
The town kept its Hawaiian roots through all of it. ʻImiola Church, the white New England–style church at the center of Waimea, was built in 1857; its missionary, Reverend Lorenzo Lyons, loved the place enough to write the song “Hawaiʻi Aloha,” still sung across the islands. Waimea grew into a true cross-cultural community — Hawaiian, paniolo, and later Japanese families — a ranching town with a church, a schoolhouse, and a culture all its own, cool and green and a world away from the beaches.
Our Waimea logo carries the Hawaiian hibiscus over “Hawaiian Kingdom · Est. 1795,” the year Kamehameha I unified the islands — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Hawaiʻi place. Printed in a clean retro black-and-white that reads like an old travel decal, the hibiscus stands for the islands as a whole; what makes this one Waimea is the country behind it — the paniolo on the high pastures, Parker Ranch under Mauna Kea, and a Hawaiian town that has been green, cool, and proud of its cowboys for nearly two centuries.
Why People Visit Waimea
Waimea offers the Hawaiʻi that isn't a beach — cool, green, and high, with a deep ranching culture and Native Hawaiian roots. Visitors come for the paniolo heritage, the upland air, the farmers' markets, and the rare feeling of a Hawaiian cowboy town under the slopes of a sacred mountain.