Introduce Honolulu, the capital of Hawaii.

Huonu Lu Lu (Huonu Lu Lu, Lu Lu badminton) is located in the southern part of Oahu, in the coastal lowland between the Kolo Mountains and the Vianai Mountains. In Hawaii, it is called "Fire Slave Lu Lu badminton". "Fire slave" means "lowland connecting two mountains" and "Lu Lu badminton" means "shelter from the wind". During the period of the Kingdom of Hawaii, this was the place where local residents parked canoes. After 100 years of construction, it has become a transportation hub and international commercial port in the Pacific Ocean and the air, and has developed industries such as sugar production, canned pineapple, petroleum refining, cement, steel bars, aluminum smelting and clothing, with a population of 350,000.

New visitors to Honolulu always like to visit Iorani Palace and Huashe Exhibition Hall. Iorani Palace, located in the city center, is the royal palace of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Iorani Palace means "above the gods" in Hawaiian. Now Iorani Palace is the seat of the Hawaiian House of Representatives and Senate, and it is open to the public. Visitors can visit the throne carved with flowers and painted with gold, the Hawaiian king's scepter decorated with feathers, exquisite gold-plated furniture and crystal lamps bought by King Caraco from Europe in the luxurious king audience room. Huashaopu Exhibition Hall can be called the "treasure chest" of Polynesian culture and art, and it displays 26 feather crowns once worn by Hawaiian kings, among which the feather crown of Kamehameha I is worth millions of dollars. There are also many precious feather wars, cloth pieces, bark clothes and decorations used by early Hawaiian residents, and several cabins and canoes with the same size as the original ones. There is a big map hanging on the wall of the exhibition hall, which shows the route of early Hawaiians crossing the Pacific Ocean to the Hawaiian Islands.

Waikiki Beach in the east of downtown is a good place for water sports. There is a coconut grove on Waikiki Beach. After winning the battle, the soldiers in the kingdom often came to the coconut grove to celebrate the victory. Today, under the towering coconut trees, Hawaiians, Tahitians and Samoans in national costumes can sometimes be seen dancing traditional hula, knife and torch dances. When the sunset glow dyed the sea red, the boundless sea would become infinite colors. At night, the lights on the beach flash like countless fireflies; In the moonlight, the undercurrent gently patted the beach. From the seaside came the faint sound of guitar and Creary's brisk and rhythmic Hawaiian folk songs. The elegant and quiet night at Waikiki Beach makes tourists linger.