
The Devastation Trail stretches from the parking lot at the Devastation Trailhead to Puʻupuaʻi Overlook,via a one-mile (1.6 km) round-trip walk on a paved path.
The area was blanketed in cinders from the 1,900-foot tall lava fountains during the 1959 eruption of Kīlauea Iki. The trail provides views of the new cinder cone, Puʻupuaʻi, that developed during the five-week eruption. Stay on the paved trail. Do not climb the cinder cone.
Endangered nēnē (Hawaiian geese) frequent this area. Please use caution when parking. Don't feed the nēnē.
The area was blanketed in cinders from the 1,900-foot tall lava fountains during the 1959 eruption of Kīlauea Iki. The trail provides views of the new cinder cone, Puʻupuaʻi, that developed during the five-week eruption. Stay on the paved trail. Do not climb the cinder cone.
Endangered nēnē (Hawaiian geese) frequent this area. Please use caution when parking. Don't feed the nēnē.
Is there something we missed for this itinerary?
Itineraries across USA

Acadia

Arches National Park

Badlands

Big Bend

Biscayne

Black Canyon Of The Gunnison

Bryce Canyon

Canyonlands

Capitol Reef

Carlsbad Caverns

Channel Islands

Congaree

Crater Lake

Cuyahoga Valley

Death Valley

Dry Tortugas

Everglades

Gateway Arch

Glacier

Grand Canyon

Grand Teton

Great Basin

Great Smoky Mountains

Guadalupe Mountains

Haleakalā

Hawaiʻi Volcanoes

Hot Springs

Indiana Dunes

Isle Royale

Joshua Tree

Kenai Fjords

Kobuk Valley

Lassen Volcanic

Mammoth Cave

Mesa Verde

Mount Rainier

North Cascades

Olympic

Petrified Forest

Pinnacles

Rocky Mountain

Saguaro

Shenandoah

Theodore Roosevelt

Virgin Islands

Voyageurs

White Sands

Wind Cave

Yellowstone

Yosemite

Zion