Your people on the ground

Guided by people
who know them best

Not tour operators. Not agencies. These are the locals whose families have lived, fished, farmed, and surfed these islands for generations — and who want you to actually understand them.

11 guides
Kai Makoa
O'ahu
Kai Makoa
Former Pipeline competitor. 22 years on the North Shore. He knows where the swell comes from.
Dr. James Kalani
O'ahu
Dr. James Kalani
Military historian, Oahu native. He knows which signals went unread and why it still matters.
Leilani Akana
O'ahu
Leilani Akana
Native Hawaiian educator from Waianae. Four generations of fishing the western shore. She walks Ka'ena differently.
Kainoa Kealoha
O'ahu
Kainoa Kealoha
Voyaging canoe crew, restoration ecologist. His family has maintained a working fishpond for 800 years.
Nalani Kahananui
Maui
Nalani Kahananui
Born and raised in Hana. She's driven the road 2,000 times. She knows every gate, every garden, every family.
Captain Ailani Souza
Maui
Captain Ailani Souza
Lahaina-born captain. 20 years reading the whale channel. She knows where the mothers rest with their newborns.
Captain Moana Akana
Maui
Captain Moana Akana
Marine biologist. 14 years of first-light Molokini. She'll name every creature you see through her waterproof slate.
Captain Keoni Ferreira
Kaua'i
Captain Keoni Ferreira
Born in Hanalei. 19 years on the Nā Pali coast. He holds the access permits nobody else can get.
Akoni Kamehameha
Kaua'i
Akoni Kamehameha
Sixth-generation kalo farmer. His family has worked Hanalei Valley since before Western contact. This is genealogy, not agriculture.
Dr. Hana Puna
Big Island
Dr. Hana Puna
USGS volcanologist. 14 years monitoring Kīlauea. She reads eruptions the way you read faces — small signals, long history.
Kawika Kahanamoku
Big Island
Kawika Kahanamoku
Kohala cultural practitioner. His family has conducted ceremonies at Pu'ukoholā Heiau since 1791. Not a docent — a practitioner.