Hawaii's Tunnel Of Trees Is Positively Magical And You Need To Visit
By Megan Shute|Published September 13, 2016
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Megan Shute
Author
With more than 10 years of experience as a professional writer, Megan holds a degree in Mass Media from her home state of Minnesota. After college, she chose to trade in her winter boots for slippahs and moved to the beautiful island of Oahu, where she has been living for more than five years. She lives on the west side but is constantly taking mini-road trips across the island and visits the neighboring islands whenever she can getaway. She loves hiking, snorkeling, locally-grown coffee, and finding the best acai bowl on Oahu.
In an island chain as beautiful and picturesque as Hawaii, it can be hard to proclaim that a scenic drive that doesn’t hug oceanside cliffs, or go through tunnels carved in the mountains, is one of the best drives in the state. But that is exactly what we’re saying about Maluhia Road, a stunningly magical tunnel of trees located in southern Kauai near Koloa.
The Holo Holo Koloa Scenic Byway serves as the gateway to Kauai's southern shore, and is full of magnificent views and gorgeous stops, including a stretch of highway covered in a canopy of eucalyptus trees.
The original 500 trees were planted more than a century ago - in 1911, as a gift to the community from Walter McBryde, a local pineapple baron, who had leftover trees from a landscaping project on his estate.
There are some, however, who don’t believe this story and instead think that the trees - imported from Australia - were planted by the Knudsen family to solidify the boggy roadway, or that the trees were planted in order to form a windbreak for nearby sugarcane fields.
Regardless of the tree tunnel’s origins, it is easy for everyone to agree that the result is a positively stunning, dense, green corridor - and perhaps one of Kauai’s most scenic drives.
The trees were stripped down to bare branches during Hurricane Iniki’s 225 mile per hour winds, but have since made a nice recovery, and are back to being the beautiful tunnel of foliage they once were.
While we understand the urge to pull off the road and take an Instagram-worthy shot standing in the middle of the road, we urge you to take caution, and stay out of the road for your own safety as well as that of other motorists.