This blue house was our starting point. The owners built it as a B&B. The lava flows here are from 1990.
The view as we hike away from the house. |
Pahoehoe, or rope lava.
The scorched remains of a two-story house that belonged to a friend of our guide and was overrun by a lava flow.
Giant rainbow (see house in foreground for scale)
Double rainbow |
Our guide, Diana, and Tyler hiking over the a'a lava field with our walking/poking sticks.
Fresh oozing lava. It's hot enough to glow bright red even in direct sunlight. |
You can really feel the intensity of the heat coming off the molten rock. It solidifies surprisingly fast though.
Lava flowing into the ocean
Steam where lava and water meet
Tyler and Diana
Diana poking lava with a stick
David making a lava souvenir. The trick is to pull off a glob of molten stuff with your stick. After cooling on the rocks for a few minutes, you have an original lava creation.
Layers of minerals in the lava produce different colors
Some houses built on a recent lava field
Tyler plays with lava. |
Layers of minerals in the lava produce different colors
Some houses built on a recent lava field
These are the lava art works that we made.
More photos of the sights during our trek across the lava field can be found here and videos of the lava are here (it was extremely windy on the lava field, and there's a lot of wind noise, so turn down your volume).
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