Hilo is a surviving Hawaiian plantation town, the largest city in Hawaii County, and the main entry point into Hawaii's Big Island. With an ideal semitropical climate, Hilo is the perfect spot to begin an exploration of the eastern half of the Big Island, including the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
Close to Hilo are two famous shield volcanoes, Mauna Loa, active, and partly within Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, and Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano upon which some of the world's best ground-based astronomical observatories are based.
Japanese garden in Hilo, Big Island, Hawaii. Hilo has a unique cultural diversity; Polynesians, Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, Koreans and Europeans blend together to create a lively and friendly city, surrounded by an oasis of charm, natural beauty and Hawaiian history.
In 1935, a Big Island lava flow was heading directly at Hilo. The U.S. Air force bombed the flow, stopping it before it reached the city. Kilauea, on Hawaii's Big Island, is considered the largest and most active volcano on the planet. In fact, an eruption that began in 1983 is ongoing. Hilo is famous across the islands for its many varieties of locally-made ice cream.
Attractions In Hawaii
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

Panaewa Rainforest Zoo
This one-acre zoo is the only outdoor rainforest zoo in the U.S. Located in the heart of the Panaewa Forest Reserve on the Big Island, the Panaewa Rainforest Zoo is home to some 50 species of rainforest animals, including endangered Hawaiian birds. This is one of the few zoos to observe Sumatran tigers, Brazilian tapirs and the rare pygmy hippo, an endangered breed found only in Western Africa.