Lava tours stir mixed feelings around
erupting Kilauea
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[July 12, 2018]
By Jolyn Rosa
HONOLULU(Reuters) - Shane Turpin has for
years taken tourists on boat rides to see lava oozing lazily down
Kilauea's slopes and into the Pacific Ocean several miles away.
But when the river of molten rock burned down his and his neighbors'
houses after the volcano erupted in May, he briefly stopped the tours.
"When the houses on the coastline were burning, we took those ships
off," said Turpin, 39, who runs Lava Ocean Tours out of Hilo. "Those
were my neighbors, I actually lived there."
But like many on the island trying to rebuild a life amid the
destruction, he went back to work, catering to increased demand from
tourists eager to witness the latest eruption of one of the world's most
active volcanoes.
"Life always provides different opportunities; you either accept things
and go forward with them or you don’t," he said.
Kilauea has shown no signs of quieting since it first began erupting on
May 3. Lava spewing from "Fissure 8" has wiped out scores of homes in
Kapoho by the Pacific. Scenic Kapoho Bay, a stop along Turpin's tours,
is now filled with lava.
And, after a short respite, "lava tourism" is booming on the Big Island,
with helicopter and boat tour operators trying to please tourists and
show respect for thousands of locals who have lost homes or been
evacuated.
LAVA TOUR BOOM
Lava tourism has long existed on Hawaii's Big Island. Visitor numbers
spike each time Kilauea, which has erupted almost continuously since
1983, sends a tongue of lava toward the ocean. The current eruption is
one of the longest and most intense on record.
Visitor arrivals to the Big Island fell by 1.6 percent in May
year-on-year after the eruption, after several cruise ships canceled
port calls at Hilo and Kona, the island's two main cities, the Hawaii
Tourism Authority said. Yet tourist spending actually increased by 3.3
percent to $173.9 million in May.
Figures for June have not yet been released.
Boat tours cost around $220 per person, with at least two other outfits
competing with Turpin. Half a dozen companies also offer helicopter
tours starting at around $300 per seat.
Residents have mixed feelings about noisy tour helicopters that fly over
traumatized communities like Leilani Estates and Kapoho Vacationland,
which lost hundreds of homes.
"They have helicopters starting as early as six in the morning and they
go all day," said Rob Guzman, 47, an evacuee and guesthouse operator,
who recently returned to his Kalapana home after an access road was
reopened.
"At the same time, it’s putting more money into the local economy when
we’ve been hit very hard," he added.
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A 'Caution' sign stands in a lava flow on the outskirts of Pahoa
during ongoing eruptions of the Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii, U.S.,
June 6, 2018. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester/File Photo
Tourists on helicopter tours will see a 180-foot (55-meter) tall
lava geyser, an eight-mile 8 miles (13-km) river of molten rock from
fissure 8 cascading toward the sea, and a newly made volcanic
wasteland pockmarked with the remains of over 650 homes.
It was something Seattle tourist Steve Gaffin could not resist.
"I feel sorry for all the people who’ve lost their homes," said
Gaffin, who planned to see the eruption on a visit to the island
with his wife. But he added, "Why would you want to miss this? This
is exciting!"
People can only witness the lava from the air or the sea. All lava
flow hiking tours have been stopped, and the Hawaii Volcanoes
National Park, where Kilauea is located, is closed to visitors. Over
80 people, some of them locals, have been cited for loitering in
lava zones and face penalties of up to $5,000 and a one-year jail
sentence.
That leaves some evacuees, displaced and unable to the pay the cost
of tours, unable to view the spectacle of lava flows that destroyed
their homes or forced them to flee. They are allowed to inspect
their homes at regular intervals with a civil defense escort.
"Seeing the lava is a right and part of processing the disaster,"
said Hazen Komraus, head of a community association in the Kalapana
area, who like many locals wants to see a ground viewing area
established.
With this in mind, one helicopter tour company said it was giving
any empty seats free of charge to evacuees to join the sightseeing
tours and is offering them discounts if they want to hire a
helicopter to survey their properties from the air.
"We've flown several dozen residents so far and have dozens more on
the list," said Paradise Helicopters Chief Executive Cal Dorn,
adding that he also donates up to $20 per seat on tourist flights
toward evacuee relief efforts.
(Reporting by Jolyn Rosa; additional reporting by Terray Sylvester
and Suzanne Barlyn in Pahoa; additional reporting and writing by
Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; editing by Bill Tarrant and Jonathan
Oatis)
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