There are trips you plan meticulously, and then there are trips that quietly remind you why you travel in the first place. Our five days on Hawaii’s Big Island was the latter — a deliberate exhale after months of New York noise, deadlines, and the relentless pace of a city that never quite lets you rest.
We didn’t come to conquer Hawaii. We came to breathe.
Hilton Waikoloa: Our Home Base and Sanctuary

From the moment we arrived at the Hilton Waikoloa Village, the agenda loosened. The sprawling resort on the Kohala Coast operates on its own gentle rhythm — lagoons, open-air walkways, and the kind of pool that makes you forget there is anywhere else to be.

And so, for much of the trip, we simply stayed. We ordered drinks we didn’t rush, let the sun track slowly across the sky, and counted that as a full day well spent. No guilt, no itinerary. Just presence.

For a couple arriving from New York, that in itself felt radical!
Above the Fire: Helicopter Over an Erupting Volcano

The Big Island has a way of making sure you don’t get too comfortable. On the day we booked our helicopter tour, the volcano happened to be actively erupting — and what unfolded at 5,000 feet above was nothing short of extraordinary. The timing was pure serendipity, and it transformed what might have been a scenic flight into one of the most arresting experiences of our lives.

Peering down at rivers of glowing lava from above — close enough to feel the weight of what you’re witnessing — is humbling in the most profound way. The earth below has been at this for millennia, indifferent and magnificent. It strips away the trivial. You land back on the ground quieter, more grateful, and slightly rearranged.

The Hidden Side of the Big Island: East Coast Valleys and Waterfalls

What most visitors to the Big Island never see is its eastern face — and that is precisely what makes the helicopter tour so revelatory. As we banked east, the landscape shifted dramatically: lush green valleys carved deep into the earth, cascading waterfalls threading through ancient cliffs, and coastlines that feel untouched by time.

This side of the island is largely inaccessible by land. The only way to truly witness it is from the air — and being that close to nature in its most raw, unfiltered form is an experience that photographs can gesture at but never fully capture. It is the kind of beauty that earns silence.
A Taste of the Village — and a Taste of Home

Firstly, one of the restaurants on the property served pandesal and ube pandesal. Like what?! And it was genuinely so good and soft.

Beyond the resort gates, the Waikoloa Village offered a welcome dose of local life. We explored a handful of restaurants outside the Hilton — casual, unhurried, and full of character. What surprised us most was how deeply Filipino cuisine is woven into Hawaiian food culture.

Dishes and flavors we grew up with appeared naturally on menus, not as novelty but as staple. It felt like an unexpected homecoming thousands of miles from home.

And then there was ube — everywhere. In lattes, in ice creams, in cocktails. The vibrant purple root had clearly found its second home in the Pacific. We ordered it in every form we could find and had no regrets.
A Sunset Worth Slowing Down For

On one of our final evenings, we walked along the beach as the sun made its slow descent over the Pacific — a generous golden hour that felt almost cinematic. A quiet sunset dinner followed.

Those are the moments travel is really for.
The One We Missed: Dolphins at the Resort Sanctuary

If there is one thing we wish we had carved out time for, it is this. The Hilton Waikoloa is home to a dedicated dolphin sanctuary — a remarkable on-property experience where guests can get up close, and even swim alongside, a resident pod of dolphins in a protected, purpose-built lagoon.

We managed to get close enough for photos. We did not manage to get into the water with them due to timings, but we highly recommend it to anyone staying at the resort.
What the Big Island Gives You

The Big Island is not Hawaii’s most glamorous island, nor its most famous. It is something better: honest. It offers volcanic drama and hidden valleys, world-class resort comfort and authentic local warmth, all on an island still literally growing beneath your feet.

We came for rest. We found renewal — and a reminder that the world is far larger, older, and more extraordinary than the four walls of our daily routine.
Life is short. Book that ticket.
