Hawaii is the rainbow capital of the world. Here's what that means
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[February 10, 2025]
By AUDREY McAVOY
HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii's regular sunshine, short rain showers and clean
air come together to create some of the planet's best conditions for
viewing rainbows. They're such a frequent sight that a University of
Hawaii professor calls the state the “rainbow capital of the world.”
Right now it's the winter rainy season in the islands, which means the
odds of seeing a rainbow are even higher than usual.
Rainbows emerge so often in Hawaii they've become popular symbols of
island life. Pictures of them adorn buildings, the sides of public buses
and appear on standard vehicle license plates. University of Hawaii
sports teams are even named after rainbows.
“For me, rainbows really signify hope and new beginnings,” said Liane
Usher, the president of the Children's Discovery Center in Honolulu,
which features rainbows on its exterior wall and in its exploration
rooms. “I can’t ever help but smile whenever I see a rainbow after the
rain.”
Here are some things to know about rainbows in Hawaii.
Where can I find rainbows?
Rainbows form when raindrops refract sunlight into a spectrum of colors.
The brighter the sun, the clearer the rainbow.
Look for them when it is both sunny and raining at the same time. They
will appear opposite the sun. They will seem larger and higher in the
sky in the early morning and late afternoon, when the sun is lower on
the horizon.
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Steven Businger, professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of
Hawaii at Manoa, says the archipelago's trade winds bring many small
showers with enough blue sky between them for the sun to shine through.
Hawaii's clean air also helps. Other places tend to have more air
particles from dust, pollen and cars. Conditions improve further during
Hawaii's rainy season, which lasts from October through April.
“Hawaii has maybe the best rainbows on the planet,” Businger said.
Businger created an app called RainbowChase to help people find rainbows
in Hawaii.
Rainbows are so prevalent that there are about 20 names for them in the
Hawaiian language, according to a Manoa website, including distinct
words for rainbow fragments and those that sit low on the horizon.
What role do rainbows play in Native Hawaiian culture?
Rainbows represent divine or supernatural power in Native Hawaiian
tradition.
Sam 'Ohu Gon III, senior scientist and cultural adviser at The Nature
Conservancy in Hawaii, said rainbows are considered a symbol of Kāne,
one of the four main gods in Hawaiian tradition. Traditionally, the
closer one got to a rainbow, the more likely they were to encounter a
supernatural force, or an extremely powerful or chiefly person, he said.
In one centuries-old story, a rainbow appears over the secluded home of
a Hawaiian princess for four straight days. Another emerges above the
ocean when her suitor arrives, a man so strong his punch pierces an
opponent’s chest like a spear.
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Joseph Heher photographs rainbows at Shipwreck's Beach, Grand Hyatt
Kauai, Hawaii, July 2, 2010, in Hawaii. (AP Photo/Ashley Heher,
File)
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To Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, a teacher and Native Hawaiian cultural
practitioner, a rainbow signals an “aumakua,” which is a deified
ancestor or a family or personal god.
“When those of our loved ones go before us, they precede us in life
and they leave us in this realm. They are able sometimes to show
their presence," Wong-Kalu said. "The rainbow is one of those ways.”
Rainbows let her know spiritual protection is present and that she
is loved and watched over, said Wong-Kalu, who is also known as Kumu
Hina.
When did rainbows become symbols of island life?
Rainbow imagery decorates everything from buildings and restaurant
facades to athletic uniforms.
The Hawaii men’s athletic teams are called Rainbow Warriors and the
women’s teams are Rainbow Wahine, using the Hawaiian word for women.
The teams are called ‘Bows’ for short.
The origin of the rainbow mascot dates to New Year's Day in 1924.
Hawaii was locked in a scoreless tie against the visiting Oregon
Aggies when a rainbow appeared over the field. Hawaii scored soon
after and reporters began calling the team the Rainbows, according
to the book “Hawai'i Sports: History, Facts and Statistics.”
The Hawaii football team in 2000 dropped “Rainbow” from its nickname
when a coach expressed concern it carried a “stigma” because of its
association with the LGBTQ+ community. The school restored the name
in 2013.
Will climate change affect rainbows?
When Kimberly Carlson was a professor at Manoa, she saw a rainbow
outside her apartment window that made her wonder how climate change
would affect them.
Now a New York University environmental studies professor, she's
studied the impact over the next century.
Her team's analysis, published in a paper two years ago, predicts
Brazil, the Mediterranean and parts of Central Africa will have
fewer rainbows by 2100. They found places that currently get lots of
snow, but that will instead receive more rain, will likely see more
rainbows. Alaska falls in that category.
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Scientists believe rainbows will continue to be plentiful in Hawaii,
but in the coming decades, longer dry spells might lead to fewer
rainbows on the arid, leeward sides of the islands, Businger, the
atmospheric sciences professor, said. Maui and the Big Island might
be particularly affected, he said.
The singular experience of glimpsing a rainbow makes them worth
studying, he said.
“Rainbows are a cultural touchstone for us. They cause us to stand
still and for a moment, forget about the past and the future,”
Businger said. “We are really in the moment when we see a
spectacular rainbow, and that’s a rare experience in our busy
lives.”
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