Hawaii's Big Island: Late Summer/Fall: VOG?!
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Jun 2015
Posts: 6
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Hawaii's Big Island: Late Summer/Fall: VOG?!
Hi
Hoping to make a trip to the Big Island in August/Sept/Oct. Living temporarily on Oahu and am having reaction to VOG, so concerned about being even closer to the source.
Any thoughts on making this trip? Any of these months better than the others for less VOG? Any suggestions on the best location to stay?
Many thanks!
Hoping to make a trip to the Big Island in August/Sept/Oct. Living temporarily on Oahu and am having reaction to VOG, so concerned about being even closer to the source.
Any thoughts on making this trip? Any of these months better than the others for less VOG? Any suggestions on the best location to stay?
Many thanks!
#4
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 3,959
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It's dependent on volcano conditions, which obviously are unpredictable. General rule of thumb is to stay as far west and north on the island as possible, not only are the best white sand/swimmable beaches there, but it's farthest from the vog. Kohala Coast, Waikoloa, Waimea if you wish to save some money etc.
While volcano conditions are completely unpredictable, weather is only almost completely unpredictable, so imo you should definitely steer toward the later end of your Aug-Oct date range if possible. Vog gets exponentially worse on the island when trade winds fail, and they fail more often in summer than fall. October in our experience is the best weather month of the entire year, reliably sunny days and Pacific winter storms have not yet had a chance to erode the island's few white sand beaches, which makes beachgoing a whole lot more enjoyable.
While volcano conditions are completely unpredictable, weather is only almost completely unpredictable, so imo you should definitely steer toward the later end of your Aug-Oct date range if possible. Vog gets exponentially worse on the island when trade winds fail, and they fail more often in summer than fall. October in our experience is the best weather month of the entire year, reliably sunny days and Pacific winter storms have not yet had a chance to erode the island's few white sand beaches, which makes beachgoing a whole lot more enjoyable.
#6
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 16,907
Likes: 0
"Residents flee Big Island"
This will come as a great surprise to the people who live and work on the Big Island.
The weather is usually very nice year-round (70s to 80s).
http://www.govisithawaii.com/hawaiis...nd-when-to-go/
This will come as a great surprise to the people who live and work on the Big Island.
The weather is usually very nice year-round (70s to 80s).
http://www.govisithawaii.com/hawaiis...nd-when-to-go/
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thornphoenix
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Apr 8th, 2005 07:22 AM




