Capuaiva Beach Park is a place where you can really appreciate the sea breeze of the coconut grove on the Blue Sky and White Cloud Avenue, and when you came here, the weather was very good, and the endless sea was very beautiful.
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These trees are very old. The grove is right by the road. Some days the park was closed but you could still view the grove. You do need to watch for falling nuts.
This has historical interest, but is just a bunch of coconut palms off the highway. there is a place to pull off and park, and you can walk about. It is on the shoreline.
You are not allowed to enter and walk around, everything is fenced. The coconut trees planted by Kamehameha are in a deplorable state, most without foliage. This is not an attraction as it is not attr...
the palms are planted by Kamehameha and therefore it is both interesting for people who like nature but also for peole interested in historic places. it is very close to the main city and also not far...
Not able to enter and walk around - as it's closed off. We drove by it a ton on our visit to the island - very pretty and nice to drive by, even if not able to walk around.
Capuaiva Beach Park is a place where you can really appreciate the sea breeze of the coconut grove on the Blue Sky and White Cloud Avenue, and when you came here, the weather was very good, and the endless sea was very beautiful.
Capuai Iwao Forest Beach Park is really the name, is a maple tree forest, full of tropical flavor of the seaside park. The tall orange trees in the sunset is really beautiful, the sunset lighting the sea, the silhouette of orange trees, like a beautiful picture.
This beach park is beautiful, in fact, it is the place where you can park on the side of the road, they are called beach park, there are also places where you can self-barbecue, are free. I feel that life here is really leisurely.
The ancient Hawaiian oyster forest in Kapuaiwa Coconut Beach Park was planted during the reign of King Camehameha V in the 1960s. Hundreds of orange trees sway in the wind and are the most obvious natural landmark on the island of Molokai
A local guide brought us here, so large a maple forest, few tourists. According to the guide, this is the royal maple forest that the king had ordered to plant. The maple trees are tall and big, and you should be careful walking below. At any time you should be careful of the ripe oranges that fall from your head. Don't go under the tree when you see the yellow ripe orange.