This is the first in a series of coffee table books and online galleries that express our love of Kaua’i through pictures and narrative. This is not a tour book, nor it is simply another photo book of the “Garden Isle.” Rather this is a photojournal of our annual pilgrimages to Kaua’i that began in 2004. Please enjoy this gallery, and the additional galleries that will follow.
Aloha and Mahalo,
Terri and Bill Taylor
Our Kaua'i - 2004
This is a love story. Not just a 40 plus year personal romance, but OUR romance with the, “Garden Isle” of Kaua’i. While we traveled to Hawaii several times before, including twice to Maui, once to Hawaii and several times to Oahu, our first trip to Kaua’i was in June 2004. Thus begins this love story, which has no end in sight.
The pictures are all Bill’s. Bill has been a serious, though not yet professional, photographer since he was a child. The images in this first volume, “Our Kaua’i - 2004”, were all taken with a Sony F707 digital camera. Pictures in subsequent volumes were taken with Sigma cameras equipped with the Foveon “Full Color Sensor”.
This love affair will endure for the rest of our lives. We love you, Kaua’i. Thanks for the memories, past, present and future!
Terri and Bill Taylor
October 2010
Copyright 2004-2011 All RIghts ReservedThe first order of business was getting a decent meal after a long day of travel. The concierge recommended the Hukilau Lanai Restaruant up the road a few miles in Kapaa. We had a wonderful meal there on the garden patio. It was so good that we’ve been back every year since! Returning to the Radisson we were greeted with this gorgeous evening view from our balcony.
Just past Princeville Highway 56 ends and becomes Highway 560. The first stop on Highway 560, this panoramic view from the Hanalei Lookout, is simply spectacular. Little did we know that the drifting clouds would provide the backdrop for amazing scenes later in the day.
Note the one-way Hanalei Bridge just to the right of center above, as the road winds around and drops quickly from this lookout to the valley floor.One moment the mountains were completely shrouded in clouds; minutes later we turned from lunch to see the clouds had raised up to reveal this sensational view of almost a dozen waterfalls. One thing about Kaua’i, the weather is constantly changing, and no matter how many times you come back to a place you will see something different.
The bridges on Highway 560 are one way, which could cause traffic problems. Not here in Kaua’i! There is an informal protocol that everyone seems to understand, that once three to five cars have passed from one direction they yield to the next three to five cars from the opposite direction. Imagine depending on this common courtesy in a major east coast city!?!
What’s this, you ask? Trees and clouds?!? Well, this is one of Kauai’s MOST photographed scenes, the Kalalau Valley from the Kalalau Valley Lookout in Kokee State Park. As noted earlier, you can visit the same places on Kaua’i time after time and see different things. This visit was a “clouded” bust, but visits in later years have more than made up for it.
Saturday, June 19, 2004: We were supposed to go on a helicopter tour of Kaua’i this morning. Unfortunately the weather was so bad they could not fly. Oh well, next year. So we went sightseeing on our way to the airport. First was Wailua Falls. There was lots of rain that spring, so the falls were engorged with water and as beautiful as we have ever seen them.