37 Cabins. Surf site, Kalaeloa, O‘ahu. Off the officers’ cabins at the west end of White Plains Beach. Cable Channel. Dive site, Hanauma Bay, O‘ahu. Channel cut through the reef to house a submarine communications cable for Hawaiian Telephone. California Reef. Dive site, ‘Âina Haina, O‘ahu. Introductory dive site at 40 feet, with some ledges that have a wide diversity of marine life; like California, the ledges have a wide diversity of everything. Calvary by the Sea Lutheran Church. Memorial, ‘Âina Haina, O‘ahu. Two stone monuments established in 1979 in the beachfront garden of the church. The monuments have rows of individually inscribed metal plates that are “in loving memory of those who have been buried at sea.” One of these plates is for Kala Kukea (1943–1996), who lived in ‘Âina Haina and whose ashes were scattered offshore. In a state renowned for its exceptional watermen, Kukea, a rescue captain in the Honolulu Fire Department, was one of the best. He excelled in surfing, diving, kayaking, and outrigger canoe paddling and was a highly respected coach for the Hui Nalu Canoe Club. Campbell. National wildlife refuge, Kahuku, O‘ahu. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service leases two wetland parcels from the James Campbell Estate: the Ki‘i Unit (126 acres) and the Punaman ò Unit (38 acres). The Ki‘i Unit is man-made, consisting of several wastewater settling basins built by Kahuku Sugar Company before it closed in 1971. Punamanò is a natural spring-fed marsh. Both sites attract migratory and native waterbirds that frequent the shore of Kahuku Point, including Hawaiian ducks, Hawaiian moorhens, Hawaiian coots, Hawaiian stilts, black-crowned night herons, and over two dozen species of migratory seabirds and waterfowl. Also known as James C. Campbell National Wildlife Refuge. c Campbells 38 c Campbells. Surf site, Campbell Industrial Park, O‘ahu. Off the public right-of-way on Kaomi Loop in Campbell Industrial Park. Camp Erdman. Recreation site, Mokulè‘ia, O‘ahu. Named in 1932 for Harold Randolph Erdman (1905–1931), who was killed in a fall from a horse during a polo game. The land for the camp had been leased in 1926 from Walter Dillingham, but upon Erdman’s death the Dillingham family donated the land to the YMCA. Erdman was Dillingham’s nephew, the son of his sister, Marion Dillingham Erdman. Camp Hâlena. Recreation site, Hâlena, Moloka‘i. George P. Cooke, the first president of Moloka‘i Ranch, was an enthusiastic scouting supporter and sponsored the construction of Camp Hâlena, a cluster of small cabins and related buildings on Hâlena Beach. Camp Homelani. Recreation site, surf site, Mokulè‘ia, O‘ahu. Salvation Army camp on Crozier Drive. Camp Homelani was originally a half-acre site on the beach when it was acquired in 1948 by Major Adolf Kranz, the Salvation Army officer who had been Hawai‘i’s division commander during World War II. The Salvation Army is a Christian organization and Kranz named it Homelani, or “heavenly home,” to reflect their religious beliefs. It now includes a 1-acre site on the beach and 8 acres on the opposite side of Crozier Drive. The surf site is off the camp and is also known as Homelani. Camp Kokokahi. Recreation site, Kâne‘ohe, O‘ahu. A YWCA camp and hostel at the southeast end of Kâne‘ohe Bay. The camp was founded in 1935 by Reverend Theodore Richards, who also named it Kokokahi, “one blood.” Kokokahi is a name he devised to signify that all races have similar blood and are, therefore, equal. Camp Mokulè‘ia. Recreation site, surf site, Mokulè‘ia, O‘ahu. In August 1947, the Episcopal Diocese, under the leadership of Bishop Harry S. Kennedy, purchased Camp Mokulè‘ia’s 2.5 acres from the estate of James D. McInerny for $40,000. The original buildings on the site, built in the 1920s, were part of McInerny’s beachfront home. The camp was dedicated on September 14, 1947. In 1978, the camp’s property was expanded when an additional 27 acres of land between its west boundary and Mokulè‘ia Beach park were leased from Mokul è‘ia Ranch. The surf site is offshore and is also known as Camps, Razors. Camp Naue. Recreation site, Hâ‘ena, Kaua‘i. YMCA camp on Kaua‘i’s north shore established in 1926. Naue is a coastal area that was famous for its hala, or pandanus, grove. The epithet nâ hala o Naue...