A honeymoon in Mauiis a sun-kissed adventure
Published 12:00 am Sunday, April 5, 2015
- Ellen Creager / Detroit Free PressA postcard-perfect beach scene in Wailea, Maui.
LAHAINA, Maui — If you think the wedding was exhausting, wait till you get to the honeymoon.
Whale watching. Zip lines. Luaus. Snorkeling. Driving a hairpin road on the edge of seaside cliffs while your beloved new spouse clutches the armrest in terror.
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Maui, often named the most beautiful island in the world in travel polls, is so overwhelming in its charm that honestly, it’s a bit intimidating. There are so many choices here that honeymoon couples might be tempted instead to just collapse on a beach chair and shut their eyes.
Except that they might be missing something.
“We are not really big planners,” said Lacy Ruether of Grande Prairie, Alberta, whom I met with her husband, Kris, at scenic Twin Falls on the Hana road. Married three weeks, they were in Maui for a 10-day honeymoon to rest after their big wedding back home.
“We did book snorkeling, and a luau, and we’re going to go golfing, and today we’re on the road to Hana,” she said. “We’re up at 7 or 7:30, but we want to take our time.”
Take their time? With that schedule?
“Just plan one thing a day,” said Kris calmly.
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His wife nodded. “Plan so you don’t need a vacation from your vacation.”
Hawaii is the land of honeymoons. As part of a record 8.3 million visitors last year, more than 624,000 were honeymooners, up 4.3 percent from 2013.
Here in Maui (the second-most visited island after Oahu) the scenery alone is so romantic that you feel as if you are starring in your own exotic movie. Lush greenery nestles against crashing waves. Dreamlike islands in the distance seem imported just for the visual effect. Towering resorts line the west coast with its sugar sand beaches, while more modest lodgings are scattered on the north shore and inland.
In shimmering Maui, every couple I met looked as if they were on their honeymoon.
One couple who were holding hands looked just married, but it turned out they’d been wed 25 years. I saw another silver-haired couple kissing on Kapalua Beach, but it turned out they weren’t yet married.
Then on a whale watch near Lahaina, I ran into Chad and Jen Berg, of St. Paul, Minnesota, who qualify as almost newlyweds. Married two years, they were on their first trip to the Aloha state.
Standing near the swaying rail of a catamaran, humpback whales spouting and leaping nearby, Chad said romantic Maui was definitely worth the 12-hour journey from Minnesota.
“You’re going to get three times as good a vacation here as Orlando or San Diego,” Chad said, “and you don’t have to pay $500 a night: You can come to Hawaii for the same price that you go somewhere else. If we had known, we would have come to Maui earlier. We always thought it was too expensive.”
Nearing the end of their 10-day trip, the Bergs had driven the Road to Hana. They’d been snorkeling, shopping and on a north shore scenic drive. They’d gone golfing. And to the beach. And out to dinner lots of times. Now they were on a whale watch boat. The only thing they’d run out of time for was renting a moped.
Is there anything they regretted? Chad Berg nodded.
“When we come again,” he said, “we will try to chill more.”