Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Hardships from eruption linger one year later

Over 700 homes lost on Hawaii’s Big Island

- By Caleb Jones

PAHOA, Hawaii — A year after a volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island rained lava and gases in one of its largest and most destructiv­e eruptions in recorded history, people who lost their homes and farms in the disaster are still struggling to return to their cherished island lifestyle.

More than 700 homes were destroyed in the historic eruption, and most people will never move back to their land.

Over four months, Kilauea spewed enough lava to fill 320,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools, burying an area more than half the size of Manhattan in up to 80 feet of now-hardened lava.

Dozens of nearby homes that were spared still sit empty, either cut off by surroundin­g flows, damaged by airborne debris or downwind of cracks that continue to spew toxic gases.

Big Island Mayor Harry Kim lost a home in the eruption and says people are just beginning to come to terms with the devastatio­n.

“We as human beings wish for normal to come back,” Kim said. “In a volcanic eruption, everything you know is no longer there.”

Among those whose lives were forever changed are Tisha Montoya and her family, who lived off the grid on several acres downslope from where the eruption began.

They had a large house and several cabins, along with greenhouse­s, pavilions and animal pastures. Montoya harvested different types of exotic fruit and had a pineapple garden, sheep, chickens, ducks, rabbits and guinea pigs.

On May 4, the day after the eruption started, she evacuated when a 6.9-magnitude earthquake violently jolted the family’s purple octagonal home. Lava was pouring from new cracks in the nearby Leilani Estates neighborho­od, and toxic gases filled the air.

Her father, Edwin Montoya, stayed behind to care for the animals.

Edwin was committed to saving the animals, and he was prepared to die doing it.

“If it blows its top and I’m there at the time, I’m 76 years old, I’ve lived a good life, and if I have to go, I want to go,” Edwin Montoya told The Associated Press last May. “I love Hawaii, and this is where I want to stay for the rest of my days.”

As the lava neared, Edwin’s focus turned from taking care of the animals to evacuating them. He left the day before a river of lava arrived and cut the farm in half. The molten rock eventually took nearly all the structures, including the home and all but one small chicken coop that Edwin built.

Lava stopped flowing the first week of September. Edwin died less than a week later.

All roads to the family’s farm are now cut off, leaving it accessible only by a two-hour hike through thick jungle.

Tisha returned there last week. “This was the most special spot on the whole land,” she said as she paused to pray near the miles-long wall of lava covering her home. “So we buried him here as he wanted us to. ”

 ?? Marco Garcia The Associated Press ?? Tisha Montoya and her dog Bebe cut through the lava field that covered much of her property and destroyed her home near Pahoa, Hawaii, when Kilauea erupted in 2018.
Marco Garcia The Associated Press Tisha Montoya and her dog Bebe cut through the lava field that covered much of her property and destroyed her home near Pahoa, Hawaii, when Kilauea erupted in 2018.

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