Another sign within Nakalele Point.After wandering around the area for over 40 min I finally found the Blowhole.  That's that white spray just right of center.  The water spray from it was over 5 feet tall.  Just a few months before we visited this site a man fell into the blowhole after being hit by a wave, his body was never found.Here's Steve and Nancy in Nakalele Point.DSCF0831_test03.JPGAcross the road from Nakalele Point is the giant volcanic rock.  The boulder is called the Bellstone.It's reported that if one strikes the boulder in the correct spot with a another rock it will sound like a bell.  I wasn't packing a rock that day so I couldn't test the theory.A view of Kahakuloa Head from Nakalele Point.Kahakuloa Head is 636 feet high.  It is believed that Kahakuloa Head was one of King Kahekili's favorite cliff-diving spots. King Kahekili was king on Maui in the mid-1700s.  He climbed up this hill and leaped into the ocean below. That's why the hill is also known as Kahekili's Leap.This is a church in Kahakuloa Village, the village is home to about 100 people.Kahakuloa is also where the road narrows.Love the blind corners.The roads were like this all the way back to civilization.Around every turn was another great view.
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This is a church in Kahakuloa Village, the village is home to about 100 people.