
When the first white men showed up in Hawaii in 1778 it was the middle of a long fall and winter festival during which various sexual techniques were demonstrated by nude hula dancers, couples engaged in a “bowling for partners” game, and played various other sports. The foreign explorers assumed that the Hawaiians never worked and that sex was a universal sport—so to speak.
Shortly thereafter American missionaries quickly put a stop to these enlightened customs, and tried their best to completely and permanently ban hula dancing and surfing (in the nude, of course). But as time passed and the first generation of missionaries went to their reward, surfing, hula dancing and the pursuit of sexual pleasures regained some of the ground they had lost.
Today’s Hawaii is not as laid back as it was in its pre-missionary days, but the sun, the sand, the surf and the islands still work their seductive magic on residents and visitors alike. There is definnitely something in the tropical air, in the flora of Hawaii, in the constant heaving and swirling of the surf and in the caressing breezes that stirs the libido of men and women of all ages...
In this arm-chair {voyeur] look at the things that make Hawaii the honeymoon capital of the world, the beaches, the beach boys, the hula girls, the visiting coeds, the cruising bachelors, Hawaiian music, the melodious Hawaiian language...all play a role in the reputation and reality of Hawaii as a wonderful place to visit. The book is available from Amazon.com. For other titles in the same genre see my other titles on Amazon.com and/or on my website: BoyeDeMente.com.
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