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Flying to Hawaii from Florida
If you have, do you fly non-stop or stop in California, spend a night or two and go on to Hawaii to break up the long flight?
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Non-stop is the way to, if possible.
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A night or two in Las Vegas provides time to manage jet lag. The direct flight to Hawaii from Las Vegas is very manageble.
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To clarify, a non-stop flight is different from a direct flight. Non-stop means that the plane only takes off once and lands at your final destination, with no stops. A direct flight means that you will not need to change planes during the trip, but the plane may make stops along the way to your final destination.
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One time I managed to get an “affordable” nonstop flight to Honolulu, with lie flat seats. Woke up in paradise, completely refreshed. Best flight ever.
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Nonstop from Florida to Hawaii (Oahu, I assume, since Maui's airport is much smaller) is a very long flight. Figure about 5-6 hours to the west coast and another 5-6 hours to Hawaii.
Honolulu is pretty much like L.A. except in a volcanic setting and with much more indigenous cultural pride. If you have never been before, I suggest after you hit the big tourist spots like Pearl Harbor (USS Arizona!), Waikiki, North Shore (Get some Matsumoto's shave ice!!), get yourself island-hopped over to Maui or Kauai. They still have some services for tourists, but are much more relaxed, laid-back, and scenic. Much less "big city" like. I know the advice was unsolicited, I just offered it as my insights from having been a half-dozen times, and have close friends who are native islanders. |
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FlightsFrom.com will show you where in the world you can fly non-stop from a particular airport. This link (map view) shows where you can fly non-stop from Orlando (MCO). FlightsFrom.com As far as Honolulu (HNL) is concerned, you can fly non-stop from Atlanta (ATL-Delta), Houston (IAH-United), Dallas (DFW-American) and more. |
was there last year , food is outrageous expensive. the best meal we had was at the polynesian cultural center buffet on Oahu. pay for the non stop ride, trust me on this one.
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Click here for Google Flights... |
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A direct flight means that you may change planes during the trip, but the flight number will remain the same. |
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Going out no issues with flight. Coming back, nice to break it up. Pick a city you have not been too, as long as they have direct flight home.
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We flew from Orlando directly to Honolulu last year on Hawaiian Air --- non stop. Great flight.
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I used to do work there and now that and have been to the islands way more times than I can count… today, prices for food are thru the roof. Last time a year or so ago, 1 pancake on Maui was $24… don’t want to even talk about greens fees. Funny, last time we were there, during a short rainfall, I was talking to the housekeeping folks under a roof, they asked where we were from, I said Florida… first thing out of their mouths, “why are you here???, don’t you have palm trees and great beaches and way more golf courses???” |
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Spend at least three or four nights in San Francisco. Lots to see and do. If you can walk (hike) do the Golden Gate Bridge. Alcatraz a must see. Sip a beverage from Ghirardelli’s overlooking the wharf as you nip some fresh chocolate. Take a ride around the city on the cable cars to China town and the crooked street. If you haven’t been, you got to go!
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Florida is beautiful, many natural attractions, but quite, quite different from Hawaii. For one, there are no live volcanoes etc. Two completely different paradises. You can do Hawaii cheaper. Look at what the natives do, where they shop, etc Hawaii is very expensive for tourists because they help subsidize these far-from-everything islands. Tourists are their bread and butter. |
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It is subtle in everything. You go to the end of the Road to Hana and park to climb up to see Fagan's Cross, you will make that uphill walk. However, if you're a local sistah, you go ask your cousin (and they are ALL your cousin) for the gate key to drive up to the Cross. If you do drive the Road to Hana, make sure you stop at a roadside vendor for the banana bread - it IS THE BEST in the world. You walk the trails to the Iao needle you must stay on the trail. Natives (and their guests) can get off the trail and go wade in the crystal clear waters. Why? Because they own the entire state. It is theirs. The U.S. Government owns it name only, but in reality it belongs to Hawaiians and they may do whatever they wish. Part of it might be because natives don't file lawsuits, but haoles do. So do the Portuguese (non-natives who have lived on the islands for many years or generations). |
Yes, Kama’aina rate is for locals, I am familiar with it. They usually can’t afford tourist prices - look at their wages. I guess because I learned plein air art, I stayed for several months at a time and my poor artist friends shared their secrets of cheap living. Like you help harvest at a farm and you get some of the food. Shop at grocery stores where it is cheapest. Etc. Accommodations are the most expensive - you have to look around for that, and near a Bus stop, which used to have a senior pass for the month for $5. Don’t know what it is now. Bus goes everywhere on the island on Oahu.
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We live in TV in the summer; but live in Hawaii the rest of the year. Sometimes we fly from here to either JFK, Houston, Atlanta, DFW, Atlanta, Seattle or Las Vegas for either the shortest layover if flying straight here or there. Other times we stop in one of those places overnight to visit family or friends.
Consider watching Hawaiian/Alaska airlines as there was once a flight with only an hour layover at jfk to mco. (Alaska/Hawaiian to merge). As a couple, we also watch for planes with a seat configuration of 2 instead of 3 seats on either side of the aircraft. Certainly fly with extended legroom seats if first/business class is too expensive. |
No longer an option.
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Tourism is the only industry. We joke that we must pay for the more consistent weather than here!
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Federal employees who lived and worked in Hawaii received a 22 percent cost-of-living salary increase. And, unlike any other place in the world, this increase was tax free. |
We were just there. We did MCO-SLC-OGG there and HNL-ATL- MCO back on Delta. I recommend a nonstop or a stop half way over so you can stretch your legs and move a bit. We enjoyed walking around Salt Lake City airport in our sandles and shorts. We flew into OGG because it was $400 cheaper than HNL. We reserved before the fires.
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If you must connect, I suggest doing it someplace other then California to make the "long haul" portion of the flight as long as possible. This is the best way to minimize jet lag - sleep on the flight and hit the ground running when you arrive to be in that time zone day one. A connection may also make it possible to fly directly into Maui or Kona (Big Island) which is our preferance over having to go to Oahu and then connect. Unless you want to see Pearl Harbor you don't need to spend much time in Oahu and should focus on the other Islands that are more typical Hawaiian experiences. You can connect in Oahu on the way home and see Pearl Harbor before a very late non-stop return to the mainland as it is very close to the airport.
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Bus passes for Kamaaina/ kapuna are cheaper with a HoloHolo card: TheBus New
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Negligent Fact checking!
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Every time we fly to Hawaii, we try to stop in Phoenix instead of Los Angeles. LAX is such a dump.
Hawaiian airlines has some nice lay flat seats that are pretty comfortable, if you go First Class. |
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So your other thread is “Driving trip instead of Hawaii” because of the ticket cost, LOL.
If you fly direct take plenty of things to do for the 8 hour (or so) trip. They will have movies on the flight that helps kill the time. The climate is much different than Florida and you will not be disappointed (except for the cost). |
Hawaii
we flew through Phoenix
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Flying to Hawaii from Florida
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If you want a couple days layover, well ok, but it's not a difficult time change to adjust to. Flying to Europe is more challenging for me. |
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