January 24, 2024 – Photo of the Day – Hilo, Hawaii

Hilo, Hawaii ocean front park with black lava and sand beaches

Where in the World Are We?

Hilo, Hawaii is on the East Coast of the Big Island of Hawaii located on the East end of the Hawaiin Islands

HILO, HAWAII, USA
RAINFOREST CLIMATE AND WONDERFUL HIKING OPPORTUNITIES AWAIT YOU

In comparison to Kailua-Kona, Hilo is often described as “the old Hawaii.” With significantly fewer visitors than residents, more historic buildings, and a much stronger identity as a long-established community, this quaint, traditional town does seem more authentic. It stretches from the banks of the Wailuku River to Hilo Bay, where a few hotels line stately Banyan Drive. The characteristic old buildings that makeup Hilo’s downtown have been spruced up as part of a revitalization effort.

Nearby, the 30-acre Liliuokalani Gardens, a formal Japanese garden with arched bridges and waterways, was created in the early 1900s to honor the area’s Japanese sugar plantation laborers. It also became a safety zone after a devastating tsunami swept away businesses and homes on May 22, 1960, killing 60 people.

With a population of almost 50,000 in the entire district, Hilo is the fourth-largest city in the state and home to the University of Hawaii at Hilo. Although it is the center of government and commerce for the island, Hilo is a residential town. Mansions with yards of lush tropical foliage share streets with older, single-walled plantation-era houses with rusty corrugated roofs. It’s a friendly community, populated primarily by descendants of the contract laborers — Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, Puerto Rican, and Portuguese — brought in to work the sugarcane fields during the 1800s.

One of the main reasons visitors have tended to steer clear of the east side of the island is its weather. With an average rainfall of 130 inches per year, it’s easy to see why Hilo’s yards are so green and its buildings so weatherworn. Outside of town, the Hilo District has rain forests and waterfalls, a terrain unlike the hot and dry white-sand beaches of the Kohala Coast. But when the sun does shine — usually part of nearly every day — the town sparkles, and, during winter, the snow glistens on Mauna Kea, 25 miles in the distance. Best of all is when the mists fall and the sun shines at the same time, leaving behind the colorful arches that earn Hilo its nickname: the City of Rainbows. The Merrie Monarch Hula Festival takes place in Hilo every year during the second week of April, and dancers and admirers flock to the city from all over the world.

Scenes of The Big Island of Hawaii

That evening we had dinner at The Restaurant

Tonight’s Entertainment

BOOGIE FEVER & CLUB TROPICANA
TONIGHT’S SHOW & POOL DECK DANCE PARTY

STARTING FROM 9:30 PM POOL DECK, DECK 8

Join us on the Pool Deck for an entertaining evening!

Get on your boogie shoes and feel the heat in your feet as you join our Silversea Singers and Dancers for some disco fever and explosive dance moves, bound to get your toes tapping and heads bobbing.


After the show, the pool deck transforms into “Club Tropicana” – a tropical-themed dance party under the stars with delicious cocktails and your favorite dance hits with DJ Gabor.

You are welcome to dress up to match our tropical Island theme!