Volcano residents reflect on daily quakes that frayed nerves and left HVNP in a shambles

The Kilauea Lodge restaurant is closed for lunch due to volcanic uncertainty May 11, 2018, in Volcano. (HOLLYN JOHNSON/Tribune-Herald)

Office manager Janet Coney takes a call at Kilauea Lodge in Volcano. (HOLLYN JOHNSON/Tribune-Herald)

An aerial view of Kilauea’s summit on July 13, 2018. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park’s Jaggar Museum are visible on the caldera rim in the foreground. (Courtesy photo/U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY)

Incident Commander John Broward and Superintendent Cindy Orlando in July 2018 observe a large sinkhole at Kilauea Overlook/Crater Rim Drive. (NPS Photo/J. Ferracane)

People watch from Volcano Golf & Country Club as a plume of ash rises out of Halemaumau Crater May 15, 2018, from the caldera of Kilauea in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. (HOLLYN JOHNSON/Tribune-Herald)

HILO — One year ago, the earth split open and changed the landscape of Puna irrevocably.