Driving through the clouds on Maui
Advertiser Staff
WHERE: Nowhere are Hawai'i's volcanoes more compelling than at the summit of Maui's Haleakala. From the rim of the great crater — a deep-sided pit that disappears from view — you can gaze across the Pacific, above the clouds, to the peaks of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on the Big Island.
Below are the rusty reds, ochres and blacks of lava and ash flows. It's silent, despite the 1.5 million visitors year-round to the summit. Weather appears and just as quickly disappears; a cool mantle settles immediately after you stop moving.
The view, which in clear weather extends 100 miles, rewards drivers for an intense switchback journey through several micro-climates. What you think may be fog turns out to be drive-through cumulus clouds resting gently on the back of the world's largest dormant volcano. Highway 378 is reputedly the only place in the world where you can drive from sea level to above 10,000 feet in 38 miles. Acclimate to the increasingly thin air at rest stops.
WHAT TO SEE:
On the way down look for the black-nosed nene, the Hawaiian goose, endangered as much for skittering across the road as for any ecological reason; Haleakala is one of the few places to spot them easily.
LEARN MORE
Read more about Haleakala summit, ranger-guided hikes and programs at www.nps.gov/hale/planyourvisit/guided-activities.htm