Historic Hawaii volcano eruption scarred landscape, lives

FILE - In this May 20, 2018 file photo, members of the media record a wall of lava entering the ocean near Pahoa, Hawaii. It’s been a year since a Hawaii volcano rained lava and gases on a rural swath of the Big Island in one of its largest and most destructive eruptions in recorded history. More than 700 homes were destroyed in the historic eruption, which started May 3 and buried an area more than half the size of Manhattan in now-hardened rock. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

In this Monday, April 22, 2019 photo, Tisha Montoya and her dog Bebe cut through the lava field that covered much of her property and destroyed her home near Pahoa, Hawaii. Tisha and her father Edwin Montoya lived on the secluded property for many years until they had to evacuate due to the 2018 Kilauea lava eruption where the molten rock eventually took nearly all the structures, including the home and all but one small chicken coop that Edwin built. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia)

In this Monday, April 22, 2019 photo, Tisha Montoya and her dog Bebe stand atop the lava flow that covered much of her property and destroyed her home near Pahoa, Hawaii. Tisha and her father Edwin Montoya lived on the secluded property for many years until they had to evacuate due to the 2018 Kilauea lava eruption where the molten rock eventually took nearly all the structures, including the home and all but one small chicken coop seen here that Edwin built. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia)

FILE - In this May 5, 2018 file photo, Edwin Montoya, 76, poses for a photo outside his home near Pahoa, Hawaii, where he lived off the grid on a farm with his daughter Tisha. On May 4, the day after the eruption, lava was pouring from fissures in the nearby neighborhood of Leilani Estates, and toxic gases filled the air. Montoya decided to stay behind to care for their animals, but was ultimately forced to flee and lava destroyed almost all of the property. Lava stopped flowing the first week of September and Edwin died less than a week later. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

FILE - In this Friday, May 18, 2018 file photo, Peter Vance photographs lava erupting in the Leilani Estates subdivision near Pahoa, Hawaii. A year after one of Kilauea volcano’s largest and most destructive eruptions, people who lost their Big Island homes and farms to rivers of lava are still struggling to regain a sense of normalcy. More than 700 homes were destroyed in the historic eruption, and most people will never move back to their land. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

In this Tuesday, April 23, 2019 photo, visitors Bruno Hoschstrasser, left, and Mirjam Grylka, both from Switzerland, watch surfers from a newly formed black sand beach below Kilauea volcano near Kapoho, Hawaii. The beach was created as lava from the 2018 Kilauea eruption entered the ocean, broke apart and churned through the water. Before the eruption, the shoreline was about 100 yards inland from where it is now. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia)

LEILANI ESTATES — 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.

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