Kaaha Shelter — Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park

  • $0.00 /night
  • (4.8)4 reviews

Contact Info

808-- (click-to-reveal)
Send SMS
808 - (click-to-reveal)

Camping Style

Backpacker
Cabin
Other Camping
RV Camping
Tent Camping
Trailer Camping

About Campground

Ka‘aha is located on the southern coastline of the park, 3.6 miles from the trailhead at the end of Hilina Pali road. The hike begins with a steep downhill trail that switches back 24 times to the base of the pali (cliff). Along the trail you will be hiking through mostly non-native grasses dotted with native ‘ōhi‘a trees. Two thirds of the way down you will find your only chance for shade on this hot, dry, windy trail under a large ‘ōhi‘a tree.

The rest of the hike is a gradual downhill slope to the coast. Ka‘aha has a rocky shoreline with a well protected cove that has some great snorkeling. You may find green turtles swimming in the cove, or resting on the shore. There are no trees in the area to provide shade, but the shelter on the hillside is a nice place to get out of the elements. Ants are extremely abundant, although they do not bite, or sting, but they will crawl on anything (including you) on the ground. The trail out is uphill the entire way and feels like five miles in the intense sun. We recommend you avoid hiking in the mid-day sun.

Ka‘aha can be accessed from several trailheads:

Hilina Pali Overlook Trailhead via Hilina Pali Trail and Ka‘aha Trail 3.6 mi (5.8 km)

Mau Loa o Maunaulu Trailhead via Keauhou Trail, Hilina Pali Trail, and Ka‘aha Trail 11.5 mi (18.2 km)

Puʻuloa Trailhead via the Puna Coast Trail, Keauhou Trail, Hilina Pali Trail, and Ka‘aha Trail 17.4 mi (28.0 km)

Campers may stay a maximum of 3 consecutive nights per site. A total of 16 hikers are allowed per night at Ka`aha.

Reservation Details

For backcountry camping, there is a non-refundable $10.00 fee per trip, in addition to the park entrance fee. The fee is good for up to 10 people and 7 nights per permit. Failure to obtain a backcountry permit is a violation of 36 CFR 2.10(b)(8). Violators may be subject to fines up to $1000 and/or 6 months in jail. All eight backcountry campsites (Ka‘aha, Halapē, Keauhou, ‘Āpua Point, Nāpau, Pepeiao Cabin, Red Hill Cabin and Mauna Loa Cabin) require a permit, with a stay limit of three consecutive nights at one site. Campers can move to another backcountry site for the fourth night, but no more than 7 consecutive nights per permit. Stays longer than 7 nights require purchasing an additional $10.00 permit. Sites may be reserved up to a week in advance and are reserved upon receipt of permit fees. Fees for backcountry camping can be paid in person at the Backcountry Office by credit card, personal check, cash (exact change please), or online through pay.gov up to a week in advance of your departure. Physical permits must be picked up no more than 24 hours in advance from the Backcountry Office, open daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Access

Hike-in
Walk-in

Accommodations

Tent Sites

Features

Reservable

Essentials

Drinking Water

Location Map

More Details

Featured Videos


Reviews Ratings

Average ratings

4.8

4 Reviews
5
3
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 Reviews
more_vert

John Coney

6 years ago
5/5

Great backpacking place in Hawaii volcanoes national park. Cant wait for the park to reopen.

Helpful
0
Comments
0
more_vert

ray ayende

7 years ago
4/5

This is an 8 mile round trip hike, from 2300ft to sea level , this is a strenuous hike, be prepared.

Helpful
0
Comments
0
more_vert

BJ Kaulana

2 years ago
5/5

It was a well worth hike peaceful an secluded.make shure to bring your own pots an trying pans .an plenty water

Helpful
0
Comments
0
more_vert

E

1 year ago
5/5

This was our first camping out trip, and we have to pick the hardest hike on the park. Not because we wanted to, but because we didn't knew any better. We did everything that an inexperienced hiker will do wrong, we did. To start, well it was al my decision. So let's start with over packing for an overnight camping. I had on my back at least what it felt, a 45lb weight plate. This included a full pillow size, a sleeping back, a $30 heavy Walmart tent that boucled anytime the wind hit it, bunch of cand of food, that we didn't even eat. To top it all of, I did the hike in beach sandals and my second half on water shoes. Would have been fine if the hike surface was smooth, but is not. Is very technical volcanic rock which required real hiking gear. You pretty much are going to sig sag a steep mountain. This is not your topical hike one bit. If you're not in shape, you are going to remember this adventure the rest of your life, and if you get hurt down there. There's no way that they are going to be able to drag you up the mountain cliff. So you better not twist or hurt your legs while down there, because is going to take literally a helicopter to get you out of that place. Just been real, without exaggerating the whole experience. For an experience hike, this will be an enjoyable hike, because been experienced, means you are wearing the right gear to begin with. Once you are at beach level, if no one is down there, then just think of been on another planet without civilization, because that's pretty much what will feels like. Specially when you are surrounded by black rocks that you don't see on your daily life if you are an out of towner. Hopefully my troubles saved you some inconvenience by reading this.

Helpful
0
Comments
0

Write a Review

Drag & drop files here or click to upload
More in

hawaii