Turtles & Tacos Snorkel

Turtles & Tacos Snorkel

Starts at $159.00
Premium Open Bar
Guaranteed Turtle Sightings
Fresh Island Taco Bar
Late-Morning Departure
Professional Photographer Onboard
Turtles & Tacos Snorkel

Snorkel, Sip & Savor the Aloha

Laid-back, fresh, and full of fun, this mid-morning turtle snorkeling adventure is all about good vibes and island flavor. Cruise aboard our spacious 65′ catamaran and snorkel with turtles alongside Hawaiian green sea turtles and colorful tropical fish at one of Maui’s top reef sites. Snorkel gear, flotation, and everything you need is provided, so you can dive in and explore with ease while snorkeling with turtles Maui.

After your maui turtle snorkeling adventure, build your perfect plate at our island-inspired taco bar, loaded with fresh flavors and local ingredients. Then head to the open bar for a specialty margarita or a Maui Brewing Co. craft beer, and soak in the ocean breeze from our sun-kissed decks and lounging bow hammocks. Whether you’re diving in or just here for the tacos, this turtles and tacos maui experience is a no-stress, all-fun kind of day.

The ultimate Maui vibe, served with salt, lime, and a splash of aloha.

What’s Included

The Waikulu Experience

Elevate your Turtles & Tacos adventure with exclusive access to Maui’s own Waikulu Agave Spirit. Locally distilled, small-batch, and available only on the island of Maui.

Crafted from 100% blue agave grown in Maui’s volcanic soil, Waikulu Agave Spirits offer a distinctive flavor profile that reflects the island’s unique terroir. As Hawaii’s sole producer of blue agave spirits, Waikulu embodies a true farm-to-bottle ethos, ensuring each sip delivers an authentic taste of the island while you enjoy swimming with turtles in Maui.

Available exclusively as a signature upgrade.

Like the lava, Hawaii’s culture and cuisine have grown, layer by layer, over years, expanding as waves of immigrants have each brought something new to the islands. These ingredients— beef, rice, spam, pineapples, soy sauce, black pepper, and many others—mingled and fused to create the “local style” dishes that are unmistakably and perplexingly Hawaiian.

Digging down through the layers of Hawaii’s home cooking exposes a chronology of people, plants, and politics that together build what we think of as Hawaiian cuisine today.
These first immigrants brought an onslaught of imported foodstuffs, including chickens, pigs, and the staples known as canoe plants: taro, bananas, breadfruit, sugarcane, and coconuts.

These basic ingredients, flavored with ti leaves, ginger, and thick granules of sea salt gave the ancient Hawaiians a health and vitality that impressed the motley crew of European sailors who arrived with Captain Cook in 1778.

In addition to poi, the Hawaiians mixed taro with coconut and sugar cane into a thick, chewy pudding called kulolo. Taro leaves known as lū’au, gave the classic Hawaiian feast its modern name. The leaves were wrapped around meat to grill on hot rocks (laulau) or stewed with coconut milk and bits of fish or diced meat (lū‘au ‘ulo) and served, of course, with a calabash of poi. Everything else—the seaweed, the poke (marinated raw fish), kālua pig smoked with sandalwood over hot rocks—was a condiment to add flavor to poi. Even the earliest Europeans ate a diet dependent on poi, although they brought their own seasonings and sides.
The first cattle landed at a Hawaiian port in 1793, a gift from Captain George Vancouver to King Kamehameha I. The king put a royal prohibition known as a kapu on the small herd and allowed it to grow until the feral one-ton pipi were a destructive danger. In 1831, a Spanish vaquero fled unrest in Mexican-Spanish California, arriving in Hawaii on a whaling ship. He ended up in service to the king as a cattle herder. Over the next few decades, more vaqueros settled in the area, bringing recipes using black pepper, garlic, onion, hot chilies, and, of course, every part of the cow.
Chinese sugar laborers began arriving as strikebreakers in 1852 after native Hawaiian workers started walking off the job over low pay and poor working conditions. In the next three decades, the population of Chinese grew from fewer than 400 individuals to more than 18,000.

Legend has it that the first strike staged by Chinese laborers was over poi rations. They demanded rice, not poi, and they got it. Chinese appetites fueled a local market that became a lucrative export industry as profitable as sugar cane. Many Chinese laborers, on completing their five-year contracts, obtained land leases and filled abandoned taro fields with rice. Today, Hawaiians consume nearly four times more rice than mainland Americans, and the double scoop of rice is a plate lunch fixture.

The Chinese also brought saimin, a Chinese noodle soup in clear broth. Even after the era of Chinese immigrant laborers was over, every subsequent immigrant group adopted saimin and added their own toppings, which is why modern versions can have char siu, Portuguese sausage, Japanese kamaboko (fish cake), Korean kimchi and Spam all in the same bowl.
Portuguese sailors playing the fur and whaling trades began passing through Hawaii early on but became more common after 1830, when drought and famine hit the Portuguese islands. The sailors acquired salted salmon from Native Americans on the U.S. mainland and ate it as a substitute for bacalhau, the salted codfish base of Portuguese recipes. They rarely settled, but when they docked in Hawaii the sailors bartered salmon for beef, sugar, and coffee. Diced finely with onion and tomato, salmon salad (lomi-lomi) became a staple of Hawaii’s poor and eventually replaced the traditional poke at Hawaiian lū‘au.
When Japanese citizens were finally permitted to seek work abroad in 1885 after nearly three centuries of isolationist politics, they came to Hawaii at an unprecedented rate. Their population grew from only 116 in 1884 to over 100,000 in 1920. They’re still one of the biggest ethnic groups.
Japanese food preferences were so influential that their dislike of the long-grain rice grown by local Chinese farmers ended the Hawaiian rice industry and prompted Hawai`i to import short- grain rice from California. The problem with long-grain rice was that it didn’t clump easily for pressing into o-musubi, rectangular bars of rice, meat, or pickles wrapped in green-black nori or laver that Japanese field hands could pocket for a snack. After World War II, the Spam musubi on our Styrofoam plate, with its greasy pink slab, became a favorite grab-n-go lunch item.

Laborers also packed rice, with one or two entrées and a few sides, in the segmented bento box that evolved into the iconic Hawaiian plate lunch. Ours features a Japanese-influenced entrée, chicken katsu, along with the requisite double scoop of short-grain rice and a shiny lump of macaroni salad. The chicken is fried in a light tempura batter and sliced into boneless strips, and comes with a gingery soy sauce.
Puerto Ricans were an obvious choice to break the Japanese sugar strikes; Puerto Rico was a newly acquired U.S. territory, so restrictions placed by Congress on hiring foreign workers didn’t apply. Records of Puerto Rican arrivals weren’t even required, so it’s only an estimate that 5,000 of the new arrivals took over the sugar fields in 1901. To top it off, Puerto Rico’s thriving cane fields were demolished by two hurricanes in 1899. The market was free of competition and Puerto Rico’s experienced cane workers were in need of jobs.

While the period of Puerto Rican immigration was relatively short, local Hawaiians have developed a bit of a cult following for the nameless hole-in-the-walls, food trucks, and roving table-and-tent set-ups that serve Puerto Rican fare along the highways.
Local-style kimchi has been sold at mainstream grocery stores since at least 1939. Unlike the authentic soggy, heavily fermented version, in Hawai`i, kimchi is eaten crisp and spicy, freshly pickled in hot chili pepper brine. It’s a salty, tangy, and spicy vegetable condiment I think I could eat on everything, which is probably why, in Hawai`i, they do. Kimchi pizza is authentically Hawaiian; pizza with pineapple chunks is not.

The pineapple did play a role in bringing the first Korean immigrants to Hawaii in 1903. The first pineapple plantations were established at the end of the 1890s, and when the Japanese started striking there weren’t enough laborers for both sugar and pineapple fields. In desperation, the sugar planters sent a recruiter to Korea in 1902. He made agreements with the Christian missionaries there to bring laborers illegally into Hawai`i, violating contract immigration laws. Between 1903 and 1905, over 7,000 Korean Christians became illegal immigrants. By the time legal immigrants arrived after the Korean War, their food was already absorbed into the Hawaiian melting pot.

Kimchi is now ubiquitous, added to saimin soup or tucked inside musubi, or spread over kālua pork sandwiches. It’s also often served as a side to Korean-style barbecues like bulgogi or kalbi.
The Filipinos were first brought to Hawaii in 1907 as strikebreakers. At that time the Philippines was a U.S. territory so plantations could avoid immigration hassles by recruiting Filipino workers. The first 150 arrived that year. By 1935, Filipinos comprised 70 percent of the labor force, and as of 2010, they’re the largest ethnic group in Hawai`i.

Maybe because the Philippines itself was already a cultural melting pot, Filipino cuisine quickly became a staple. You can find ensaymada in bakeries and binignit on supermarket shelves. Adobo, a messy, saucy stew made from either pork or chicken boiled in vinegar and soy sauce, can be found on the Hawaiian lunch plate in a trifecta with rice and mac salad, a mysterious combination that can only be explained by the last major cultural influence on Hawai`i: becoming part of America.
Americans began arriving in Hawaii in droves after the Pearl Harbor bombing: first, the influx of 40,000 military servicemen, then up to a million tourists a year by the 1960s after Hawaii became a state.

It’s possible that missionaries brought the recipe for the overcooked, swollen macaroni noodles served cold and slathered in mayonnaise since “deli mac” was a popular food item in New England in the 1920s. It’s also possible military cooks introduced it during the war, along with Spam. G.I.s on reprieve preferred to frequent hamburger joints and drive-ins, inspiring the 1940s invention of loco moco, a hearty mess of sunny-side up eggs over beef patties and rice slathered in gravy.

Pineapple companies capitalized on America’s post-war infatuation with Hawai`i . Several 1950s cookbooks like “A Hawaiian Lu’au” taught mainlanders how to make “Hawaiian” creations never before served on the islands, like pineapple baked beans or pineapple upside-down cake. Canadians invented Hawaiian pizza around this time. Eventually, even Hawaiian cooks added pineapple to dishes like Spam fried rice, partly to placate expectant tourists, and partly for the delicious freshness pineapple adds to starch-heavy, pork-heavy, fried Hawaiian comfort food.

In 1992, twelve Hawaiian chefs officially introduced the idea of “Hawaii Regional Cuisine,” local- style food using fresh ingredients that grow on the islands. The chefs formed a non-profit and trademarked their new designation.
Vessel Location: Slip #56 Ma’alaea Harbor (300 Ma’alea Road, Wailuku, HI 96753) on the Oceanside Pier.
Parking: Arrive early at the harbor to use the posted QR codes for convenient parking payment via your smartphone. Rates are approximately $1 per hour, and the Maui snorkel turtles tour is expected to last around 3 hours.
*We recommend arriving at the harbor at least 15 minutes before check-in
Check-In Time: 10:45 am

FAQs

1. Are turtle sightings guaranteed on your Maui turtle snorkeling tour?
Yes! We guarantee turtle sightings in Maui. Our crew knows exactly where to find turtles in Maui and visits protected areas where Maui turtles gather daily. If you don’t see turtles, we offer a complimentary return trip.
We’re the only turtles and tacos Maui experience with luxury service. Our turtle yacht departs at 10:45am (no 5am wake-up!), serves gourmet tacos onboard, and limits groups to 12 guests for intimate turtle snorkeling adventures.
Absolutely! Our turtle snorkeling welcomes all levels. We provide premium gear and instruction for safe snorkeling with turtles Maui style. The calm waters are perfect for first-time swimming with turtles in Maui.
Our taco turtle menu features fresh fish tacos, pork carnitas, and vegetarian options using local Maui ingredients. Drinks include craft beer, margaritas, cocktails, and non-alcoholic beverages – all included in your turtle yacht experience.
Turtles in Maui are visible year-round, but visit mid-December to mid-April for the ultimate Maui sea turtle snorkeling plus whale watching combo. Maui turtles are most active during morning hours when our tours depart.

Reviews

Turtles & Tacos Snorkel

Starts at $159.00
Premium Open Bar
Guaranteed Turtle Sightings
Fresh Island Taco Bar
Late-Morning Departure
Professional Photographer Onboard

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RED satisfaction Badge

The Ali'i Guarantee

At Ali’i Nui Sailing Charters, we take great pride in offering the Ali’i Guarantee. As the only company on Maui to provide such a promise, we are confident that your experience will not only meet but exceed your expectations. Should it fall short for any reason, we will gladly refund up to 100% of your ticket price or arrange a complimentary rebooking for an alternative experience.
Please note that minor variations may occur due to factors beyond our control, such as weather conditions, updates to food and beverage offerings, or operational considerations. These adjustments are made with your safety and comfort in mind.

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