Expert Travel Advice to Kauai
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Our Favorite Haunts
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Top Ten Surfing Spots
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Top Ten Warm-Weather Winter Wildlife Refuges
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Travel with Children: Top 10 Beach Vacations
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Top Ten Getaways to Beat the Winter Blues
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January Parks and the Outdoors Travel Guide
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In Search of the Hawaiian Monk Seal
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True Hawaii
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Island Obsessions
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August Romantic Travel Guide
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June Romantic Travel Guide
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Kauai: I Dream of Kauai
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Kauai: Top Attractions
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Top Ten Wildlife Areas We Love (and Would Hate to Lose)
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Base Camp Hawaii
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Top Ten Hawaii Adventures
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Top Ten Beaches in the United States
Gorp Top Ten -
Backpacking in Kauai
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Napshot
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Top Answers To Kauai Travel Questions
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Anonymous user asked:Where is the best place to snorkel?Answer this2 AnswersAnonymous user answered:One of the best places to snorkel is called Tunnels. It is up, past Princeville; about 1/2 way to Ke'e beach, which is at the very end of the road. Tunnels has lots of reef and is great for snorkeling;EXCEPT in the winter with high tide. Because there is all of the reefs, you can get caught up on the reef if it is in the winter, because you get higher tides on the north end of Kauai in the winter. Tunnels has a super large beach and lots of people, but not a lot of places to park. Many peopl drive by it. It is right before the dry cave. Have fun!!
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Anonymous user asked:What facilities on Kauai are available for a wedding?Answer this1 AnswerAnonymous user answered:Fern Grotto, Smith Family Tropical Gardens, Spouting Horn, Moana Mele Estate.
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Kim answered:HI Kathy, Summertime, when families descend on Hawaiâi, constitutes high season. So does wintertime (from mid-December through March), when a blanket of brrrr covers most of the mainland. Holiday periods like Thanksgiving and Easter also draw throngs. Be careful about coming in late April: There are three simultaneous holidays in Japan at that time, which means the Japanese are traveling in greater numbers than usual. In general, the north and eastward facing coasts tend to get more rain. But even when it's raining on the north or eastern shore, it's often not on the south or westerly shores. And rain showers don't tend to last that long, like they do on the mainland. Check this out ==>http://www.govisithawaii.com/hawaii-weather/ And you might also want to pick up a copy of my Hawaii: An Explorer's Guide :-) ==> http://www.amazon.com/Explorers-Guide-Hawaii-Complete/dp/0881508098/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1308801035&sr=8-1 Kim Grant
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Anonymous user asked:Is there another good luau other than Smith?Answer this1 AnswerAnonymous user answered:Try Tahiti Nui on the North Shore
