Putting an end to his 11-days long vocational trip in his home town Honolulu, President Obama boarded Air Force One flight for Washington, D. C. last night.
As the first daughters Sasha and Malia leapt up the steps of Air Force One, President Obama and the First Lady greeted Adm. Robert Willard, commander, U. S. Pacific Fleet; Gen. Gary North, commander, Pacific Air Forces; and Col. Giovanni Tuck, commander, Hickam's 15th Airlift Wing.
Onlookers hoping to meet the President went away thwarted.
First Lady was escorted by President himself, as she stepped into Air Force One at 10.02 pm, and then the President waved to the onlookers before entering the plane.
The vacation home was under continuous Coast Gaurds surveillance.
On the last day of the vacation, the first family, along with some close friends, visited the Honolulu Zoo which was then closed to the public. The President stopped for a while at National Memorial Cemetery to pay respects to his maternal grandmother.
During vacation, the house in which the Obamas had stayed is now for sale at $8.9 million.
Supporters like group of "disaffected Democrats" seeking stronger action on healthcare or protestors like Native Hawaiians opposing federal legislation had, many a times, gathered and waved from Obama's vacation house during his visit.












