Evacuating Home in Year of the Dog

3 months of lava erupting next door, 24 volcanic fissures in our neighborhood, hundreds of disaster updates from Civil Defense, living out of a suitcase, moving 4 times, our house burns down — and only 5 weeks left to create my solo exhibition.

  • Duality

    Lava obliterates my neighbor’s home, but I am mesmerized and can’t look away. A dead Ohia tree on our hill sprouts new growth, while Fissure 17 creates the newest cinder hill next door. Stepping inside my house is like hugging an old friend — I don’t want to leave. But home isn’t safe anymore — I don’t want to stay. It’s an overwhelming internal conflict: feeling exhilarated by standing close enough to taste sulfur dioxide, yet haunted by an unknown future.

    May 16, 2018 • Day 90, Year of the Dog

  • Toto, We're Not in Puna Anymore

    The end of our world starts on the night of non-stop earthquakes. Two days later, the volcano erupts in our neighborhood. We frantically shove our lives into canvas shopping bags and drive away from our home of 22 years. The next day we return to grab clothes just in time for the magnitude 6.9 earthquake. I leap onto my little dog and hold her in a fetal position while the house swims around us. Five more lava fissures erupt forcing us north to a subdivision with no jungle trails, no lava and no earthquakes.

    May 6, 2018 • Day 80, Year of the Dog.

  • Evacuated

    We drive too much during our evacuation, often heading home to rescue more of our lives — with dogs buckled in the back seat, because I refuse to leave them alone. Back home the weather is volatile, police check every ID, and the car crawls over painted cracks on the highway. Depleted and exhausted, we find solace crossing the wilderness of Saddle Road, and return to our temporary home in near darkness.

    May 12, 2018 • Day 86 Year of the Dog.

  • Before and After, on Our Hill

    Before the eruption, the `Io (Hawaiian hawk) brings a message that I don’t understand until after the volcano erupts next door. The `Io lands very close to my barking dogs and looks at us relaxing in our cedar cabin on the hill. One month later, Fissure 17 erupts in a direct line from where the `Io perched, ejecting a fountain of lava that builds a new cinder hill next to ours.

    May 13, 2018 • Day 87, Year of the Dog.

  • Armageddon Day

    All Hell breaks loose when nine fissures erupt at once, gushing lava in every direction. Lava fountains surge 300 feet while the boom from a sudden steam explosion sends shock waves through our bones. Strangers slip past police checkpoints to crowd my neighbor’s lanai for a nervous lava viewing party. I give my tripod to the Reuters photographer, then watch our neighborhood disappear forever.

    May 18, 2018 • Day 92, Year of the Dog.

  • Dark Days, Warm Dogs

    We can’t go home anymore. Our land is surrounded by lava. The high speed lava river from Fissure 8 decapitates Hwy 132 on the same day we rent a truck to haul out our furniture and police block all entry. My husband sneaks through the jungle in a friend’s pickup to load what he can, Beverly Hillbillies style. Then his phone dies and he’s gone for hours in the dark. My little dog senses our distress and has a panic attack where she can’t breathe. The emergency vet says to make her life as normal as possible. What is normal when you’re evacuating from a volcano?

    May 31, 2018 • Day 105, Year of the Dog.

  • Pretend We're on Vacation

    Day of mourning. The lava river detours backwards and evaporates Green Lake in a column of steam, then plunges into the ocean, eliminating Kapoho Bay and Champagne Pond, the jewels of Puna. Over 700 homes vanish. We face the ocean in silence. It’s six weeks into our evacuation so far, living out of a suitcase, anxious for stability, worried about Home. Pretend this is a vacation.

    June 6, 2018 • Day 111, Year of the Dog.

Fabulous concept and wonderful photographs! … never been a dog fan - but love what & how you moved through this project.

— Michael Marshall, Professor of Art and Chair of the Art Department at University of Hawai`i at Hilo


“Your art is one of the silver linings of the eruption. Thank you!”

— Hawaii resident after 3 months of Lava Eruption


“Looks Great. I Didn’t Expect To Cry. Onward.”

— Professional Framer for my show and Fellow Evacuee


“Great show! Nicely done. Love the frames, photo choices, posted info. Well put together.”

— Professional printer for my show

Thank you for capturing the dog emotional side - Humans weren’t the only ones affected. Great show!

— Dawn Goehring, Animal Biz Hawaii, Professional Dog Trainer since 1993


“Photos of your dogs sucked me into emotions that have been buried. Love what you have shown us, thanks and aloha.”

— Fellow Evacuee and Neighbor


“Thank you for doing this even though it brought my sadness to the surface. We were in Lanipuna and our farm is still there but inaccessible.”

— Fellow Evacuee


“Your show touched me … more than I would have expected. Including the evacuation, civil defense quotes along with the fabulous photos presented an interesting counter balance to this year. CONGRATS - Well done, my friend.”

— Fellow Evacuee and Friends

“I came to see your show, because I recognized the expressions on your dogs - it’s the same expression I see on human evacuees at the Red Cross Shelter. Grabbed my heart!”

— Red Cross Worker during 2018 Hawaii Lava Evacuation


“Very emotional show — so thoughtful — thank you —”

— Hawaii Island resident


“ “Before + After” is so stirring. We’re living in “After” and may we all recover well!”

— Fellow Evacuee and Neighbor next door


“ “Best in Show” because you translate your emotions into your photos.”

— Hawaii member of the local dog community