AVOID this part of Big Island of Hawaii for this reason! DO NOT move here!

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  • Опубліковано 26 лют 2023
  • Hawai'i is a beautiful place and my favorite place to visit. There is a special place in my heart for the Big Island of Hawai'i but there is one area to avoid moving to. If you are thinking about moving to the Big Island of Hawai'i consider the risks of the locations you want to move to. Watch the video to find out.
    Most photos and footage by me.
    Footage marked with USGS filmed by the US Geological Survey: usgs.gov
    Lava Zones: • Lava Zones Of The Big ...
    Kalapana Hawaii
    1955 Kilauea Eruption
    1960 Kilauea Eruption
    Puu Oo eruption
    Kupainanaha
    Pahoa Hawaii
    LERZ eruption
    Puna District
    Leilani Estates Volcano Vents

КОМЕНТАРІ • 72

  • @thepunadude
    @thepunadude 4 місяці тому +8

    THANK YOU! SOMEONE WITH SOME SENSE .. I WAS KONA SIDE FOR THE EARLY '90S ERUPTION(KALAPANA) REQUIRING THE MOVING OF A CHURCH! THE '14 FLOW ALMOST TOOK OUT PAHOA TOWN .. THEN THE '18 FLOWS COVERED OVER 11 SQ MILES WITH LAVA 30-100FT DEEP, MAN DID THE NEWBIES PACK UP N LEAVE! LEARN/RESPECT, LAND, CULTURE N PEOPLE!

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  4 місяці тому

      Thanks for watching and input! I remember watching the news when they moved the church when I was living in Pennsylvania. I visited the Big Island with my wife in December 2014 and took photos of the smoke from the lava not to far from the Market Place, it stopped a few days later. Pahoa dodged a bullet that time. I was also on the Big Island 1 week before the Leilani Estates eruption happened. Got a lot of footage of the overflowing lava lake at Halema'uma'u. I left on 2 May 2023 a day before it all happened. Leilani Estates got hit in 1955 and 2018. The thing is people don't respect the laws of nature when it comes to volcanic activity or any other natural disaster. Who in their right mind wants to build a house on top of an active volcanic rift zone! There are people who are building homes in Kalapana as we speak on top of lava flows I recorded in 2010 and in the late 90's!

    • @thepunadude
      @thepunadude 3 місяці тому

      NEED TO KEEP YOU OFF THE ISLAND!! LOL! BEEN HERE 35YRS THIS TIME ... USAF OAHU '68-'72@@volcanoimage

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  2 місяці тому

      @@thepunadude LOL! I was at Hickam from '99-'03 Loved it. Missed it too!

  • @brandongreen697
    @brandongreen697 Рік тому +12

    I personally own and continue to build and plant a home on the lava in kalapana. Is anything really promised to be around in 50 years? I have a house in maryland we owned for 20 that now is deemed swamp and getting worse. It wont last another 20. Just saying we take risks all the time in life. This land is not for the lazy but the community is amazing. Everyone lives off grid and for the most part live aloha and help/share with the community. Enjoying kehena on sundayfunday. Uncle roberts on wed and saturday market. Literally purest air on earth being untouched and filtered for thousands of miles before we breath it. All 25 minutes from huge city life.
    Cant wait to return in less than 100 days!!!!

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +5

      Lower Puna is definitely a beautiful place, I just would not live there unless you have a home that you can move easily :) I did this video to give people a heads up on moving to lower Puna and not to underestimate the area. 75% of the land between Kalapana and the SE tip of the Big Island of Hawai'i have been covered by lava since 1955. I have documented Kilauea for over 25 years and seen lava flows destroy many acres of forest over the course of a night. I have spent over 250+ nights out on the active lava fields between 1998 and 2010. The homes in Kalapana are built on lava flows between 15-35 years old. We all take risks in life, sometimes life is short. Just be aware of any east rift zone eruption between Pu'u O'o and Pu'u Kia'i. Any sustained eruption that takes place in this part of the rift zone will surely destroy Kalapana and if the eruption takes place on the NE side of the rift, Pahoa is in the crosshairs.

  • @iquetzal6014
    @iquetzal6014 16 днів тому +2

    The probability of getting lava inundated on Puna/Hawaii is much smaller than getting burned out in California, tornadoed in the midWest, or hurricaned in Florida. There is no such thing as a risk-free landscape.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  15 днів тому

      True but an eruption happens about every 50-70 years on the E Rift Zone. Zone 1 has the highest risk. Leilani Estates sits on over the rift zone and got hit in 1955 and 2018. There is risk no matter where you live. But living on top of an active rift zone invites trouble within a lifetime.

  • @iquetzal6014
    @iquetzal6014 16 днів тому +3

    Surfing sucks. Do not do it. Stay away from surf breaks.

  • @marcielynn4886
    @marcielynn4886 10 місяців тому +10

    Off the grid 22 years in Puna. Stay away don't come here not safe for you.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  10 місяців тому +2

      I agree and respect your choice to live there however I believe some people underestimate lower Puna and I could tell by some conversations I had with folks who live there. This video is designed to let people know ahead of time the volcanic risks involved with living in lower Puna. When someone builds a permanent house on an active volcanic rift zone and has lava flowing toward their house it is difficult for me to feel sorry. The ultimate disrespect for nature is the assumption that nothing will happen to them. If people choose to live there fine it is a free country. Don't get me wrong lower Puna is gorgeous. If I were to live there I would rather build a home that could be moved easily. Pahoa had a wake up call in 2014 and the town is in the crosshairs from Pele's wrath. Part of Leilani Estates got obliterated in 2018. It is not if but when other areas of lower Puna will get covered by lava and this includes Pahoa. This video serves as a warning for the future and I don't sugarcoat it.

    • @iquetzal6014
      @iquetzal6014 16 днів тому +1

      You right brah. Warn them before it too late. Them make a big mistake come hea.

    • @janetsecchi5070
      @janetsecchi5070 15 днів тому

    • @phai470
      @phai470 7 днів тому

      How much of an influence is the activity of Puna Geothermal Ventures on the natural flow of the lava?

  • @sandramorey2529
    @sandramorey2529 Рік тому +6

    It happens. If you build you should expect that your home may someday be wiped out. We watched Kalapana get eaten and we owned a piece of land off Red Road between Kaimu and Kapoho.
    We were never able to afford to build,but if you can afford or can do your own building build a structure you can dismantle and move. btw: we sold last year and did pretty well. So for us it was
    an investment. The Hawaiians clean their houses, leave an offering for Pele and leave. They've lived down there for eons.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +5

      I own a piece of land in Nanawale Estates which actually is on top of a lava flow from 1840. I am in the process of selling it. Lower Puna is probably the the most beautiful place on the Big Island but the writing is on the wall when it comes to an eruption. You are correct, if people were to move to Lower Puna and build a house they should not make it a permanent structure but be able to move it on a moments notice. If an eruption were to take place just a mile or two uprift from Leilani Estates then Pahoa could easily be taken out due to areas of the steepest descent just north of the rift zone. I have spent over 25 years documenting Kilauea and 250+ nights out on the active lava fields from 1998-2014.

  • @RangerMcFriendly
    @RangerMcFriendly Рік тому +6

    Stayed at a B&B over in Leilani Estates in 2015. Just about three years later it all was buried in lava.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +1

      I actually drove through Leilani Estates the day before the eruption happened unaware of what was going on underneath! We left on May 2 2018. People were saying at the airport that many small shallow earthquakes were taking place under Leilani Estates. When I went out there last year it seemed strange where there used to be many trees is now a barren lava field. In 2014 I remember seeing the lava encroaching the market square in Pahoa but stopped a few days later. Even insurance companies will not insure anyone in lava zone 1 and to a lesser extent lava zone 2.

    • @stable-shadow
      @stable-shadow 3 місяці тому +1

      It's so very sad kapho tide pools are completely gone, under 80 ft of Lava, I feel so fortunate to have spent 20 years snorkeling their...... It's mind blowing...... Peace9

  • @julierawlins5984
    @julierawlins5984 7 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for posting this.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  7 місяців тому

      Anytime! While lower Puna is very beautiful it always remains under the shadow of Kilauea's destruction that will happen in the future possibly within our lifetimes.

  • @richardfranklinmorse
    @richardfranklinmorse Місяць тому

    That area is really nice. I live in Kona but I love Puna as well. If you don’t pay too much it’s worth the risk.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Місяць тому

      You are right Puna is beautiful. This video was made to highlight the risks so people can make an informed decision. The area in question has been covered by 75% of lava since 1955. The 1955 eruption should have been a warning not to live on the rift zone especially Leilani Estates which will have another eruption within a lifetime. I suggest if anyone moves there to have a home that can move literally.

  • @deniceeverham9467
    @deniceeverham9467 23 дні тому

    😮Years ago I was looking to buy cheap land on the big island. Then I realized many places were built on lava flows. I didn’t buy and sure some of it has been destroyed by lava flows. The whole Island is a big lava flow .

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  21 день тому

      The Big Island sure is beautiful but the lower Puna area is a no go. I just sold my land in Nanawale. Land on the northern part of the Big Island is safe from volcanic activity but more expensive.

  • @marcielynn4886
    @marcielynn4886 Місяць тому

    With lava run towards the sea. With tidal waves, run towards the mountain.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Місяць тому

      With lava don't underestimate it which is the ultimate disrepect!

  • @olaapuna1
    @olaapuna1 22 години тому

    This is what happened when you disrespect Tutu Pele …….

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  14 годин тому

      Yes building a house or living on an active volcanic rift is an all around bad idea no matter where you are in the world.

  • @warningsigns4526
    @warningsigns4526 9 місяців тому

    fires

  • @user-xr3pr2uh6h
    @user-xr3pr2uh6h 3 місяці тому +1

    I used to live in Puna off the Pahoa-Kapoho Rd in 2006 across from Green Mountain near the red road. Just went back in Jan...
    It's all gone, it's too crowded now, too much traffic. Goodbye to paradise.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  3 місяці тому

      The traffic from Pahoa to Hwy 11 has gotten gradually worse over the course of 25 years. I remember back in '98 there was hardly any traffic from Hwy 11 to Pahoa now it is back to back traffic.

  • @sethoverturf9689
    @sethoverturf9689 Рік тому +1

    Pahoa is not even that bad 💀

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому

      It did have a close call back in 2014 where lava reached the outskirts of the town.

  • @annmariemarin5513
    @annmariemarin5513 5 місяців тому

    Good to know I am looking to move to BI in next 2-3 years

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  5 місяців тому

      The Big Island is a beautiful place it is just certain areas are under threat of eruption. The Lower Puna area would be a no go as anyone's house would be under threat of lava like 1955, 1960, 2014 and 2018. Best to live in lava zones 4 or higher.
      This lava zone map 1 (highest threat of eruption) to 9 (lowest threat) about.hawaiilife.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/lava-zone-map.jpg Also would not recommend the Kona side of the island due to threats from Hualalai and Mauna Loa. Waimea and Hawi on the north part of the BI and Na'alehu on the the SW part of the Big Island whose geography protects from lava flows.

  • @whateveryonesalreadythinki2574

    Please come to Puna

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +2

      Been to lower Puna countless times. Beautiful place but would not want to live anywhere south of Pahoa.

    • @AdonisColon-ck3lq
      @AdonisColon-ck3lq Рік тому +1

      Puma is beautiful! If people choose to live in fear that's on them! Not everyone loves like that! Lova an light to you!

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому

      @@AdonisColon-ck3lq Don't get me wrong, Puna is the most beautiful place on the Big Island. This video is meant to give people a heads up on the risks of living in the Lower Puna area and not to underestimate it considering that 75% of the area between Kalapana and the SE tip has been covered by lava since 1955. I am only a messenger that is it. Pahoa had a close call in 2014

  • @nylesgregory2120
    @nylesgregory2120 7 місяців тому +2

    Good God! Thank you for posting this. Such a reality check and a gut-punch for anyone dreaming of getting into the Hawaiin Market to live. The only affordable place left Hawaii forces people to dodge Lava, Vog (breathing Sulfur dioxide), Earthquakes AND Mold? Well, let's all sign up for that. That may be affordable, but it's not 'live-able.' Cue the end of that dream.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  7 місяців тому +1

      Yes the most affordable place to live in Hawai'i in the lower Puna Disctrict of the Big Island. I am trying to sell my land plot in Nanawale, I see the writing on the wall. I get some hate on this video but the truth hurts. Any area south of Pahoa should be a no go to live on a permanent basis. Just ask the folks who lived in Leilani Estates. Also Pahoa had a close call in 2014. I remember seeing the smoke from the lava just a few hundred feet away from the Pahoa Market Place. Luckily it stopped. Only a couple of buildings got burned from the 15 mile long lava flow. Toward the end of the video I drove by a house that shows a line of small vents that erupted in their backyard. The house got spared though!

    • @nylesgregory2120
      @nylesgregory2120 7 місяців тому +2

      I'm Hapa and have been trying to figure a way back to the islands, but every avenue - starting with (affordable) is no longer an option. On the Lava zones - the hard reality is that a home may be spared, but a vent opens nearby - a hot vent that is active and gases don't seem to be slowing anytime soon. Try turning to your Home Insurance Co. for new coverage AND living next to an active vent. That doesn't leave one comforatble, nor confident about going to the grocery store and returning to no home and you don't know where the Dog is. Right? Safety and security is #1, and if you have low confidence on that footing, then any low number Lava Zone is simply a non-starter. I am sooo thankful you posted this and appreciate any insight you're willing to share. Don't listen to the haters. This was a (need-to-know) video. Thank you @@volcanoimage

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  6 місяців тому +2

      @@nylesgregory2120 The best and safest place on the Big Island is on the northern part of the island and the Hamakua coast. The likelihood of Mauna Kea erupting is almost next to nothing so at least the Hamakua coast is safe from Hilo to Hawi. We have a better chance at winning the 100 million dollar lottery while getting struck by lightning on a clear day than Mauna Kea erupting in our lifetimes. Kona and the west part of the island is always under threat from Hualalai and Mauna Loa. Hualalai is steep and its lava flows would be fast. It is on the hot seat for an eruption. The area in South Point is relatively safe from Mauna Loa's lava flows due to its terrain. It seems that a Kilauea lower east rift zone eruption happens every 60-70 years. Considering that 75% of Lower Puna (The area south of Pahoa to Kalapana and then to the SE part of the island) has been covered by lava since 1955. I have been documenting Kilauea's eruptions since I first visited in 1998. There are people who built houses on top of lava flows in Kalapana that I remembered were active just a few years before! I am pretty sure many of these people know the risks but really don't care. As of now there is one insurance company (I believe Barclays) that will insure a house in lava zone 1 but I don't know if they will continue to do so since Leilani Estates eruption of 2018. Lava zone 2 has some more options but is very expensive from what I have heard. Here is a video on Hawaii's lava zones ua-cam.com/video/YajvBbGJWL0/v-deo.html and this is a video I did on Pahoa which dodged a bullet in 2014 ua-cam.com/video/Gs8oaVCdw0I/v-deo.html Here is a lava zone map Lava zones 6-9 are your best bet. about.hawaiilife.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Lava-Hazard-Zones-e1667310442112.jpeg Hope you make it back to the islands and find a safe area to live :)

    • @cdpsc1111
      @cdpsc1111 4 місяці тому +2

      Yes, much better to be whipped out by a tornado, hurricane or? You take your chances for the benefits. If you are are up in years there is no needed to worry about the distant future. Live in beautiful place with risk or an ugly, safe place.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  4 місяці тому

      @@cdpsc1111 Thanks for your input. Everyplace has some degree of risk of a natural disaster some more than others. Half of the folks that lived in Leilani Estates prior to 2018 thought the same thing that they had a piece of paradise, they don't have homes anymore. Leilani Estates got in in 1955 (eruptions near there each lifetime). Lower Puna is perhaps the most beautiful place on the island but 3/4 of it got covered by lava in just a human lifetime. I bought land in Nanawale back in 2005 and now in the process of selling. Back then I knew not to buy land in Leilani Estates nor anywhere along the coast. While Nanawale is relatively safe as it is on top of a lava flow from 1840 but it and Pahoa would be in the crosshairs of a lava flow if an eruption breaks out between Hwy 130 and one mile uprift from it. This video highlights the risk of living in lower Puna. I will be brutally honest I would not live nor build a house in lower Puna unless it can immediately moved by a vehicle. To me the risks outweigh the benefits. There are other safer places on the Big Island that are no longer under threat of an eruption or flowing lava. However if someone has a few years left, I say enjoy lower Puna.

  • @charlottehardy822
    @charlottehardy822 Рік тому

    You’ve already told me I want to live in the most expensive part on a previous video 😂

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому

      The most expensive part is the generally the safest :) I would not recommend anyone to move to the lower Puna region.

  • @olaapuna1
    @olaapuna1 22 години тому

    Bad bad bad, don’t come…….

  • @808Motorrad
    @808Motorrad Рік тому +2

    There are other reasons to not live in the Puna district. Pahoa has the largest amount of registered sex offenders in the state in addition to the whole area being ground zero for crime.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому

      True Pahoa does have its share of criminals. Criminal activity is mainly petty theft, drugs and sex offenders. Pahoa is known as a "wild west" type town, even looks like one! But Pahoa is in the crosshairs of destruction from a future eruption.

  • @vangies2005
    @vangies2005 4 місяці тому +1

    Pahoa is Beautiful Place .Visit first .Theres a lot of People moving here !

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  4 місяці тому +1

      Don't get me wrong Pahoa and lower Puna in general is a beautiful place. Pahoa nearly got hit by lava in Dec 2014. I saw it with in a few hundred feet from the Market Place. Leilani Estates got hit in 2018 and in 1955. Nanawale got hit in 1840. If people are going to move there they need to know the uncomfortable truth and risks. Leilani Estates and Pahoa lie on an active volcanic rift zone which sees eruptions three to four times a century

    • @danielskomp9072
      @danielskomp9072 8 днів тому

      Hippies, all Hippies!

  • @kennyg1358
    @kennyg1358 Рік тому

    Not to mention the Coqui frog.

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому

      The coqui frogs were an invasive species but are now part of the lower Puna "experience" just like kudzu was an invasive species in the SE US and now it is part of its "experience" :)

  • @pseudoreality666
    @pseudoreality666 Рік тому

    Going off the title i assume it was inhabited by Flat Earthers, that would scare anyone off

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +1

      Flat Earthers are nothing more than internet pranksters and that is how I treat them LOL!

    • @sigisoltau6073
      @sigisoltau6073 Рік тому +1

      I thought flat earthers, anti-vaxxers and karens.

    • @pseudoreality666
      @pseudoreality666 Рік тому

      @@sigisoltau6073 and jehovah witnesses

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  Рік тому +1

      @@sigisoltau6073 Almost all flat Earthers on UA-cam just do it for money. They are nothing more than con men. Thank God the flat Earth fad is dying :)

    • @sigisoltau6073
      @sigisoltau6073 Рік тому

      @@volcanoimage True. They've got no basis in reality. Some though legit believe that the earth is flat, which is stupid.
      I've seen lots of stupid over the last three years. From flat earthers to one who thought that if enough kava built up during the Geldingaladur eruption in Iceland during 2021 that it would gain enough mass to become a black hole. Or the guy who didn't know how rockets worked in space and thought I watched to much Star Trek. He thought rockets need an atmosphere to push against to move forward. Guess he never learned that every action produces an equal and opposite reaction, or that rockets, once in space, can use a planet's gravity for gravity assist maneuvers to get to the next planet. That's how Voyager, Cassini and New Horizon spacecraft got to their target planets/dwarf planets.

  • @scott_meyer
    @scott_meyer Рік тому

    We spent 2 weeks in a rental house on Hanalei Bay. Literally 50 feet from the beach.

  • @michaelkersey2954
    @michaelkersey2954 2 місяці тому

    I love hawaii. I will take my chances

    • @volcanoimage
      @volcanoimage  2 місяці тому

      I love Hawai'i too. People took their chances in Leilani Estates in 2018 too. This video is designed to let people know of the risks of living in the lower Puna area and the volcanic risks associated.