San Francisco Chronicle

Tourism boosters urge vacationer­s to keep trip plans

- By Audrey McAvoy and Jae C. Hong Audrey McAvoy and Jae C. Hong are Associated Press writers.

VOLCANO, Hawaii — Warnings that Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano could shoot boulders and ash out of its summit crater are prompting people to rethink their plans to visit the Big Island.

But most of the rest of the island is free of volcanic hazards, and local tourism officials are hoping travelers will recognize the Big Island is ready to welcome them.

Rachel Smigelski-Theiss is among those who have shifted gears. She had intended to visit Kilauea’s summit with her husband and 5-year-old daughter and stay in Volcano, a town a few miles from the crater. Now they’ve canceled their trip. She’s worried potential flight disruption­s would strand them on the island.

“My equivalent of this — and I’m from South Florida where we have hurricanes — is driving quite literally into a hurricane,” she said.

Hawaii officials have had a busy month pleading with travelers to keep their plans even as dramatic images of natural disasters afflicting the islands have bombarded television­s and social media feeds.

In April, floods on Kauai Island made travelers nervous. Then last week, it was Kilauea volcano sending lava bursting through cracks into people’s backyards in the Leilani Estates neighborho­od. Plus, as Kilauea’s magma shifted undergroun­d, a magnitude-6.9 earthquake rocked the Big Island.

Since the quake, there have been frequent aftershock­s. More than a dozen fissures oozing lava have opened in the ground. Adding to the distress, of the 36 structures destroyed, 26 were homes.

And now, scientists are warning that an explosive eruption may occur at the summit crater within weeks.

Tina Neal, the scientist-incharge of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcanoes Observator­y, said geologists don’t expect the summit eruption to be life-threatenin­g so long as people stay out of the national park. Volcano and other nearby communitie­s may be showered by pea-sized fragments or dusted with nontoxic ash but they aren’t expected to get hit by large boulders, she said.

Robert Hughes, owner of Aloha Junction Bed and Breakfast in Volcano, said he’s had “tons” of cancellati­ons since Wednesday when geologists first warned of the explosive eruption.

Hawaii Volcanoes National Park’s decision to close Friday due to the risk of an explosive eruption also will discourage travelers, said Janet Coney, the office manager at Kilauea Lodge, an inn in Volcano.

 ?? Jae C. Hong / Associated Press ?? Sgt. Carl Satterwait­e of the National Guard tests air quality near cracks emitting volcanic gases from a lava flow in the Leilani Estates subdivisio­n near the town of Pahoa on Thursday.
Jae C. Hong / Associated Press Sgt. Carl Satterwait­e of the National Guard tests air quality near cracks emitting volcanic gases from a lava flow in the Leilani Estates subdivisio­n near the town of Pahoa on Thursday.

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