urgent need for complete and total isolation. Surrounded on three sides by the Pacific ocean and cut off from the rest of Molokai by 1600-foot (488m) sea cliffs, Kalaupapa provided the environment. In early 1866, the first leprosy victims were shipped to Kalaupapa and existed for 7 years before Father Damien arrived. The area was void of all amenities. No buildings, shelters nor potable water were available. These first arrivals dwelled in rock enclosures, caves, and in the most rudimentary shacks, built of sticks and dried leaves. Taken after Damien had constructed most of the houses seen here, this photo shows the stark, barren peninsula and settlement at Kalawao in the 1880s. Folklore and oral histories recall some of the horrors: the leprosy victims, arriving by ship, were sometimes told to jump overboard and swim for their lives. Occasionally a strong rope was run from the anchored ship to the shore, and they pulled themselves painfully through the high, salty waves, with legs and feet dangling below like bait on a fishing line. The ship's crew would then throw into the water whatever supplies had been sent, relying on currents to carry them ashore or the exiles swimming to retrieve them. In 1873, Father Damien deVeuster, aged 33, arrived at Kalaupapa. A Catholic missionary priest from Belgium, he served the leprosy patients at Kalaupapa until his death. A most dedicated and driven man, Father Damien did more than simply administer the faith: he built homes, churches and coffins; arranged for medical services and funding from Honolulu, and became a parent to his diseased wards. Shown here in a rare pencil sketch from December, 1888, Damien contracted the disease, and after 16 years of selfless service, died in 1889. In 1886, Brother Joseph Dutton arrived at Kalaupapa to assist Father Damien. Dutton, an energetic and dedicated missionary priest, assumed many of the duties Damien was unable to perform as his leprosy progressed. Mother Marianne, another revered servant, devoted 29 years on the peninsula as an administrator, nurse and educator. She spent her life on the go, even as her age climbed well into the seventies. She died in 1918. In 1977, Pope Paul VI declared Father Damien to be venerable, the first of three steps that lead to sainthood. Pope John Paul II declared Damien blessed in 1995, the second step before canonization as a saint. With the advent of sulfone drugs in the 1940s, the disease was put in remission and the sufferers are no longer contagious. The fewer than 100 former patients remaining on the peninsula are free to travel or relocate elsewhere, but most have chosen to remain where they have lived for so long. The few cars on the peninsula travel at a top speed of five miles per hour, as there is nowhere to go and no reason to hurry. A broad smile and a friendly wave of the hand are commonplace and integral to the lifestyle. At Kalaupapa are the administration building, post office, book store, fire station, never-used jail and of course the hospital which, considering the size of the population, is one of the best staffed and equipped in Hawaii. In the center of the village stands the large town meeting hall, with a big blackboard nailed on its front and some chalk hanging nearby, just in case a message for someone needs to be written. While Kalaupapa is now a National Historic Site, it is also the home of the few former patients who chose to remain there. So access, is by law, strictly regulated. Unless you are invited by one of the residents, you must take the tour offered by Damien Tours of Kalaupapa (about $40.00). The peninsula can be reached by air or by way of the trail from upper Molokai. Visitors can hike in and out or ride one of the Molokai mules. Visitors must be at least 16 years old. 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Read More >> Popular Ports of Call: Honolulu | Kauai | Lanai | Maui | Waikiki FEATURED HAWAIIAN CRUISES Feb 4, 2006 Norwegian Pride of America 7 days Honolulu, HI $3189 ** Feb 5, 2006 Holland America Amsterdam 15 days San Diego, CA $1751 * Feb 5, 2006 Norwegian Pride of Aloha 7 days Honolulu, HI $3239 ** Feb 8, 2006 Norwegian Norwegian Wind 10 days Honolulu, HI $914 ** Feb 8, 2006 Norwegian Norwegian Dream 10 days Honolulu, HI $914 ** Feb 11, 2006 Norwegian Pride of America 7 days Honolulu, HI $1729 ** Feb 12, 2006 Norwegian Pride of Aloha 7 days Honolulu, HI $609 ** Feb 18, 2006 Norwegian Norwegian Wind 11 days Honolulu, HI $3169 ** Feb 18, 2006 Norwegian Pride of America 7 days Honolulu, HI $1744 ** Feb 19, 2006 Norwegian Pride of Aloha 7 days Honolulu, HI $1279 ** 121 Cruises Found 1-10 | 11-20 | 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-50 | 51-60 | 61-70 | 71-80 | 81-90 | 91-100 | 101-110 | 111-120 | 121-130 | Show All HAWAIIAN CRUISE WIZARD Sail Date: Select month All January February March April May June July August September October November December 2006 2007 2008 Cruiseline: Select Cruiseline All Carnival Celebrity Costa Cruise West Crystal Cunard Disney Holland America MSC Italian Norwegian Oceania Orient Princess Radisson Seven Seas Royal Caribbean Seabourn Silversea Viking River Windjammer Windstar (continued from top of page) Today, come to Hawaii for the unexplainable, the utterly magical, and find bright anthuriums growing wild, volcanic peaks soaring to 14,000 feet and vibrant poinsettias when it isn't even the holidays. For all their similarity, each island has its own distinct personality. Like Hawaii, the big island, with Kilauea's crater where some say Pele, the fire goddess, lives. Maui, with remote swimming spots so beautiful, they were once reserved solely for Hawaiian royalty. And Honolulu, where the cliffs and waterfalls are often visited by spectacular rainbows. Yet there is one thing that all of these islands hold in common. It's called 'aloha,' the spirit of welcoming. back to featured cruises | back to top of page About Us | Security | Privacy | News | Affiliates | Travel Agents ©2002-2003 CruiseDirect, Inc. All rights reserved. CruiseDirect Terms of use | Privacy Policy Featured offers are for select dates only, are subject to availability, and are based on double occupancy. Your exact price depends on time of actual booking. All prices are in $US. To convert into other currencies, please see our currency converter . 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