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  Home / Flights on United Airlines / United Airlines Flights from Kahului (OGG) to San Diego (SAN)

United Airlines Flights from Kahului (OGG) to San Diego (SAN)

Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on United Airlines, which operates a non-stop flight Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, Thursdays from Kahului (OGG) to San Diego (SAN), regularly scheduled to depart at 3:00pm and arrive at 10:15pm. Usually a Boeing 737-700 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Kahului, HI to San Diego, CA is 5 hours and 15 minutes.

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Regularly Scheduled Flights to San Diego (SAN) from Kahului (OGG)
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During your San Diego vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:

Heritage Park
This 8-acre county park, dedicated to preservation of Victorian architecture of the 1880s, contains seven original 19th-century houses moved here from other places and given new uses. Among them are a bed-and-breakfast, a doll shop, and a gift shop. The small charming synagogue at the entrance, Temple Beth Israel, was built in 1889 in Classic Revival style and relocated here in 1989. A glorious coral tree crowns the top of the hill.

San Diego Museum of Man
Located under the iconic, rococo, tiled California building and bell tower just inside the park entrance at the Cabrillo Bridge, this museum is devoted to anthropology, with an emphasis on the peoples of North and South America. Favorite exhibits include life-size replicas of a dozen varieties of Homo sapiens, from Cro-Magnon and Neanderthal to Peking Man, and a small room featuring Egyptian mummies and artifacts. Don't overlook the annex across the street, which houses more exhibits, and the lady making fresh tortillas and quesadillas Wednesday through Sunday. The museum's annual Indian Fair, held in June, features American Indians from the Southwest demonstrating tribal dances and selling food, arts, and crafts. Allow at least an hour for your visit.

Mingei International Museum
This captivating museum (pronounced "min-gay," meaning "art of the people" in Japanese), offers changing exhibitions generally describable as folk art. The rotating exhibits -- usually four at a time -- feature artists from countries across the globe; displays include textiles, costumes, jewelry, toys, pottery, paintings, and sculpture. The permanent collection includes whimsical contemporary sculptures by the late French artist Niki de Saint Phalle, who made San Diego her home in 1993. Martha Longenecker, a potter and professor emeritus of art at San Diego State University, founded the museum in 1977. It is one of only two major museums in the United States devoted to folk crafts on a worldwide scale (the other is in Santa Fe, New Mexico) and well worth a look. Allow half an hour to an hour to view the exhibits. A large new Escondido branch has additional exhibits.


Make your reservations for discount hotel rooms in the San Diego area, including:

Hilton San Diego Gaslamp Quarter
With a location at the foot of the Gaslamp Quarter and immediately across the street from the Convention Center, this hotel is ideally situated for business travelers. Yet unlike some of its competition, the Hilton doesn't overwhelm with size, making it a great place for guests who want to be close to the action (which includes loads of restaurants, nightlife, and the ballpark within a few blocks), but not get lost in the shuffle. The hotel opened in 2001 on the site of the old Bridgeworks building -- part of San Diego's original wharf a century ago; much of the brick façade was incorporated into the hotel's polished design.Standard rooms boast upmarket furniture, including an overstuffed chair and ottoman, down comforters, and pillow-top mattresses. There are suites and an executive floor, but the really snazzy picks are rooms in the intimate Enclave wing, a converted office space next to the main building which features 30 oversize guestrooms with towering ceilings, custom furnishings, Frette linens, and lavish bathrooms sporting whirlpool tubs. No two of the Enclave units have the same floor plan, but they are the handsomest hotel rooms downtown, resembling a swinging loft far more than any typical chain hotel.

The Westgate Hotel
Before downtown's 1990s resurgence, the lavish Westgate and its old-school neighbor, the U.S. Grant, were the only hotels of note in the business district. But whereas the latter came by its formality during an era when royal treatment was expected, the Westgate was considered nouveau riche when it opened in 1970. Legend has it that President Eisenhower, during an early 1960s visit to San Diego, asked local banker C. Arnholt Smith, "Is this the best you have?" Smith took Eisenhower up on the challenge and built the Westgate. Smith's wife toured Europe collecting pieces to furnish the public spaces, including Louis XVI-period antiques and Baccarat crystal chandeliers. But ultimately, the Westgate became a money pit, leading to its sale to the Holding family in 1975; they in turn established a standard of luxury -- including fruit baskets and deferential, European-style service.Despite the plain exterior of this 18-story high-rise, the 18th-century lobby is a re-creation of an anteroom from the Palace of Versailles, featuring brocade upholstery, tapestries, crystal chandeliers, parquet floors, and Persian rugs. Afternoon tea is conducted daily here with great aplomb. Rooms boast old-world decadence with Italian armoires, and marble finishings. At 400 square feet, standard rooms are the largest of any downtown hotel, and the city views are splendid. The Westgate has a fine jewel-box restaurant, Le Fontainebleau, noted for its French-California-Asian fusion cuisine, live piano, silver place settings, and Saturday night dinner dancing. Yes, it's more formal than the convention-centric competition down the street, but the Westgate is a good choice for travelers seeking fancy digs.

The Bed & Breakfast Inn at La Jolla
A 1913 Cubist house designed by San Diego's first important architect, Irving Gill -- and occupied in the 1920s by John Philip Sousa and his family -- is the setting for this cultured and elegant B&B. Reconfigured as lodging, the house has lost none of its charm, and its appropriately unfrilly period furnishings add to the sense of history. The inn also features lovely enclosed gardens and a cozy library and sitting room. Sherry and fresh-cut flowers await in every room, some of which feature a fireplace or ocean view. Each room has a private bathroom, most of which are on the compact size. The furnishings are tasteful and cottage-style, with plenty of historic photos of La Jolla. Gourmet breakfast is served wherever you desire -- dining room, patio, sun deck, or in your room. Picnic baskets (extra charge) are available with a day's notice. The gardens surrounding the inn were originally planned by Kate Sessions, who went on to create much of the landscaping for Balboa Park.


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