Paradise Meadows Orchard & Bee Farm
Discover Paradise Meadows Orchard and Bee Farm in Kaʻū, offering complimentary tastings of award-winning Ka'u coffee, honey, and macadamia nuts, plus a self-guided farm tour with animals and an art gallery.
- Complimentary tastings of local products
- Self-guided farm tour available
- See farm animals (parrots, ducks)
- Explore coffee and fruit orchards
Paradise Meadows Orchard and Bee Farm, Home of Hawaii's Local Buzz is a Kaʻū stop that blends tasting, browsing, and a little farm wandering into one easy outing near South Point on the Big Island. It works well as a relaxed break in a part of the island that can feel spacious and lightly developed, especially for travelers who want something more grounded than a lookout and less commitment-heavy than a full tour day. The draw is simple but strong: local coffee, honey, macadamia nuts, and a working-farm setting that gives those products some context.
Complimentary tastings, then a slow walk through the property
The signature experience here is straightforward and appealing. Paradise Meadows offers complimentary tastings of Kaʻū coffee, honey blends, macadamia nuts, and chocolate products, making it a good place to sample what the farm actually produces before deciding what to take home. The setting adds to the appeal: coffee, avocado, banana, and citrus trees grow around the property, and the farm’s aquaponics greenhouse gives the visit more variety than a simple retail stop.
The self-guided format is part of the charm. Rather than a tightly scripted tour, the visit has a drop-in feel that lets travelers move at an easy pace. Farm animals, including rescued parrots and free-range Muscovy ducks, add a bit of personality without turning the stop into a zoo-style attraction. An on-site art gallery, with work by resident artist Megan Collins, widens the experience beyond agriculture and gives the property a more distinct local identity.
A practical stop in Kaʻū, especially with South Point in the plan
This is one of the easier Big Island activities to weave into a South Point or Naalehu day. The farm sits on South Point Road, a short detour off Highway 11 and roughly 12 miles north of Ka Lae. That makes it a natural pause point if the day already includes South Point, Punaluu, or a longer drive through Kaʻū’s south end.
Because the experience is informal and self-guided, it fits well as a one-hour-or-so stop rather than a major time block. Travelers can visit for tastings, browse the shop, look around the grounds, and continue on without feeling rushed. Shady parking helps in a region where midday heat can make simple errands feel more tiring than they should. A food truck may be present on some days, which can turn the stop into an unexpectedly convenient lunch break, though it should be treated as a bonus rather than something to count on.
The main tradeoff: casual, not curated
Paradise Meadows is a good fit for travelers who like farm products and low-key exploration, but it is not the place to expect a highly structured interpretive tour. The self-guided approach means the experience is more flexible than polished. That works well for independent travelers, but those who want a narrated agricultural deep-dive may want to look elsewhere or check ahead about guided options.
The farm setting also means the usual practical common sense applies: wear comfortable shoes, expect uneven ground in places, and plan for sun, dust, and a bit of walking around a working property. Nothing in the setting suggests a high-adrenaline outing, but it does reward visitors who are happy to slow down and look around.
Best for coffee, honey, and unhurried travelers
Paradise Meadows Orchard and Bee Farm suits families, product-minded travelers, and anyone who enjoys sampling local foods directly from the source. It is especially useful for visitors who want a modest, memorable stop in Kaʻū that feels distinctly local without requiring a reservation-heavy plan. The mix of tastings, animals, orchard scenery, and a small art component gives it broader appeal than a simple farm store.
Travelers chasing beach time, strenuous hiking, or a deeply historic site will probably find better matches elsewhere. But for a South Point itinerary that needs a smart, low-stress stop with real local flavor, Paradise Meadows earns its place.










