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Kauai with the Kids

With the exception of a 20-minute drive to the boogie-boarding beach, there are four words most parents will never hear from their kids while on vacation in the Hawaiian paradise of Kauai: “Are we there yet?” Roughly 550 square miles, this compact island has enough adventure to keep the whole family satisfied for weeks. By law, no building can stand higher than a coconut palm, so instead of hotel towers you’ll find sheer sea cliffs, lush tropical forests and 50 miles of sandy beaches. It’s a place where kids can reclaim their imaginations; where WiFi connections take a back seat to zip lines and Zodiac boats.

Kauai with the Kids

MAKING YOUR LIST
The big problem with Kauai is choosing your adventure. You can hike through a rain forest; explore the backcountry by mountain bike, horseback or dune buggy; or float on an inner tube or paddle a kayak on rivers that flow through secluded tropical forests. Among the island’s natural wonders are the spectacular 10-mile-long Waimea Canyon, known as the Grand Canyon of the Pacific, and the rugged cliffs of the verdant Na Pali Coast on the northwest shore.

THE BEACH, OF COURSE
Kauai has more sandy beaches per mile of shoreline than any other Hawaiian island. Anini Beach on the north shore, Salt Pond Beach to the south and Lydgate Park to the east are favored by those who like to use a mask and snorkel to meet the denizens of the not-so-deep. You can rent equipment from Snorkel Bob’s in Kapaa, a short drive from the Lihue Airport. Holo Holo Charters and Kauai Sea Tours run guided snorkel tours along the pristine Na Pali Coast, accessible only on foot or by boat.

The calm waters off Poipu Beach are perfect for learning to surf or boogie board. World champion surfer Margo Oberg and her teaching staff will have your kids (and maybe even you) up and riding in a single 90-minute lesson. Oberg works with groups of 6; Kauai Surf School) teaches 4 at a time. If you want to learn some tips by watching the pros hang ten, ask the lifeguards to show you where the surf is way up.

Kauai with the Kids

VIEW FROM THE TOP
You could call this island ‘Zip Line Central’ for its ecofriendly, adrenaline-pumping treetop tours. Step off a wooden platform and travel, suspended by a steel line and held tight by a harness, high above the lush tropical tangle. The trees rush by—and then you land easily on the next platform. The first time might be a bit frightening, but by the third line on the circuit, you’ll feel like a bird in flight.

The zip line ride offered by Outfitters Kauai is part of a day-long excursion. Before even reaching the zip line, you kayak and then hike to a waterfall in the mountains. Kauai Backcountry Adventures operates tours on 17,000 acres of old sugarcane land. A 3-hour outing can include tubing downstream in the tunnels and flumes used in the past to irrigate the cane fields. Age and weight restrictions vary by company.

ISLAND TREATS
Kauai is the perfect place to keep your little eating machines happy. Roadside fruit stands attract visitors and locals alike with treats like freshly cracked coconut, juicy pineapple and luscious papaya. “Shave ice,” Hawaii’s mouthwatering answer to the snow cone, ranges from the obvious flavors like pineapple to such novel concoctions as sweet azuki bean-studded ice cream covered with a mound of shave ice in “rainbow” flavors (most often strawberry, orange, lemon and vanilla). For a picnic at the beach, follow the crowd to one of the takeout counters serving “plate lunch”—usually a meat entrée flanked by macaroni salad and two scoops of rice.

ALL ABOARD
In the 1800s, when much of America’s cane sugar came from Hawaiian plantations, harvested cane was moved to the mills by train. A recent attraction, the Kauai Plantation Railway, re-creates those days with a vintage diesel locomotive pulling 4 mahogany passenger cars modeled after the traveling coach of Hawaii’s King David Kalakaua.

From its old-fashioned station house at Kilohana (just south of Lihue), the Tudor-style plantation home of the sugar baron Gaylord Wilcox, the train chugs through 105 acres of orchards (growing lychee, mangos, starfruit and bananas), sugarcane groves and coffee farms, with nary a car or building in sight. Tours run daily; the early train will drop you midway for a 90-minute guided hike into the mahogany-canopied Kahuna Nui Valley. After a picnic, jump back on the train.

At Kilohana, you can check out art galleries, grab a salad or sandwich at Gaylord’s Restaurant and take a horse-drawn carriage ride. Trust us, the kids will sleep well at night, no matter what you do.

NOTE: Information may have changed since publication. Please confirm key details before planning your trip.