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Monday, June 14, 2021

"Hitchhiking and the rental car crisis..." 'James "Kimo" Rosen' (Kimo's world #318)

 

James "Kimo" Rosen is a retired professional photographer  
amongst other things lived in a tent outdoors for 7 years.
Rosen currently resides on the tropical island of Kaua'i
with his best friend and spiritual adviser,
 Ivanka "Costco" Obama, The Bipartisan Dog!
               Sunrise/weather/photos June~2021
           (These photos made it to Hawaii News Now)
                                   Photos courtesy,
                                  James "Kimo" Rosen 
Blog #2072~Kimo's world #318

Hitchhiking and the rental car crisis

The rental car fleet

on the Hawaiian islands is said to be short 40-50% of what it was 
prior to the pandemic. 
The crisis forced

the major car rental companies to sell and ship many of their fleet to mainland America.  The number is said to be over 10,000 vehicles.

 Car rentals are said to be going for as much as $700-800 a day.  Visitors are being packed into airplanes

like sardines, some call them cattle flights. This has created a huge dilemma of skyrocketing tourism which has created chaos with the return of traffic gridlock, long lines at restaurants, grocery stores, and the notorious shortage of rental cars statewide.  

 There are visitors who have resorted

to renting U-Haul vans in lieu of the traditional convertible or Jeep,  some adventurous tourists are renting bicycles, others are resorting to Uber, Lyft, taxis, and other ride-sharing services.  
 
Many locals have gotten in on the action and are renting their island beaters for a couple hundred a day.

  A single mom on Oahu was renting her brand new Hyundai sedan for $350.00 a day. She was doing so well her father gave her a loan to buy two more to rent.  This single mom is now making a killing and bringing in over $1,000 a day.   

There is a solution to the vehicle shortage that won’t cost a penny. Hitchhiking is easy on Kauai.

I’ve hitched many times from Kapa’a to Kilauea and from as far as Waimea canyon to Hanalei.  I’ve never waited more than 15 minutes for a ride.  Hitching on Kauai is very safe, the aloha spirit is alive and well.  I never had a ride where I felt threatened.  

Visitors wanting a true adventure and possibly making some friends for life and saving

all that car rental and ride-sharing fees, try to stick out your thumb and give hitchhiking a try.

While you're at it, throw away that hotel key and set up a tent on the beach, and make friends

with the surfers and beachgoers. Last but not least save the huge fee of eating out by loading up on peanut butter, jelly, and a loaf of bread and share with the houseless population that is abundant all over the islands.

The worst

scenario, and it may 
not be that bad is if the cops threaten to arrest you? You could spend a few free nights in our local jail and possibly find your soul mate?

Just kidding, 'y'all come back now, ya hear.' 

This blog appeared as an Op-ed/Guest column
in the 06-15-21 edition of the Garden Island News!
Hana Hou (Encore)