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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, November 29, 2009

On Niihau, life is simple, oh so pure


By Catharine Hamm
Los Angeles Times

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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IF YOU GO …

Niihau Helicopters on Kaua'i requires a minimum of five people for tours. If your group is smaller, you’ll be placed on standby for the days you would like to go, and if there are enough people, a tour is scheduled. A half-day tour, including lunch and drinks, is $385 per person. 877-441-3500, www.niihau.us/heli.html.

See more photographs of Ni'ihau at www.niihauheritage.org/niihau_today.htm.

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NIIHAU, Hawaii —Tell people you're going to Niihau, and they invariably exclaim, "No way!" Or, "Do you know the Robinsons?"

Yes, way, and no, I do not know the Robinsons.

And even though I've now been to Niihau, I can't really say I know it either.

But I do know that there are few places that I have anticipated visiting for as long and from which I've come away so changed.

Since my days as a child on Oahu, I've known Niihau as the Forbidden Island. It has been privately owned since 1864, when Elizabeth Sinclair bought it from King Kamehameha V. Her descendants, the Robinsons (brothers Bruce and Keith), continue to own it.

Niihau is everything Oahu, Maui, the Big Island, even Kauai, are not. It has 130 residents, give or take, and they live in the town of Puuwai. They don't have running water, and electricity is produced by the sun or by a generator, not by an electric utility. There are few cars. The people live off the land, hunting, fishing, growing their own fruit and vegetables. Sunday is reserved for church. Smoking and drinking are not allowed here. Ohana is the center of life.

Simple? Yes. But it is more than that. As Margit Tolman said after our trip here in September, "It is so pure."

That's well beyond the word "unspoiled," which we travel types like to use when we stumble upon a stretch of beach or a piece of wilderness humans haven't yet trashed.

GETTING THERE

There is no real mystery in getting to the island. Niihau Helicopters has been offering half-day trips from Kauai since 1987. It's just that few people seem to know about them.

Five of us gathered at Niihau Helicopters' offices in Kaumakani: Tolman and her mother, Renate Muller; Victor Ella of Santa Barbara, Calif.; Tanzman; and I. After being weighed and given a safety briefing, we headed for Port Allen, where the Agusta 109A helicopter was to land, refuel and take us back.

Like a group of kindergartners about to go on our first field trip, it was only the thinnest shred of adulthood that kept us from running in circles and hitting one another. We were practically bouncing on our toes to get the first look at the chopper, whose main purpose is the emergency evacuation of Niihau residents. The tours help underwrite the cost of the helicopter.

Pilot Dana Rosendal got us settled and seat-belted, and we were off, whisking the 17 or so miles across the sometimes-rough Kaulakahi Channel.

"Kauai steals all the rain," Rosendal explained.

Whereas parts of Kauai bathe in rain (the summit of Mount Waialeale is said to get 400 inches a year), Niihau gets a dozen inches or so.

Back in 1863 when Elizabeth Sinclair's sons, James and Francis, first saw the approximately 17-by-5-mile island, it had rained heavily the previous two years, and the land was electric green. It was, the men thought, a good place for a ranch.

So Sinclair passed on other parcels of land she had considered on Oahu and offered King Kamehameha IV $6,000 for the island.

Not enough. She increased the offer to $10,000. Sold! (Kamehameha IV died before the transaction was completed, so the details fell to King Kamehameha V.)

The new owners would raise cattle and sheep. They didn't know the land was nearly as unforgiving as the arid parts of Southern California. True, there are three freshwater lakes on Niihau, the biggest lakes on any of the islands, but as we spied them from the air that day — and on many days — they were nothing more than mudholes.

I couldn't imagine what the Sinclairs must have thought when they realized they had made a slight purchasing error. My heart was sinking, and my half-day trip was $385 for this tour of what promised to be 72 or so square miles of ugly.

"You guys aren't susceptible to motion, are you?" Rosendal said into our headphones. "I'll try not to dive more than I have to. I'd really like to show you the eland. I know where they're hiding right now."

LIVING OFF THE LAND

As if on cue, out of the brush sprang two of these African antelope, and as we followed them, the score from "Out of Africa" swelled in my ear's imagination. The 2,500-pound beasts bounded with the grace of a running back headed for a touchdown.

"As pretty as they are, they taste a heck of a lot better," Rosendal said.

The people live off the land here. Fish are a staple, but the wildlife here, including wild boar and eland, is fair game.

Reeling from this Meryl Streep moment, I was unprepared for the village of Puuwai, where about 35 houses, a church and a school are clustered. The flyover was brief; the Robinsons do not want the Niihauans' privacy invaded.

We would not get to meet the residents or interact with them in any way, and that was a disappointment. These sheltered souls are, by all accounts, warm and wonderful folk, but the outside world is an unwelcome guest.

"It's a privacy issue," Rosendal told me later. Bruce Robinson "really loves these people. His motto is always, 'It has to be good for the people in Niihau. If it's good for them and the ranch, which is the business, we'll consider doing it.' If it's not good for the island and the people he's not going to do (it)."

As for the rumors that Niihauans are captives in this land, Rosendal, who knows most of them, laughs.

"They can go anywhere they want. I guess he (Bruce Robinson) wants to lessen the impact of people in their area. That's their private area.

"It's not like he's that rich dude who owns the island. It's more like, 'You are the ones that live here. Yeah, I own the island, but your families have been here forever.' When his family bought the island, they agreed to respect the rights of the Niihauans."

We turned toward Nanina Beach on the north shore, where we would land. The sea was calm, the water and sky a warm blue. The sand stretched before us, unending, untrammeled, unpopulated.

Unbelievable.

MEETING MAHINA

We landed and scrambled out of the helicopter — and immediately sank ankle-deep in sand. The hike to a rustic shelter was like walking through cotton batting.

We dropped our belongings, then spread out.

For the next 3 1/2 hours, we swam, snorkeled, ate lunch (courtesy of Niihau Helicopters) and hunted for the tiny Niihau shell, which islanders make into lei and sell for hundreds and sometimes thousands of dollars.

The shoreline was covered with smooth lava that formed tide pools, brimming with sea life, and it was here we found the only resident of Niihau we would encounter.

Her name was Mahina, Hawaiian for "moon." She had big brown eyes, dark skin and a cute little nose, although she seemed to have grown algae around her mouth. She was taking her leisure in one of the tide pools and looked well pleased with herself, as monk seals are wont to do. They are an endangered and completely adorable species, and Niihau is home to many of them.

"If you see 40 of them, there are probably 120, because the rest are out fishing," Rosendal, who had seen Mahina grow from a baby, told us.

As we approached, Mahina rolled on her back, her creamy belly pointed toward the sun.

We kept a respectful distance — it is illegal to get close — but Mahina flirted shamelessly with us. She rolled and batted her eyes, as curious about us as we were about her.

But the day was slipping away, and it was time to return to whatever our reality was. As we gathered for a group photograph, a woman in our group confessed it was her birthday — "my best ever," she said.

She had spent No. 73 in a place that, until now, we had only dreamed we would see and to which each of us said we would like to return one day — just for the pure bliss of it.