TIME FOR PAMPERING
Column:
LUXURY SPAS POPPING UP ALL OVER HAWAII'S ISLANDS
By Robert W. Bone
Sunday, October 1, 2000
Amid soft music, gentle lighting, pleasant fragrances,
beautiful views and guided by deft, professional fingers, health spas are
springing up in Hawaii faster than you can say lomilomi.
Lomilomi is the traditional massage of the Islands, a combination
rough-and-gentle technique dating back to prehistoric times. Today this treatment
is offered everywhere in Hawaii, along with many standard choices such as
Swedish or shiatsu or Thai massages and reflexology techniques. Both vacationers
and locals today are pursuing "wellness," some with almost religious fervor,
embracing natural, organic treatments for body, mind and spirit, and speaking
of these things in language and tone reminiscent of dedicated oenophiles
describing fine wines.
In many spas, there are special
Hawaiian tropical touches such as the use of kukui nut oil, ti leaves, local
mud, seaweed and the like.
Most of these facilities are being installed as integral parts of the
luxury hotel experience, and the word "spa" sometimes becomes part of the
name of the establishment. Treatments are priced accordingly, and most are
open to non-guests as well as guests, although sometimes with a small extra
charge. Spas also sell health and beauty products designed to help guests
continue some of these special treatments after they return home.
Locals point out, however, that expert massages without all the glitz
and glitter can still be had at much lower rates by independent therapists
operating outside the mega-resorts.
Currently, these are the spa leaders, organized here island by
island.
Oahu
Here on the capital island, luxury spas have come along more slowly
than in other parts of the state. However, many believe the preeminent
establishment throughout Hawaii is still the JW Marriott Ihilani Resort &
Spa, a half-hour's drive west of Honolulu and Waikiki. The award-winning
health center offers dozens of different therapies ranging in length from
25 to 110 minutes, at prices ranging between $45 and $195. There are also
special half-day and full-day programs combining several treatments and topping
out at $375.
One distinctive treatment at the Ihilani is the Green Tea Detoxifying
Wrap, an experience with mud mixed with extracts from both green and Paraguay
tea along with certain essential oils, like sage, ivy, rosemary and
grapefruit.
Back in town, the Hyatt Regency Waikiki Resort & Spa features its
new 10,000-square-foot Na Ho'ola Spa, which overlooks Waikiki Beach from
aeries on the fifth and sixth floors. It offers several massages, body
treatments, body wraps, facials and waxing services for 12 hours every day.
The facility opened in April, becoming the first health spa in Waikiki.
Even newer, though, is the Abhasa Spa, which partly opened in July
at the venerable Royal Hawaiian Hotel, displacing the former beauty salon.
It is slated for total completion later this month. The Tokyo-based company,
which operates 11 spas in Japan, is offering aromatherapy using natural flowers
and herbs, along with thallassotherapy, phytotherapy and a list of more
traditional services like facials, body treatments and hydrotherapy.
Not to be outdone, the local Outrigger hotel chain is building its
new Serenity Spa Hawaii and Rejuvenation Center, which will open at the Outrigger
Reef on the Beach Hotel before the end of the year. Local and imported massage
techniques will be offered, both at the spa as well as in an outcall service
to other Outrigger properties.
The Hilton Hawaiian Village, Hawaii's largest hotel, expects to have
its new Mandara Spa open when the newest tower at the establishment is unveiled
in the spring. Not content with run-of-the-mill equipment, management has
announced that its Health & Wellness Center will feature "an ultra fast
CT scanner using electronic beam tomography and high-resolution ultra sound
3-D images."
Outside the tourist precincts in Honolulu is the Malama Salon, an Aveda
"Lifestyle Salon Spa," in Manoa, a well-known Honolulu suburb. It is the
first of three to be operated under the same management. Spa services begin
at $50 for facials and $80 for massages. Special features also include a
Vichy Shower, which shoots water simultaneously on seven different pressure
points on the body. Ultimately there will be three Aveda spas in
Honolulu.
The Big Island
Health spas sprouted much earlier in the luxury resorts on the west
coast of the Big Island of Hawaii. One is the Kohala Spa now installed on
the vast campus of the Hilton Waikoloa Village. (That's the hotel with the
dolphins and the trains, and which many remember as a Hyatt.) Some unusual
treatments include the Kohala's Color Therapy Program and the Big Island
Healing Ritual (which includes Hawaiian Kava tea served in a coconut
shell).
Besides the individual massages and therapies, the Kohala Spa also
offers several "rejuvenating packages," each consisting of various combinations
of treatments. These vary in price from the "Maternity Bliss" at $265 to
"Honeymoon Delight" at $375 for two.
Nearby, the Outrigger Waikoloa Beach hotel is the venue for the Hawaiian
Rainforest Salon and Spa. The facility says its guests can "refresh themselves
with an exotic herbal body wrap or relax in a luxurious, lightly scented
whirlpool bath, with the most advanced hydrotherapy system."
The Rainforest people also say that one of the most popular massage
treatments for soothing muscle tension includes applying pressure and heat
to the body through the application of natural Hawaiian lava rocks.
Farther up the coast, the Mauna Lani Bay Hotel also specializes in
hot rocks, along with special consultations on wellness and some seaside
massages. Also on staff at the Mauna Lani Spa are an acupuncturist and a
Chinese herbalist. One interesting Mauna Lani Bay specialty is Golf Conditioning,
which teaches mind-body techniques designed to advance your golf game--90
minutes for $120.
A neighboring resort, the Orchid at Mauna Lani, is especially proud
of its Spa Without Walls. Here guests can take their treatments either in
a shoreline tented cabana or at a waterfall tea house to "let nature get
involved in the healing process." Another unusual program at the Orchid is
the Wisdom of the Roses, a "rose powder massage to gently exfoliate, followed
by a shower with rose gel and a nurturing rose oil massage"--50 minutes for
$115.
The two hotels at the Mauna Kea Resort each boasts its own health spa.
The venerable Westin Mauna Kea Beach Hotel features Light & Life, Inc.,
with all the standard treatments, plus several Millennium Massage combinations.
Some of the more unusual choices include the Hawaiian Sea Salt Body Glow
(30 minutes for $50) and the Aztec Clay Masque (one hour for $85).
The Westin Hapuna Beach Prince Hotel, on the same resort campus, adds
to its massage menu a Hapuna Special--a body wrap followed by a your-choice
massage "guaranteed to leave you feeling like Hawaiian royalty"--two hours
for $180.
Farther down the Kona coast, at the Aston Keauhou Beach Resort, is
the more modest Kalona Salon and Spa. Besides the traditional therapies,
the spa makes use of Hawaiian medicinal plants and herbs, including Hawaiian
ti leaves applied to help remove toxins from the skin on facial massages.
Also featured is custom-made Aqua Polish, which uses local sea salts along
with nutrient-rich seaweed, grown at ocean research facilities on the Big
Island.
Maui
The brand new Spa Moana, just opened at the Hyatt Regency Maui Resort
& Spa, is a sparkling addition to the spa scene. It offers all the old
tried-and-true standbys--lomilomi and all that--plus some unusual classes
by different health and nutrition teachers. These include lectures by some
traditional Hawaiian healers, who demonstrate the medicinal powers of fruits,
herbs and other exotic flora used by the ancient Hawaiians.
Sure to be popular are the Moana's 50-minute Anti-Aging Facial, which
uses marine spring water for toning and anti-free radical effects. Some body
treatments involve the use of authentic Maui coffee, both regular and
decaf.
Over in the Wailea resort area on East Maui, the Grand Wailea Resort
Hotel & Spa has an operation it calls the Spa Grande. It includes an
amenity called the Terme Wailea Hydrotherapy Circuit treatment, a water therapy
that is a prelude to all massages, facials and body treatments.
The Spa Grande also likes to talk about its "East meets West" philosophy,
focusing on blending traditional Hawaiian healing techniques with European,
American, Japanese and Indian spa treatments and therapies. The spa is currently
the largest in Hawaii, and features some dramatic architecture and colorful
interior decorations.
Nearby, the Four Seasons Resort Maui seems to have every standard massage
and body treatment. A couple of different wrinkles, however, include the
120-minute Hawaiian Temple Lomilomi Massage, using two therapists, i.e. four
hands on the body at once, "combining ancient dance, flowing touch and conscious
breath to facilitate profound relaxation, the release of limiting concepts
and the integration of body, mind and spirit." The price is $390.
Lanai
Here on the former "Pineapple Island" the Manele Bay Hotel has its
Spa at Manele Bay. It features tea house and cabana massages overlooking
the ocean. Guests at the Lodge at Koele, under the same management, may also
shuttle over to use the spa facilities. The Deluxe Facial by the spa's licensed
aesthetician costs $90 and runs one hour and 15 minutes.
Kauai
The two super deluxe resorts on Kauai each offers a wide variety of
treatments in their health spas. The Hyatt Regency Kauai Resort & Spa
features a branch of the Anara Spa operation, known in many Hyatt resorts
around the world. Here in Kauai each massage room faces its own private
garden.
In addition to the popular massages, this Anara has several treatments
that are distinctly based on native Hawaiian healing practices. Two of these
are the $100 Kapu Kai 'Alaea (Sacred Bath and Clay Treatment), which uses
Honey Mango Bath Gel and a loofah pad, plus Papaya Blossom Oil. Another is
the $140 Ti Leaf Cool Wrap, a popular technique to alleviate the effects
of mild sunburn. On the northern shore, the Princeville Resort offers its
Princeville Health Club & Spa. Besides the standard treatments, you can
find a few specialties such as the 60-minute Hawaiian Salt Glow body treatment,
currently $90 for guests, $95 for non-guests.
Molokai
Healing hands have even come to Molokai these days, notably at the
rustic Molokai Ranch Lodge. In addition to the standard therapies, the spa
has recently introduced the 75-minute Aromatherapy Facial Treatment ($100),
a seven-stop process to stimulate cellular regeneration, and the 90-minute
Serenity C Treatment ($130), an all-over body exfoliating together with hand
and foot massage.
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