
Above the south-shore beach of Hulopoʻe rises Puʻupehe, the sea-cut lava tower that visitors call Sweetheart Rock, wrapped in its own old island legend. In 1854 a party of Mormon settlers laid out a short-lived colony in the upland Palawai Basin, and through the later 1800s the dry plains drew cattle ranchers; for a couple of years around 1900 a small sugar venture tried its luck at Keomoku on the east shore. But Lānaʻi stayed quiet and lightly peopled — a big, dry island just across the water from Maui, waiting on the crop that would remake it.
Lānaʻi's oldest stories begin with the spirits. For generations the island was shunned as a haunted place, until — as Hawaiians tell it — a chief's son named Kaululaʻau was banished here from Maui and, one by one, drove the akua ʻino, the island's evil spirits, into the sea, making Lānaʻi safe to settle. The people who came lived by the reef and the fishing grounds, and nowhere more than at Kaunolū on the southern sea cliffs — an ancient village that Kamehameha I favored as a fishing retreat. Its ruins survive today as a National Historic Landmark: stone house platforms, the great Halulu Heiau, rock carvings, and Kahekili's Leap, the cliff where warriors once dove to the sea far below. These are sacred and storied grounds, named here with respect.
Why People Visit Lānaʻi
Lānaʻi offers the rarest thing in Hawaiʻi: an island that still feels empty. It pairs a deep heritage — ancient fishing villages, a storied red-rock landscape, and the golden plantation past — with near-solitary beaches, pine-shaded uplands, and a single small town. It is quiet, scenic, and unhurried, made for travelers who want an island to themselves.