executive summary by darmansjah
BILLOWING ASH FROM
Iceland’s Eyjafjallajokull volcano
dashed travel plans in 2010, but travel to the icebound peak has been booming
since that eruption grounded millions across Europe. Volcano tourism if flaring
up globally, and back to life last August, spurring an uptick in visitors to
the long-dormant volcano. On Hawaii’s Big Island,
Kilauea volcano recently marked 30 years of nonstop eruption (the
longest in recorded history), but after lava started cascading dramatically
into the Pacific this winter, visitors began flocking with renewed vigor.
Located in a national park that’s open 24 hours a day, Kilauea offers surreal
twilight views, with the renovated Volcano House-the only U.S. hotel on an
active volcano-newly reopened. “Seeing the caldera lit up at daybreak remind us
that we’re standing on a celestial body an puts our human dramas in
perspective,” says Kathleen Hackett, a traveler from California. Tip: Active
volcanoes change constantly. Learn Kilauea’s current top vantages from local
park rangers, who get morning briefings, and monitor Tongariro flow updates at doc.govt.nz
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