A Rescue Mission Is Underway To Save Pets On Hawaii’s Big Island Lost Since The Volcano Eruption

Many people are drawn to the east side of Hawaii’s Big Island because of the country lifestyle, its seclusion and huge gardens, which also makes it perfect for people who love living with animals or who keep guard dogs.
But when the ground in Leilani Estates exploded open from a lava eruption last week, residents were forced to evacuate themselves and their pets, while some animals just got spooked and ran off.
Along with 250 people, at least 81 dogs and 28 cats were checked into the Hawaii Red Shelter set up for evacuees at Pahoa. While at least a dozen horses were evacuated to the Panaewa Zoo, which has an equestrian center.

Dr. Tim Richards, a veterinarian on the island and County Councilman checks on evacuee Andrew Linne’s dog Scotty at the Pahoa Community Center on May 5.
People whose pets have been lost — many of them spooked by the massive earthquake on Friday or because of the dramatic sounds of the lava eruption — are encouraged to report their missing animals to the Hawaii Island Humane Society.
“It’s a sad situation,” said Adam Pereira, the shelter manager at the Hawaiian Island Humane Society. “They had to evacuate so fast and lots of people thought they’d go back the next day.”
The Hawaii Island Humane Society combed through every street on Leilani Estates Tuesday looking for pets still remaining in the neighborhood. It was the third mission to retrieve animals since the area was evacuated on Thursday.
The first time the humane society went into the evacuated zone on Saturday, they retrieved six dogs and two tortoises, Pereira told BuzzFeed News.
He said the two giant tortoises were in a kennel and their owner had reported that they needed to be retrieved, however some of the dogs were not as easy to catch. There was a chihuahua who wouldn’t let him get close. He ended up coaxing the pup into a fenced in area with food and water, where he slipped a leash on the chihuahua.
“I reunited them with the owner as soon as I got out,” Pereira said with a big smile on his face.
Megan Funck, a 32-year-old resident of Leilani Estates, told BuzzFeed News that when she was evacuating, she left her cat inside her home because she thought she would return the next day with a pet carrier. “Then the next day they had blocked it all off,” Funck said. By the time she was allowed back in, her cat had escaped through the window. Unfortunately, the Humane Society has struggled to find missing cats.
“It’s harder to catch cats,” Pereira said “I’ve seen maybe one cat and I tried to go up to it but it darted off.”
Pereira said he has been “trying to figure out how to put cat traps” in Leilani Estates, but is concerned about accessing it later.
“I can’t have a cat stuck in a trap when an eruption happens,” he said.
The good news, said Pereira, is that he hasn’t seen any pets with injured feet from the hot lava.

On Tuesday’s mission to retrieve pets from Leilani Estates, Hawaii Island Humane Society control officer Justin Crusat said they brought out a couple of pit bulls, a sharpei mix, and a Catahoula leopard dog. One of the pit bulls looked shocked, but also a little relieved, as he was pulled from a kennel and into the Hawaii Island Humane’s society intake area, where he was promptly weighed and photographed.
But Crusat said now that evacuees have been allowed to go back into Leilani Estates, most of the animals have already been retrieved and on this mission they encountered vigilantes who were driving around the streets too to collect animals.
They might mean well, Crusat said, but it was a “little misguided” and illegal — since they’re technically stealing the pets from people’s properties. He said it also makes it harder for the Humane Society to reunite them with owners, since they don’t know what property the dogs were off of.
For the animals who the Humane Society isn’t able to immediately reunite with their owner, either because they haven’t been reported yet or they don’t have a microchip, then they will be held indefinitely until their their owners claims them.
“We usually do four to ten days with pets,” Pereira said, but “there’s no hold period for pets found at Leilani Estates.”