Descending Into Hawaii's Haleakala Crater
A trip to the floor of the Maui volcano still promises an encounter with the "raw beginnings of world-making"
- By Tony Perrottet
- Photographs by Susan Seubert
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2011, Subscribe
Entering Haleakala Crater, the enormous mouth of Maui’s largest volcano, in the Hawaiian Islands, feels like an exercise in sensory deprivation. At the crater floor, a desolate expanse of twisted, dried lava reached after a two-hour hike down a trail carved into its wall, the silence is absolute. Not a breath of wind. No passing insects. No bird songs. Then I thought I detected drumming. Was it the ghostly echo of some ancient ritual? No, I finally realized, it was my own heartbeat, thundering in my ears.
In 2008, National Park Service acoustic experts found that the ambient sound levels within Haleakala crater were near the very threshold of human hearing—despite the popularity of the park. Around one million people a year visit the park, many of whom also ascend to its highest point—Haleakala’s 10,023-foot summit—and peer down at the vast field of dried lava below, which, in 1907, the writer and adventurer Jack London called “a workshop of nature still cluttered with the raw beginnings of world-making.”
The now-dormant volcano, which emerged from the Pacific Ocean more than a million years ago, takes up fully three-quarters of Maui’s landmass. Although its interior, whose rim is 7 1/2 miles long and 2 1/2 miles wide, is commonly called a crater, geologists refer to it as an “erosional depression” because it was created not by an eruption but by two valleys merging. Still, there has been frequent volcanic activity on its floor. Carbon dating and Hawaiian oral history suggest that the last eruption occurred between 1480 and 1780, when a cone on the mountain’s southern flank sent lava surging down to La Pérouse Bay, about two miles from Maui’s southernmost tip, near the modern resort town of Wailea.
Only a small number of visitors to Haleakala descend to the crater floor. Those who make the effort, as London did on horseback with his wife, friends and a band of Hawaiian cowboys, find themselves in a strangely beautiful world of brittle, contorted lava. “Saw-toothed waves of lava vexed the surface of this weird ocean,” wrote the author of The Call of the Wild, “while on either hand arose jagged crests and spiracles of fantastic shape.” Initial impressions of the crater as a lifeless wasteland are quickly dispelled. Delicate lichens and wildflowers dot the landscape, along with a bizarre plant found nowhere else on earth called the ahinahina, or Haleakala silversword. The plant grows for up to half a century as a dense ball of metallic-looking leaves, produces a single tall spire that flowers only once, with a brilliant, blood-red blossom, then dies. Endangered Hawaiian birds thrive here, including the largest nesting colony of Hawaiian petrels, or uau, which let out a peculiar barking cry, and Hawaiian geese, called nene.
While much of the crater is the ocher and ashen color of alpine cinder desert, the eastern reaches are a lush green, with swaths of virgin fern forest. London’s group camped here, surrounded by ancient ferns and waterfalls. They ate beef jerky, poi and wild goat, and listened to the cowboys sing by the campfire, before descending to the Pacific Ocean via a break in the crater called the Kaupo Gap. “And why...are we the only ones enjoying this incomparable grandeur?” he wondered aloud, according to his wife, Charmian, in her 1917 memoir, Our Hawaii.
On my solitary expedition, the silence of Haleakala did not last long. As I picked my way across the lava fields, the first gusts of wind arrived, then dense clouds that were filled with icy drizzle. Soon the temperature was plummeting and I could barely see my feet for the fog. Thunder was booming by the time I reached Holua cabin, one of three public refuges crafted in 1937 from redwood with help from the Civilian Conservation Corps. They’re the only man-made shelters in the crater other than park ranger cabins. I lit a wood-burning stove as the sky erupted in lightning. For the rest of the night, tongues of crackling light illuminated the ghostly, contorted lava fields. Pele, the volatile ancient Hawaiian goddess of fire and volcanoes, must have been displeased.
The story of Haleakala National Park is inseparable from that of Hawaii itself, whose transformation from independent Pacific kingdom to 50th U.S. state has largely been forgotten on the mainland. When the federal government created the park in 1916, less than two decades after it seized the archipelago, it ignored the crater’s cultural importance for native Hawaiians. But in recent years, Haleakala’s ancient status has gained new attention.
Part of the world’s remotest island group, Maui was first settled by humans around A.D. 400-800, possibly by Polynesians,who arrived in outrigger canoes after navigating 2,000 miles of open sea. Called Alehe-la by the ancient Hawaiians, the island’s imposing peak eventually became known as Haleakala, or “House of the Sun.” It was from its sacred heights, legend holds, that the demigod Maui lassoed the sun as it passed overhead, slowing its passage across the sky to prolong its life-giving warmth.
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Comments (9)
I lived on Maui for thirteen years and visited Haleakula many times. I felt like I was on top of the world, the view was breathtaking. There is a plant called the Silver Shord,because the leaves are silver and sharp. It grows and blooms every seven years and it is beautiful when it does. I was very lucky to be able to live in a place where there was so much history and beauty.I miss not being there as often as I would like. This year 2012 I am making it a priority to do so.
Posted by Carol Willmann on January 6,2012 | 12:02 AM
Nice pictures but would love to see more compelling content like: http://www.fullscreen360.com/haleakala-crater embedded into your article.
Posted by Dede on December 14,2011 | 03:52 PM
I've had the opportunity to hike down on to the floor of the crater,several times and it is amazing once you get down there. Several years ago hiking on the sliding sands trail,a passing shower created a rainbow which appeared just out of reach ahead,in amung the twisted lava forms. It was almost like walking in a dream. The area,which I often think of as the gargoyles garden,has a number of twisted, surreal shapes and seeing them appearing in and out of the light misty rain, with the rainbow directly over the trail ahead was quite an experience. Then after about 5 or 6 minutes the rain vanished with the bright sunlight and it was a totally different landscape.
I would definitely agree if you have the opportunity to hike down into Haleakala, by all means do so. It is an experience not to be missed.
Posted by Bryan Blaylock on December 12,2011 | 09:48 PM
Dear Editor...
Reference the picture and caption on page 44/45, "...(here a trail through cinder cones, remnants of a lava flow)."
I beg to disagree with the author, caption writer, or editor who wrote that description.
Although some cinder cones may be discerned in the distance, the rocks in the foreground (a trail through cinder cones) is really a trail through large pieces of scoria. The trail itself consists of small pieces of scori that have eroded off the larter pieces. Scoria forms when gaseous lava cools rapidly, either by ejection, or by gaseous frothy liquid lava cooling on the surface of a lava flow. Probably the latter in this instance.
Richard W. Reeks
rwreeks@aol.com
Posted by Richard Reeks on December 5,2011 | 07:50 PM
Thank you for highlighting this beautiful mystic wonder of our earth. I certainly agree with Ms.Dokes about the Hawaiian culture.
I remember going to Halekela in the 70's and being so disappointed that I missed the sunrise by about 15 minutes; but I took some astonishing photos with a red filter and they were pretty good.
I feel so fortunate that I had the opportunity to visit back in day before big resorts took over the island.
Posted by Bonnie Leigh on December 3,2011 | 09:33 PM
The historic trail into the crater is now the subject of litigation. Mr. Perrottet mentions Worth Aiken who ran a guide service for tourists. Tourists were guided to the crater rim via the historic Haleakala Trail -- a trail that the Kingdom of Hawaii and the Territory of Hawaii maintined. To learn more, or to support the reopening of this public trail, go here: http://pathmaui.org/?page_id=300
Posted by Public Access Trails Hawaii on November 25,2011 | 06:03 PM
Aloha from Nashville, TN
I traveled on a tour to Hawaii April, 2011. Haleakala was one of our many stops. Truly a wonderful place. I learned a lot about Hawaii and Hawaiian culture for a mainlander. Hawaii is like another world. I love the fact that it is part of our United States.
Without question, Haleakala should be given back to the true Hawaiians. The true land dwellers that originally owned it with help from our Park Service Rangers as a means of funding. Hawaiian culture should also be taught in the schools just as much as Native Americans have the right to learn about their ancestors and their tribes. Hawaiians should be seen as a individual entity just like Native Americans. Hawaiians are Native Americans too. They have a right to their culture, dances and language. All of which are fascinating. I don't know enough about North American Indians I wish I did. I got a chance to sip at the Hawaiian Culture and loved every bit of it. They have a wonderful fulfilling culture. I learned the real meaning of Aloha, it is not a word, it is a lifestyle. An attitude of living in the Hawaiian Islands and the world. Aloha to you all.
Posted by Cheryl G. Dokes on November 24,2011 | 04:58 AM
I hiked Haleakula twice in the 1970s, descending out the other side and down to Kalpo Gap. We slept in a horse stable our first time through. Camped in our tent the second. I remember those cabins very well. So excited to learn that CCC boys built them. I've written about them here in WA State, including a novel, TREE SOLDIER. I'll have to check other projects out in Hawaii.
Posted by JL Oakley on November 23,2011 | 09:30 PM
beautiful pictures of a spiritual place you should all put on your bucket lists i love it more and more thanks smithsonian for sharing
Posted by joani morris on November 18,2011 | 01:12 AM