
Today the Big Island is a place of volcanoes and coffee, snow and surf, ranch country and rain forest — proud of its Hawaiian heritage, its paniolo, and the landscapes that keep changing. Its story runs from the first Hawaiian settlers through Kamehameha's unification, the 1847 founding of Parker Ranch, the 1908 paniolo triumph at Cheyenne, and the volcanoes that still build new land. Our Big Island designs gather that identity into wearable form — the volcano, the coffee, the cowboy. Big Island, Hawaiʻi — the youngest and largest of the islands, still growing under your feet.
To manage the wild cattle, ranchers brought Mexican vaqueros to the island in the 1830s; they trained Hawaiian riders, who became the paniolo — Hawaiʻi's cowboys, named from español. Parker Ranch took root in Waimea in 1847 and grew into one of the largest ranches in the United States. The coffee belt rose in the Kona uplands, and the great volcanoes drew the world: Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park was established in 1916 around Kīlauea and Mauna Loa, and the summit of Mauna Kea — sacred in Hawaiian culture and the tallest mountain on Earth base-to-peak — became home to world-class observatories. Two coasts, snow and lava, coffee and cattle: an island that is never quite finished.
Why People Visit the Big Island
People come to the Big Island for the volcanoes, the coffee, and the sheer range of it — snow and lava, ranch and reef, all on one island. Its towns of Hilo, Kona, and Waimea give it two coasts and a paniolo heartland, and the land itself is still being built at the volcano's edge.