The Beachcomber was a Canadian chain of elaborate Polynesian restaurants in the same vein as other popular chains like Kon-Tiki, Don the Beachcomber and Trader Vic's. There were locations in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Victoria, Regina and Winnipeg. The picks do not indicate any location.
Skull that looks like a jack-o-lantern It has a flaming crown and bones holding a shovel. This swizzle glows in the dark. This version is longer and narrower than their other version.
Swizzle has a skeleton dangling from a swizzle shaped like a bone.
Swizzle features a "K" created using a tiki and foliage.
The Luau was Steve Crane's original restaurant; after which he went on to open the popular Kon-Tiki chain of Polynesian restaurants. This pick features a tiki standing on a post that holds a wooden sign that says "Luau".
This swizzle bears the image of Mr. Bali Hai, the mascot of the Bali Hai Restaurant in San Diego, California.
1950s swizzle from Cuba includes the trademark Bacardi bat and a bottle of rum.
This is a pick featuring a skeleton arm and hand.
This version of the South Pacific paddle has logo artwork on the front side and no art on the back side. The tip of the paddle end is more rounded than other versions. The "T" in the logo text is shaped like a tree. The "i"s are shaped like a curved arrow or spear.
Swizzle features a turtle graphic that is the logo of the restaurant. Layers are built up to shape the design suggesting this swizzle was created on a 3D printer.
The House Without a Key is a novel that was written in 1925 by Earl Derr Biggers -- the first of the Charlie Chan mysteries. But it is also a real life place in Waikiki. The Halekulani hotel and its House Without A Key restaurant/bar began its life in 1907 as the Hau Tree Residential Hotel, a relatively modest establishment with a beachfront house and five bungalows. By the 1980s, the Halekulani hotel had grown, but the skyrocketing costs of Waikiki beachfront property made such a small resort impractical so it was sold to Japan’s Mitsui Corporation, which then created the “new” Halekulani around the old grounds and original building, with 453 elegant new rooms, updating it into a modern resort.
Swizzle stick served at Thrasher's Rum distillery and its adjoining tiki bar, Tiki TNT, in Washington, DC.
This swizzle features a couple under a palm tree and a curved stem with the Castaways logo.
The Castaways Resort was located in Florida from 1958 - 1981. The resort was home to the Wreck Bar and the Tahitian Bar. Over the course of their existence the created a prolific amount of swizzles for the resort and individual bars as well as combinations.
The Beachcomber was a Canadian chain of elaborate Polynesian restaurants in the same vein as other popular chains like Kon-Tiki, Don the Beachcomber and Trader Vic's. Aside from this Winnipeg location, there were also locations in Calgary, Vancouver, Regina, Victoria and Edmonton.
Swizzle features a turtle graphic that is the logo of the restaurant. This second version is the same design as the 3D version, but is a production model produced by Royer.