Whales and dolphins to shore. Hanauma Bay at rest. If there is any silver lining to be found in this pandemic, it鈥檚 that our natural resources are being given a chance to recover from overuse.

But with this news comes a stream of photos in my social media feeds of empty beaches and trails with captions like, 鈥淲ow, no crowds in Waikiki!鈥

This needs to stop 鈥 at least for now.

We have been collectively lucky health-wise so far with some of the lowest death and infection rates in the nation. That could all change with the arrival of just one irresponsible virus-carrying tourist.

Like Australia and New Zealand, we are in a potentially special situation: an isolated land mass that has stamped out transmission of the virus (fingers crossed). But unlike those two countries, it鈥檚 trickier for us to create our own rules about visitors (banning recreational air travel would fall under federal jurisdiction).

Waikiki Beach empty. 2020
Waikiki Beach on March 17. Images of a tourist-free Hawaii are having unfortunate consequences. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

Over 5,000 visitors have arrived in Hawaii since Governor Ige mandated a 14-day self-quarantine for arrivals to the state 鈥 we should expect more will come if they feel that Hawaii is open-for-business, regardless of what our state government officials tell people.

And all these seemingly innocuous social media photos of Hawaii鈥檚 natural resources are like individual ads encouraging tourists to travel here. I see it in the comments after these kind of posts from mainland folks wondering if it鈥檚 time to book their trip.

The Hawaii Tourism Authority has done a good job in putting out the word that Hawaii is closed; now it鈥檚 our turn to say 鈥 and show 鈥 that too.

Social media suffers from the tragedy of the commons in that we all pay when someone decides to publish a photo of shared spaces, but only the person doing the posting benefits. More simply: when you are trying to boost your follower count by posting idyllic photos of empty Hawaii, which in turn attracts more tourists, it is more crowded and overrun for all of us.

That can be problematic during normal times. Now it鈥檚 a matter of life and death.

This type of forbidden empty beach posts (and yes, Instagram stories, TikTok, and Snapchat count, too) are catnip for the type of rule-bending tourist who sees the closure of the Haiku Stairs as a challenge, not a deterrent. And coupled with cheap air fares and beachfront vacation rental homes that are advertising 鈥渜uarantine dream鈥 style housing, we are inviting a rush of this type of no-rules visitor.

(Just yesterday I got a text from friends who were horrified that an international acquaintance had rented a house here for two months and was ready 鈥渢o party.鈥 Yikes.)

You might feel young, healthy, and confident in your immune system, and in that case, I鈥檓 happy for you 鈥 truly.

But we live among elderly and immunocompromised folks, some of whom are working essential jobs and can鈥檛 stay home. And there鈥檚 evidence that segments of our population might be at to developing complications from COVID-19.

It鈥檚 hard: the outdoor world is so much a part of many of our lives and identities. To share a picture of the beach, a wave, or a hike is an expression of joy and appreciation for a life well-lived, the 鈥淟ucky We Live Hawaii鈥 sentiment.

But this isn鈥檛 a request to not go outside. We should surf, hike, and go for beach walks if we can respect the distancing rules and stay within the boundaries mandated by our officials 鈥 but maybe we don鈥檛 need to share a picture on social media?

No Shame

I want to stress that this isn鈥檛 meant to shame anyone; for a lot of us, it鈥檚 a reflexive thing to want to share what makes Hawaii 鈥 and therefore our own lives 鈥 special. I鈥檝e definitely done this myself!

And for some of us, it鈥檚 a business 鈥 a pretty social media feed of Hawaii life can make a lot of money. And at a time in which jobs and ways to make an income are scarce, I am sympathetic.

It鈥檚 tricky for Hawaii to create rules about visitors.

In an ideal world, we鈥檇 have a roadmap for how to effectively limit tourism now and a game plan for adequate testing, tracing, and enforcing quarantines. But until we have that, it鈥檚 time to be creative.

If you鈥檙e going to post, maybe share pictures of the people in our community who are helping our neighbors or promote the restaurants and small businesses that need our help?

Or share pictures of your kids, your lunch, your backyard, and your baking projects? If you feel you have to share nature photos, maybe tell a story about your past adventures?

I know I鈥檇 feel safer for now and I hope you would too.

And I鈥檒l be looking forward to seeing all of your tourist-free COVID-19 era photos after this is all over.

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