I enjoyed seeing the road buried. I live near the St. Lawrence Seaway on the border between USA and Canada. Whole villages and roads were flooded to enable large laker ships to move goods through the Great Lakes to the ocean. When I was a child, there were many places one would see roads that went into the water. Today most are covered by soil on land and sediment underneath the water surface.
Always amazing how lava flows into shapes,so much to see,was hoping for a live today,I had gone to a food drive where they stuff your car full of different kinds of food,it was frozen meats and cases of vegetables, I gave most of it away,my neighbors were happy,got some food for the homeless guy in the woods,have to cook up some to can since I have way too much for myself,so was cooking up a case of tomatoes,onion and peppers,should have a couple nice jars of sauce to put away,sorry to missed live,stay safe
Hey Scott! Thanks for that little outing! Will have to have you take me and my son and grandkids out there when they come visit. So when I worked in state parks and public green spaces as a ranger years ago in Oregon, I sometimes would come across a simple rainwater irrigation system, similar to what you have there. A hose and some barrel or tank, and generally some metal roofing directing rain to the tank. Maybe yours blew away in a storm. Anyway, there was generally a patch of cannabis growing at the end of the hose. Had to confiscate it of course. Had to burn it. After drying it carefully and rolling it into little bundles. Burned very smoothly and slowly😉 Muchos Mahalos for the nice morning out!
That there is some wonderful views! Such a variety to see. The sea, greenery. Ohias. Peel’s Hair , Tephra. Interesting patterns and different levels of historical lava. Some of it looks elvish. Just the type of place I wish I could go to visit.
Ripples, pillows, chunks and lumps, cracks, crevices and tunnels. The variety is amazing. And amidst it all is the road that was, grasses growing in it's cracks and all lonesome now.
@@ApauHawaiiTours and just when you think you’ve seen it all, eruption happens and you start all over again. This is the most fascinating thing about this island - it always changes.
When I come back to Hawaii, I want to book a tour with you so you can bring me to this spot! Is it closer to Puna Ka'u Historic District, or to Pu'u Loa Petroglyphs? I reckon it must be somewhere between the two ...
I enjoyed seeing the road buried. I live near the St. Lawrence Seaway on the border between USA and Canada. Whole villages and roads were flooded to enable large laker ships to move goods through the Great Lakes to the ocean. When I was a child, there were many places one would see roads that went into the water. Today most are covered by soil on land and sediment underneath the water surface.
Always amazing how lava flows into shapes,so much to see,was hoping for a live today,I had gone to a food drive where they stuff your car full of different kinds of food,it was frozen meats and cases of vegetables, I gave most of it away,my neighbors were happy,got some food for the homeless guy in the woods,have to cook up some to can since I have way too much for myself,so was cooking up a case of tomatoes,onion and peppers,should have a couple nice jars of sauce to put away,sorry to missed live,stay safe
Hey Scott!
Thanks for that little outing! Will have to have you take me and my son and grandkids out there when they come visit.
So when I worked in state parks and public green spaces as a ranger years ago in Oregon, I sometimes would come across a simple rainwater irrigation system, similar to what you have there. A hose and some barrel or tank, and generally some metal roofing directing rain to the tank. Maybe yours blew away in a storm. Anyway, there was generally a patch of cannabis growing at the end of the hose. Had to confiscate it of course. Had to burn it. After drying it carefully and rolling it into little bundles. Burned very smoothly and slowly😉
Muchos Mahalos for the nice morning out!
😆 🤣 😂
Wow! You can see just about evert type and texture of lava in that area! Thanks for the exploration.
That there is some wonderful views! Such a variety to see. The sea, greenery. Ohias. Peel’s Hair , Tephra. Interesting patterns and different levels of historical lava. Some of it looks elvish. Just the type of place I wish I could go to visit.
The little tidbits of history in the exploration always make me happy! Your excitement and awe always come through and make my day brighter.
You took us there! Cool spot. Cannot wait to come back 😎
Holy moly! There is so much more to explore there!
This is awesome. Can’t believe I missed this live. What a fun hike! Thank you.
Ripples, pillows, chunks and lumps, cracks, crevices and tunnels. The variety is amazing. And amidst it all is the road that was, grasses growing in it's cracks and all lonesome now.
🌋🏝️👍❤️ what a fantastic island of incredible spectacular display of mother nature at her best, awesome 😊
Sooo many interesting patterns and shapes!
Wow Scott! I have never seen those lava balls. That’s so awesome!
First time for me too! It really is endless exploration.
@@ApauHawaiiTours and just when you think you’ve seen it all, eruption happens and you start all over again. This is the most fascinating thing about this island - it always changes.
Thanks for the amazing views and facts and pizza 🍕 oven shot. 😍 Aloha. 🌺
Lava Balls! Yip.
Very cool
So that lava flow was from 1975 or recently? Thank-you for the video. 😌
1969-1974 Maunaulu
When I come back to Hawaii, I want to book a tour with you so you can bring me to this spot! Is it closer to Puna Ka'u Historic District, or to Pu'u Loa Petroglyphs? I reckon it must be somewhere between the two ...
It's a secret :-)
Greatest❣️Another beautiful day with our Ohana❤Mahalo much ❤️
I would be wandering the lava fields for hours and hours, just me and my camera gear….
VNP is the perfect place for that.