Tag: Hawaii

  • Pirates of the Carribean cast dies after suffering shark attack at Hawaii

    Pirates of the Carribean cast dies after suffering shark attack at Hawaii

    49-year-old lifeguard Tamayo Perry who had roles in the fourth Pirates of the Caribbean movie, Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle, and Blue Crush, died after a shark attack off Oahu, Hawaii.

    The attack occurred near Goat Island on Sunday afternoon, according to Honolulu’s emergency services.

    A caller reported seeing a man with apparent shark bites, prompting emergency services to respond to Malaekahana Beach just before 1 PM local time.

    Rescuers brought Perry, an Ocean Safety lifeguard and surfing instructor, to shore via jet ski.

    Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene, as stated by Shayne Enright of the Honolulu Emergency Services Department.

    Perry, who started with the Ocean Safety department in July 2016, was known for his work as a lifeguard on the North Shore.

    Shark warnings were posted in the area following the incident.

    Acting Honolulu Ocean Safety chief Kurt Lager described Perry as “a lifeguard loved by all” and noted his worldwide recognition as a professional surfer.

    “Tamayo’s personality was infectious, and he cared deeply for everyone,” Lager said.

    Honolulu mayor Rick Blangiardi also expressed his condolences, calling Perry “a legendary waterman and highly respected,” and termed his death “a tragic loss.”

  • Hawaii wildfires: Over thousand people still missing

    Hawaii wildfires: Over thousand people still missing

    Over 1,000 people are still missing after a fire burned through the town of Lahaina in Hawaii two weeks ago, according to officials.

    Officials will soon release a list of the people who are missing so that they can better look for them.

    Some search teams are looking through the debris and are only finding bones or small pieces of bodies. This makes the job hard.

    Currently, 115 people have been confirmed to have died.

    On August 8th, the fires devastated a large part of the old town of Lahaina on the island of Maui. These fires are now seen as the most severe natural disaster to ever happen in Hawaii.

    At a meeting with reporters on Tuesday, FBI special agent Steven Merrill who is in charge of the search said: “We may not know everything about everyone in the end. ”

    “We are looking at everyone on that list until we can show that they are not on that list. ”

    About 1,400 out of the original 2,500 missing people have been located. However, officials have had a hard time determining the exact number of people who are missing.

    “Every day, the numbers will be different,” Mr Merrill commented. The new guess for the number of missing people comes after Maui mayor Richard Bissen said it was around 850.

    Officials don’t know how many of the over 1000 missing people are believed to be dead.

    Groups of people with special dogs have been searching the area that was burned for dead bodies. The very hot fire has made things difficult because some search teams are only finding bones or small pieces of bodies in piles of ashes.

    The authorities are asking family members to give their DNA to assist in identifying the victims.

    According to Julie French from ANDE, a DNA analysis company, they have gathered at least 104 samples to make family trees or pedigrees.

    The amount of money that the damage caused is believed to be around $6 billion or £4. 7 billion

    Officials have revealed the names of the 13 people who lost their lives in the fire. These people include someone who loves music, kind grandmothers, and a motivating father.

  • Hawaii fires: First victims identified as the death toll rises to 106

    Hawaii fires: First victims identified as the death toll rises to 106

    Officials have named the first casualties of the catastrophic wildfires that ravaged the island of Maui last week.

    The first two victims were identified by Maui’s police department as Lahaina residents Buddy Jantoc, 79, and Robert Dyckman, 74.

    With nearly 1,300 people still missing, the dead toll from the flames has now reached 106.

    Hawaii’s Governor Josh Green has stated that it will probably take a few more days for authorities to determine an exact death toll.

    Richard Bissen, the mayor of Maui County, expressed his sincere condolences to the families who are starting to get notifications of their loved ones. “In this most trying time, we offer our prayers of consolation as a community.”

    Authorities have identified three other people, he claimed, and their next of kin have been notified.

    The president stated on Tuesday that he has yet to go due to worries that doing so would take away from the humanitarian response in terms of resources and attention. He announced that Jill Biden would travel with him to Hawaii.

    “I don’t want to be a hindrance. I’ve visited too many areas affected by disasters, Mr. Biden remarked. I’m concerned that we won’t obstruct current recovery efforts.

    He declared that the US Coast Guard and US military will be utilised together with “all available federal assets” for recovery efforts in the area.

    As more dead are discovered in the most severely affected areas of Maui, officials in Hawaii have stated that they anticipate the death toll to grow in the days ahead. Searches for human remains have only been conducted in 25% of the impacted region thus far.

    Lahaina, a town of around 12,000 people, lost 80% of its structure to the fire.

    Many Maui locals expressed their frustration with the scope and pace of the recovery efforts to the BBC.

    Les Munn, a local, claimed that he had already received $500 (£392) from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), which is less than the cost of a single night at the majority of the island’s hotels.

    He continues to rest in a shelter for the time being.

    Everyone wants the limelight, but nobody wants to put their feet on the ground, according to Felicia Johnson, a local.

    One woman in Lahaina claimed she feared starvation in the days following the fire on a street above the fire line.

    On Maui, a number of supply hubs for relief efforts have been set up.

    At her neighbor’s house, one of several grassroots relief supply hubs organised by neighbours in the neighbourhood, people are already delivering bags of ice, water, clothing, batteries, and little solar chargers.

    Amory Mowrey spent $1,700 loading up his and his friend’s SUVs with bags of rice, cases of water, packs of batteries, and toilet paper before making a second trip into the most severely affected area.

    He explained, “We’re just trying to get goods into the affected areas as quickly as possible so people get what they need. “It felt like there was a lack of response from large organisations.”

    Others expressed annoyance that local supplies were being rejected by government representatives or that people were unable to reach Lahaina to assist due to road closures.

    Liz Germansky, whose home was destroyed in the fire, complained that “the government is getting in the way of people helping.”

    While stuck in a traffic gridlock on the island, she told the BBC, “I don’t think the government could have done less.”

    The current course of events is indicative of what we all went through on Tuesday, so it’s understandable how things have spiralled out of control.

    More than 500 federal emergency professionals have already been sent, according to the US government, to assist with the rescue operation.

    A one-time payout of $700 per household and low-interest disaster loans have also been authorised.

  • Hawaii fires: Death toll from Maui wildfires reaches 80

    Hawaii fires: Death toll from Maui wildfires reaches 80

    Officials report that 80 people have now been confirmed dead as a result of wildfires on the Hawaiian island of Maui.

    In what is now the worst natural disaster to hit a US state, there are worries that the numbers will continue to grow.

    Firefighters have been battling fires in a number of locations, including the historic town of Lahaina, which has been completely destroyed.

    A “comprehensive review” of how the authorities handled the wildfires has been announced by Hawaii‘s attorney general.

    It occurs as concerns over whether officials notified people quickly enough grow.

    For the first time since flames quickly rushed through early this week, razing most of the coastal town’s rich heritage and two million visitors annually, state officials reopened Lahaina to those with proof of residency on Friday.

    Cars were backed up bumper to bumper on the Honoapiilani Highway, one of the only accessible ways to Lahaina, with people standing next to trucks crammed full of supplies including water, petrol, diapers, and toilet paper.

    But shortly after it was opened, all traffic on the route save for emergency vehicles was stopped.

    Police were called in to deal with a “situation,” authorities informed the BBC, although they declined to provide further details.

    Even though police did not confirm it, evacuated Lahaina homeowners later claimed they thought their homes had been looted.

    Families remained in a mile-long queue for hours after the closure.

    Residents would encounter “destruction like they’ve never seen in their lives,” Governor Josh Green had already warned.

    And for many of the Lahaina refugees, the damage still waiting is too much to bear.

    The Tacderan family’s 23 stranded members gathered with family in Paukukalo, a coastal area east of Lahaina, to assess the damage.

    One of them, Bryan Aguiran, 26, stayed in Lahaina for the duration of the fire’s deadliest parts, dousing the flames with big buckets of water and miraculously saved his family’s home.

    But he is unwilling to return.

    He added that he hasn’t been able to sleep and that every time he closed his eyes, Armageddon appeared.

    “Lahaina will never be the same,” he declared.

    Like many other Maui locals, he expressed concern about how much higher the death toll will go.

    These worries were heightened on Friday night when residents of Kaanapali, which is located north of Lahaina, were told to leave because a fire had broken out near a fueling station that had been built up. In about two hours, Maui, it was under control. Maui official added

    Lahaina and Kaanapali in West Maui are still without water and electricity. In the area, search teams are still seeking for wildfire casualties.

    In the water is included. According to the Coast Guard, 17 individuals have so far been recovered alive from the water close to the harbour of the town. Everybody was said to be in stable condition.

    However, Gabe Lucy, a Maui-based tour guide, told the BBC that he was hearing horrifying stories.

    “People were jumping in the water, and I think for a lot of them the fire wrapped around so quickly that the only way to escape was go down to the water’s edge,” said Mr. Lucy, whose boats were called in to help.

    He continued by saying that they were “picking up four-year-olds and putting them on surfboards and pulling them out” and that he had heard tales of “bodies on the rocks”.

    The damage brought on by wildfires on the island of Maui will take many years to heal, according to the authorities. In Lahaina alone, more than a thousand buildings have been destroyed.

    For Maui’s residents, many of whom depend on the service employment provided by the tourism industry, the enormous destruction is a further source of stress.

    On Friday, Governor Josh Green forewarned Hawaiians that what they discovered in Lahaina would be challenging.

    “Lahaina is a severely damaged area. The governor, who paid a visit to the town on Thursday, warned that they will witness destruction unlike anything they had ever seen. “Be very careful and safe.”

    On Maui, there are currently six shelters for those who have been displaced, and officials have stated that they are creating a plan to accommodate them in hotels and vacation rentals.

    Donations have been pouring in lately.

    Many affluent people, including Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, reside on the island. To aid the fire victims, he and his partner Lauren Sanchez have contributed $100 million (£79 million).

    Tuesday night saw the start of wildfires on the Big Island and Maui islands of Hawaii. Although the reason is still unknown, after the fire started, hurricane gusts and dry weather contributed to its spread.

  • ‘Catastrophic’ wildfires in Hawaii result in 55 fatalities

    ‘Catastrophic’ wildfires in Hawaii result in 55 fatalities

    It is now known that at least 55 people have died as a result of the “catastrophic” wildfires that Hawaii‘s governor described.

    As a result, thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes, and according to authorities, it is impossible to find individuals because of broken communication lines.

    Keep an eye on our website as we anticipate many more developments in this topic.

  • Wildfires in Hawaii occurred after extreme climate occurrences worldwide

    Wildfires in Hawaii occurred after extreme climate occurrences worldwide

    Following other recent extreme weather events throughout the world, there have been wildfires in Hawaii.

    Wildfires in Greece had their worst July on record, severely affecting the islands of Corfu and Rhodes.

    The wildfire season in Canada has likewise been the worst on record; as of now, more than 25,000 acres (100 sq km) had burned. That comes after devastating wildfires earlier in 2023 in Australia and Chile.

    In some areas, such as the western United States, wildfires have burned more land recently.

    According to scientists, climate change is bringing about the climatic conditions that make wildfires more likely to spread.

    Large fires start every yearly in specific areas of the Hawaiian islands, according to the University of Hawaii, but the size of these fires is exceptional.

  • Fires ‘nearly completely consume’ historic town in Hawaii

    Fires ‘nearly completely consume’ historic town in Hawaii

    The historic town of Lahaina on Hawaii’s island of Maui neary got destroyed completely by raging wildfires exacerbated by hurricane winds.

    The state’s US senator, Brian Schatz, claimed on social media that Lahaina is “almost completely burned to the ground.”

    Officials said on Wednesday that there were at least six fatalities in Maui County.

    Burn victims and those suffering from smoke inhalation have overrun Maui’s hospital system.

    Firefighters are still working to put out the fires, and our first responders are in search and rescue mode, according to Mr. Schatz.

    According to early Wednesday morning reports, some people attempted to flee the raging flames by jumping into the water. At least twelve persons were pulled from the ocean, according to the US Coast Guard.

    At a press conference, Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen Jr. stated that numerous residences and commercial buildings had been totally destroyed.

    One of the town’s 12,000 residents told the local media that every boat in the harbour was on fire.

    Chrissy Lovitt said to Hawaii News Now, “It looks like something out of a movie, a war movie.”

    The real scale of the damage on Maui, according to officials, is still impossible to assess, and they have issued a warning that the death toll could grow. There have been about 2,100 displaced persons.

    Some Lahaina residents’ relatives expressed concern for missing members of their family.

    Tiare Lawrence told Hawaii News Now, “I still don’t know where my little brother is. I have no idea where my stepdad is.

    “Everyone I know in Lahaina, their homes have burned down,” Ms. Lawrence added.

    According to the monitoring website PowerOutage.us, there were about 13,000 people without power on Maui.

    Due to the fires, thousands of people were left without cell phone coverage, and West Maui 911 services were unavailable on Wednesday.

    On Maui, three sizable fires are still burning and are out of control, according to officials.

    The Big Island, commonly known as Hawaii island, which is next to Maui, is also engulfed in a number of fires.

    Due to the fires, thousands of people were left without cell phone coverage, and West Maui 911 services were unavailable on Wednesday.

    On Maui, three sizable fires are still burning and are out of control, according to officials.

    The Big Island, commonly known as Hawaii island, which is next to Maui, is also engulfed in a number of fires.

    Sylvia Luke, the lieutenant governor of Hawaii, said, “This is not a safe place to be.”

    Shelters in certain areas of Maui are overcrowded, Ms. Luke continued. Our resources are subject to taxation.

    On the westernmost point of Maui is the historic town of Lahaina. Its centre is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and dates back to the 1700s.

    The second-largest island in the Hawaiian archipelago, Maui is situated more than 3,200 kilometres (2,000 miles) from the US mainland in the northern Central Pacific.

    It draws a lot of tourists because of its stunning beaches and whale-watching opportunities in the winter, and 2.9 million people visited it last year.

    The tiny island features both wet and green jungles and dry, sunny microclimates. Hawaii experiences wet and dry seasons, with droughts growing increasingly frequent on its islands.

  • Hawaii wildfires: Residents run towards ocean to escape fires

    Hawaii wildfires: Residents run towards ocean to escape fires

    A Hawaiian town‘s residents apparently had no choice but to jump into the ocean to escape the raging wildfires that are consuming parts of Maui.

    Lahaina, which was partially destroyed or significantly damaged by the fire, was the site of “apocalyptic scenes,” according to local media.

    Aside from causing power outages, the fire forced evacuations. Debris has complicated the rescue operation.

    There are at least seven active fires in Hawaii, including the one in Lahaina.

    Several homes and businesses have been damaged in the city of roughly 13,000 inhabitants on the western portion of Maui, the second-largest and third-most populous island in the state, according to a local CBS News affiliate, the BBC’s US partner.

    The US Coast Guard reports that 12 persons were saved after jumping into the water to flee the fire.

    Videos sent on social media from the island show the town’s main street and a number of nearby shops on fire, however it is unclear how much damage was done.

    According to local business owner Alan Dickar, “buildings on both sides were engulfed.” “At that time, there were no fire trucks. The fire department was probably overworked.

    Mr. Dickar continued, “Many individuals just lost their employment since many businesses burnt. Many folks lost their homes; this will be disastrous for Maui.

    Dustin Kaleiopu, another local, told Hawaii News Now that his home was among those lost in the blaze.

    “Everything we had ever known had vanished. Every single memory we had of this home—our church, our schools, and so on—he remarked. In the blink of an eye, everything vanished.

    According to the Honolulu office of the National Weather Service, there are multiple fires burning in Hawaii as a result of Hurricane Dora’s powerful winds blowing from hundreds of miles away, low humidity, and dry air. Winds have reportedly made it more difficult to employ helicopters for firefighting operations, according to local officials.

    Large portions of Maui were evacuated, and roads and schools were closed as a result of the fires. Residents who had to leave their homes have been provided with shelter.

    According to PowerOutage.us, as of 9:00 EST (14:00 BST), almost 15,000 individuals are still without electricity.

    Acting governor of Hawaii Sylvia Luke declared an emergency and called in the National Guard on Tuesday night. Josh Green, the state’s governor, is on the road.

    Given the several fires and countless evacuations in the various district regions, it is undoubtedly one of the more difficult days for our island, County of Maui spokesperson Mahina Martin told CBS on Tuesday.

    Hawaii rarely experiences large fires like those that ravage California and other western US states.

    However, experts have cautioned that they are frequently more harmful since they can eliminate vegetation and Hawaii’s ecology evolved without fires before the arrival of humans.

  • Warning issued as Hawaii’s volcano threatens to erupt deadly glass

    Warning issued as Hawaii’s volcano threatens to erupt deadly glass

    The Klauea volcano in Hawaii is currently erupting. One of the many craters along its range, Halemaumau, is currently filled with red-hot lava.

    Although inhabitants are not likely to be in the path of the lava, they have been advised to watch out for another danger that volcanoes can produce: Pele’s hair.

    No, it’s named after the Hawaiian goddess of fire and volcanoes, Pele, not the football player. It’s also not really hair.

    The curious phenomena occurs when molten lava is spat out of a volcano at high speeds and stretches apart as it cools, forming golden, hair-like strands of volcanic glass.

    When the lava is not travelling as fast it can form Pele’s tears, small droplets of the same volcanic glass.

    ‘Pele’s hair are very thin strands of volcanic glass, usually formed in lava fountains by bursting gas bubbles,’ said Dr Brendan Mccormick Kilbride, volcanologist at the University of Manchester. 

    ‘Tiny liquid blobs of lava get stretched out into very thin filaments of glass. These are potentially hazardous because they are very sharp – they can cause harm if you try to pick them up.

    The lowdown: what is Pele’s hair?

    Thin strands of golden hair-like volcanic glass formed when lava hits the air at speed, stretching out up to two feet long as it cools

    ‘There are cases from eruptions in Hawai’i where glass shards contaminate drinking water supplies. Since they are so light they can also be transported long distances by the wind, which increases the area of potential impact and introduces new dangers like contact of glass with people’s eyes or the glass being inhaled.’

    The United States Geological Service has warned residents to minimise their exposure to Pele’s hair.

    It also raised the prospect of vog for those downwind of the volcano – also known as volcanic smog – as well as crater wall instability, ground cracking and rockfalls. 

    The entire area has been closed to the public since 2007.

  • Kilauea volcano in Hawaii erupts, spewing massive lava flows

    Kilauea volcano in Hawaii erupts, spewing massive lava flows

    On the Big Island of Hawaii, a volcano has erupted and is pouring enormous amounts of lava.

    The US Geological Survey (USGS) reports that the Wednesday morning eruption of the Kilauea volcano began just before 4.45am local time.

    The crater’s red hot patches were visible on a webcam broadcast, along with boiling lava and smoke.

    ‘Webcam imagery shows fissures at the base of Halema’uma’u crater generating lava flows on the surface of the crater floor,’ stated the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.

    ‘The activity is confined to Halema’uma’u and the hazards will be reassessed as the eruption progresses.’

    Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency stated that there is ‘no indication that populated areas are threatened’.

    The eruption for the time being is ‘within a closed area’ of Volcanoes National Park, according to the USGS.

    However, ‘very light ashfall’ could make its way to parts of Kau, Puna and South Kona through the evening, the state’s emergency services stated.

  • A cruise passenger goes missing while traveling from Australia to Hawaii

    A cruise passenger goes missing while traveling from Australia to Hawaii

    The Australian tourist who is thought to have gone overboard on a cruise ship sailing from Brisbane to Hawaii has not yet been located by the US Coast Guard.

    The Quantum of the Seas cruise liner reported a guy overboard late Tuesday night, around 500 miles (805 kilometers) south of Kailua Kona, Big Island, the coast guard said in a statement.

    The cruise ship stayed on the scene for around two hours and deployed six life rings in an effort to save the passenger, but it then continued on its way after no sign of him was discovered, according to the coast guard.

    A US Coast Guard Hercules helicopter conducted an aerial search of the area for six hours on Wednesday and it will resume the search at first light on Thursday, the coast guard said.

    Royal Caribbean issued a statement confirming a passenger was missing.

    “While on its trans-pacific sailing, a guest onboard Quantum of the Seas went overboard,” the company said in a statement, according to CNN affiliate Nine News.

    “The ship’s crew immediately launched a search and rescue operation and is working closely with local authorities,” it added.

    A passenger on board the vessel, Georgina Thompson, told Nine News she and her husband were in bed when they heard the call “Oscar, oscar, oscar” – the cruise ship line’s code for “man overboard.”

    “There were lights, you know, the big lights shining on the ocean,” she said.

    Quantum of the Seas is a 16-day voyage which departed from Brisbane, Australia on April 12 and is scheduled to reached Honolulu, Hawaii on April 28.

    The vessel made its maiden voyage in 2014 from Southampton to New York, and was at the time branded as the “world’s smartest cruise ship” with robot waiters and features skydiving on deck.

    It is 16 stories high and has room for 4,500 passengers and a 1,500-strong crew, according to the cruise company’s website.

  • Founder of Proud Boys’ Hawaii chapter, Texas man receive 4-year prison sentences for January 6th riot

    The founder of the Hawaii chapter of Proud Boys and another person were sentenced to four years in prison for their involvement in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

    According to a news release from the Department of Justice, Nicholas Ochs, a 36-year-old Proud Boys leader from Honolulu, and Nicholas DeCarlo, a 32-year-old from Fort Worth, Texas, were sentenced on Friday to 48 months in prison, followed by 36 months of supervised release.

    In addition to the prison terms, Ochs was ordered to pay a $5,000 fine, $2,000 in restitution, and a $100 special assessment. DeCarlo was ordered to pay a $2,500 fine, $2,000 in restitution, and a $100 special assessment.

    Ochs and DeCarlo attended former President Trump’s at the Ellipse that took place prior to the riot, before joining rioters at the U.S. Capitol. After illegally entering the Capitol through the Senate Wing Doors, both men stayed in the building for 40 minutes. Ochs and DeCarlo threw smoke bombs at police, while the latter filmed the former writing “Murder the Media,” the name of the men’s social media channel, on a door to the Capitol.

    “These were no teenage pranks,” prosecutors wrote. “Ochs’ conduct targeted the police and Congress — and like the conduct of every rioter that day, threatened democracy itself.”

    The news arrives a few months after Ochs and DeCarlo pleaded guilty in September to obstruction of an official proceeding.

    Of the 900 individuals who’ve have been arrested for participating in the Jan. 6 insurrection, more than 280 people have been charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcement.

    Source: Ghanacelebrities.com