It includes not killing undersized catch, building artificial reefs and considering the benefit of invasive plants.
“How’s the fishing?”
For those who have asked that question at Kuliʻouʻou Beach Park, you may have received either my short or long answer. The short answer is sharing that I was their child’s age when I first visited the park, and it has not changed.
My earliest memories were family picnics, my grandmother’s potato salad, crab nets, Kalanianaʻole Highway’s two lanes and the water which was up to my chest when I crossed the mouth of the stream with my father and brother.
I still recommend that the best time is at low tide when you can almost walk to the outer reef on white sand. It’s beautiful, therapeutic, and safe. (Knowing how to swim is mandatory, but a pair of tabis

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