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21 Baboon Point. Sea cliff, Hawai‘i Kai, O‘ahu. The outline of the sea cliff at Pai‘olu‘olu Point on the west side of Hanauma Bay resembles the face of a baboon from the lookout above the beach, especially the pointed nose. It is also known as Baboon Face and Baboon Nose. Baby. 1. Beach, Po‘ipû, Kaua‘i. Section of beach at Po‘ipû Beach Park that is protected from the open ocean by a seawall. The seawall is semicircular and forms a “pool” that is a popular swimming site for little children. Also known as Children’s Pool. 2. Park, Pâ‘ia, Maui. Small or “baby” beach park on Pâ‘ia Bay. Also known as Pâ‘ia Park. Baby Canoes. Surf site, Waikîkî, O‘ahu. Secondary or “baby” surf site with smaller waves inshore of Canoes surf site. Baby Castles. Surf site, Waikîkî, O‘ahu. Secondary or “baby” surf site with smaller waves inshore of Castles. Also known as No Name, No Place. Baby Cunha’s. Surf site, Waikîkî, O‘ahu. Secondary or “baby” surf site with smaller waves inshore of Cunha’s. Also known as Ins-and-Outs. Baby Hale‘iwas. Surf site, Ala Moana, O‘ahu. Waves here resemble those at Hale‘iwa on the North Shore of O‘ahu, although they are a smaller or “baby” version. Like Hale‘iwa, the lineup here is a long right that ends on a shallow reef. Babyland. Surf site, Mâ‘ili, O‘ahu. Opposite Mâ‘ili Pink Market. Popular swimming and surf site for neighborhood children and families with babies. Baby Makapu‘u. Bay, surf site, Makapu‘u, O‘ahu. Small bay at the north end of Kaupò Beach Park. Baby Makapu‘u was originally the name of the surf site at the east end of the park now called Suicides. After the name Suicides was introduced in the 1980s, Baby Makapu‘u migrated to the north end of the park where it was applied to the bay and a popular novice surf site b Baby Moke 22 b in the bay. The bay is also used as a site to scatter ashes following memorial services on the beach. Also known as The Bay, Cockroach Bay, Kumu Cove. Baby Moke. Island, Kailua, O‘ahu. Smaller or “baby” of the two Mokulua Islands, Moku Nui and Moku Iki, off Wailea Point in Lanikai. “Moke” is a slang abbreviation of Mokulua. Also known as Moku Iki. Baby Queens. Surf site, Waikîkî, O‘ahu. Secondary or “baby” surf site with smaller waves inshore of Queens. Baby Royals. Surf site, Waikîkî, O‘ahu. Secondary or “baby” surf site with small waves on the shallow sandbar fronting the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. Named for its location fronting the hotel. Also known as Cornucopia. Baby Sunset. Surf site, Hale‘iwa, O‘ahu. Waves here are a smaller or “baby” version of those at Sunset. Also known as Alligators. Back. Channel, Hanalei, Kaua‘i. Small sand-bottomed channel into Hanalei Bay through the reef off Pu‘u Poa Beach. This is a secondary or “back” channel in deference to the nearby primary channel into the bay at the Hanalei River mouth. Backdoor. 1. Channel, Hanauma Bay, O‘ahu. Channel through the east end of the reef. The name refers to the channel’s location at the end of the reef that leads into the outer bay. It is the backdoor or lesser-used channel, as opposed to the primary or more frequently used channel into the bay, the Cable Channel at the west end of the reef. 2. Surf site, Sunset Beach, O‘ahu. Same as Backdoor Pipeline. 3. Surf site, Ka‘alawai, O‘ahu. The inside, or reform, of the left at Brown’s, a surf site ridden primarily to the right. Also known as In Betweens. Backdoor Chun’s. Surf site, Kawailoa, O‘ahu. Left at Chun’s Reef. Most surf sites are surfed best in one direction, either to the left of the takeoff spot or to the right. When a surfer rides the opposite way of the usual direction of the wave, he or she is said to be riding through the “backdoor.” Riding left at Chun’s Reef is riding through the backdoor. Also known as Piddleys. Backdoor Pipeline. Surf site, Sunset Beach, O‘ahu. Most surf sites are surfed best in one direction, either to the left of the takeoff spot or to the right. If a site is best surfed to the...

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