PAHOA, Hawaii Island 鈥 Leilani Estates residents risked swirling gas emissions and continued lava fountaining Wednesday to retrieve possessions from threatened homes, while eruption evacuees staying at the main shelter expressed despair with their ongoing plight.

Blustery winds that caused sulfur dioxide levels to shoot from nonexistent to dangerously high in minutes 鈥 as measured by on-site Hawaii National Guardsmen equipped with monitors 鈥 didn鈥檛 keep some evacuees from stopping briefly to watch Kilauea volcano spew lava where they once walked.

鈥淲e evacuated the first day. We didn鈥檛 think we鈥檙e ever coming back after that,鈥 12-year Leilani Estates homeowner Lori Wada said as she watched a distant fissure shoot molten rock.

Some Leilani Estates homes have so far been spared, but others suffered a different fate. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

The self-described life coach said that was just one day after she had returned from a trip to California to host a retreat about dealing with life challenges called 鈥淔acing the Fire.鈥 She was back home Wednesday facing her own fire. Friends helped her fetch 鈥渋mportant things鈥 and document, through photographs, structural damage to her house.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a mixed bag trying to figure things out,鈥 Wada said. Hawaii Island is her home, she said, and where several family members also reside.聽鈥淕rieving with gratitude, that鈥檚 my heart right now.鈥

Wada said she鈥檚 rented a place in California, where her son attends college, and will move there to resume working.

Lori Wada, center, gestures among a group of Leilani Estates residents checking out the damage. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

鈥淲e鈥檒l see what life holds down the road,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just prepared to move on in any way we need to.鈥

The lava is moving on as well.聽Overnight, it flowed fast enough to cover about six football fields an hour, according to U.S. Geological Survey scientist Wendy Stovall.

Lava gushed across and then along a roadway that leads from the commercial center of Pahoa toward smaller towns and rural farmlands to the east.聽About two dozen recent fissures in that area have created towering lava fountains and bone-rattling explosions throughout the eruption. The lava that is currently coming to the surface is the hottest and most fluid to date.

“This is the hottest lava that we’ve seen in this eruption, even just a matter of 50 degrees centigrade (122 degrees Fahrenheit) makes a big difference in how quickly lava flows can move and how they behave once the magma exits the vent,” Stovall said.

In fact, the current lava eruptions in Puna are as hot as Hawaii’s lava will ever get. “It can’t get hotter than where we are,” Stovall added. “We are pretty much tapping mantle temperatures right now.”

One fissure was observed early Wednesday spouting lava over 200 feet into the air.

A mammoth fountain of lava early Wednesday, seen from聽fissure No. 8 in Leilani Estates at the intersection of Kahukai and Luana. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

Back at Leilani Estates, the edge of one flow stopped adjacent to a Nohea Street property where a home was being built, a lava fountain visible in the distance. National Guardsmen escorting news media to the site cautioned against walking on roadside vegetation, pointing out burn marks caused when methane gas ignited there.

Other neighborhood houses, some very nice with multi-car garages and spacious, manicured lawns, sat untouched by the surrounding devastation. It appeared as if the owners had simply left them for a weekend getaway.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 pretty incredible that the volcano came out in the middle of the subdivision,鈥 Erik Brady, who for the past decade has lived in Leilani Estates, said as he drove past, his car carrying a pair of custom wheels, grass trimmer and other items. He was wearing a gas mask.

Erik Brady is still hoping he won’t lose his home in Leilani Estates. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

鈥淲e bought our place. That鈥檚 all we have. If we lose our house, that will be the second house we鈥檝e lost,鈥 Brady said, noting financial reasons cost him his former Maui home.

Fluctuating emission levels that frequently warranted wearing a gas mask didn鈥檛 seem to affect John Tamashiro, who said he and his wife came down from Mountain View to help a friend move. Tamashiro said he previously was a groundskeeper at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, where he didn鈥檛 wear a mask either, despite encountering thick volcanic smog known as 鈥渧og鈥

鈥淚 used to work in it,鈥 he said after taking a break to snap a few photos of a nearby eruption site.

In Pahoa, Chad Walker was helping coordinate a seven-vehicle convoy carrying appliances, furniture and numerous other large items owned by his friend.

鈥淚 brought my whole crew,鈥 said Walker, a construction contractor. 鈥淚nstead of working today, we鈥檙e helping to evacuate him.鈥

An advancing flow that covered Highway 132 on Tuesday continued makai toward the coastal community of Kapoho, prompting Hawaii County Civil Defense to urge residents of two threatened subdivisions to evacuate now to avoid having their only remaining roadway access severed.

A tornado-like swirl in the lava mist that lit up the sky early Wednesday. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

That development will bring more evacuees to the Pahoa Community Center to join the hundreds there, some of whom have been sleeping in rain-soaked tents for weeks.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to talk about it,鈥 one man with a British accent said while sitting outside his tiny tent during a rain respite. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too painful.鈥

Nearby, Doug Langelier, 64, was in his SUV filling out a survey that he received in the mail along with a dollar bill. Langelier said he regretted not checking the trash cans for similar letters that recipients mistook for junk mail and discarded unopened.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really the only place I have to go, so I try to make the best of it,鈥 Langelier said of the spot on the edge of a parking lot that he鈥檚 used as a campsite since the eruption blocked access to the Leilani Estates home where he鈥檚 lived for the last 11 years.

鈥淚t was so beautiful,鈥 Langelier said, pausing to gather his emotions, 鈥渁nd I went down there a couple of weeks ago and everything鈥檚 dead.鈥

Langelier, who said he鈥檚 disabled, is waiting for an important doctor鈥檚 appointment next month before moving with his longtime friend, the home鈥檚 owner, to San Diego.

As someone who is living through it, what would he like to say to those who are curious about Kilauea volcano鈥檚 eruption?

鈥淚 would like people to know that the residents here are strong, friendly (and) compassionate,鈥 Langelier said, adding visitors should look at the myriad internet images of the eruption and hold off visiting until conditions stabilize.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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