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'We are going to die': Esk Valley couple's miracle survival

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Thu, 16 Feb 2023, 5:33pm

'We are going to die': Esk Valley couple's miracle survival

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Thu, 16 Feb 2023, 5:33pm

When surging neck-deep flood waters swept through their house, Esk Valley residents Katrina and John Harris thought they were 鈥渁bout to die鈥.

As their bed, clothes drawers and other household items floated alongside them in the early morning hours of Tuesday during Cyclone Gabrielle鈥檚 deadly strike on Hawke鈥檚 Bay, the family started smashing through their ceiling in a bid to gain some sort of potential life-saving respite.

Tragically, at least five people died in the cyclone, including a child who lost their life in the Esk Valley.

Two days on from the cyclone, the Harris family told the听贬别谤补濒诲听how they are lucky to be alive after raging flood waters roared through their home.

听鈥淚t was a humongous force [of water] . . . it was like a tidal wave, big surges and the water would go up and down,鈥 Katrina told the听Herald.

鈥淚 was in the corner of the bedroom and water coming rushing up to my neck. I was screaming at my husband and also on the phone to 111 and just saying 鈥榃e are going to die, we are going to die鈥. They told me 鈥榳e are getting to you鈥.

鈥淲e got away with our lives."

Esk Valley residents Katrina and John Harris say they are lucky to be alive after their Esk Valley property was swamped by neck deep water during Cyclone Gabrielle on Tuesday morning. Photo / Neil Reid

Esk Valley residents Katrina and John Harris say they are lucky to be alive after their Esk Valley property was swamped by neck deep water during Cyclone Gabrielle on Tuesday morning. Photo / Neil Reid

鈥淭he pressure of the water, it was just so strong. If you weren鈥檛 against a house or some other structure you would just be swept away.鈥

Added John: 鈥淲e all thought we were dead鈥.

The Harris鈥 - who run The Doggy Farmstay at Esk Valley, just outside of Napier 鈥 were in bed when one of their sons alerted them around midnight of rising water on their property.

By that stage, the water was just below the porch of their rural home, in an area that is driven through by motorists between Napier to Taupo and where paddocks are renowned for their vineyards and orchards.

Katrina and John immediately started to pull together a bag of contents, and gather up nine dogs on the property 鈥 six which were boarding there and three dogs that were their own 鈥 and flee the area.

But in the short time it took to do that, the surging waters had started coming through the floorboards of their home.

Escape was too late 鈥 a sense of self-preservation took over.

鈥淚t just came so, so fast . . . we couldn鈥檛 get out, it was like a big torrent outside,鈥 Katrina said.

鈥淭he water was rising up to our knees in the kitchen so my husband and my son put a German Shepherd in the bathroom, a rottweiler in the laundry, and six other small dogs on our bed in the bedroom.

鈥淲hen the waters started rising up to waist deep, we went to the bathroom, we had to smash the door down to get to the German Shepherd. It had its head above water trying to breathe, then they put it above the pantry.

鈥淲e just stood there and basically froze while all this water rushed in around us.鈥

John and a son tried their best to stem the water, by pushing against the front door in a bid to keep it closed and reduce water flow into the house.

鈥淏ut they couldn鈥檛 do it forever, and eventually it flung open with the force of the water and rushed through the house,鈥 Katrina said.

With the water rapidly rising to neck level in pitch darkness, John then took to smashing windows throughout the home in a bid to provide escape points for the torrent.

A resident waits to be plucked to rescue by a Defence Force helicopter in Esk Valley, near Napier. PICTURE / DEFENCE FORCE

A resident waits to be plucked to rescue by a Defence Force helicopter in Esk Valley, near Napier. PICTURE / DEFENCE FORCE

That slowed the rise for a time.

鈥淥ur bed, our sofa, our TV . . . everything was just swirling around amongst it all,鈥 she said.

Meanwhile, their son started trying to smash his way into the roof cavity.

鈥淚 had my son on the bed and said; 鈥楽tart smashing the roof cavity, the tiles鈥, because if the water went up more we would have the roof cavity to climb up into,鈥 Katrina said.

鈥淗e was smashing the tiles so that if we needed to get higher we could. But we didn鈥檛 need too. Eventually, the water did recede.

鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for my husband who smashed through those windows to release some water, we wouldn鈥檛 be here.鈥

John said he was still in a sense of disbelief at how 鈥渞apidly鈥 the water had risen.

Once the front door of their home had been blown in, he said there was 鈥渘o way out鈥.

鈥淭he water was hundreds of metres across the left of the house, and hundreds of metres across to the right of the house . . . the whole valley was just one big river, massive swift and fast,鈥 he said.

鈥淎nd the roar of it [the water] . . . it was like you were standing next to Huka Falls.

鈥淚t was terrifying. The volume of water was just horrendous.鈥

The flood waters finally started subsiding in the house after a lounge wall 鈥減opped out鈥, and about 10.30am on Tuesday the Harris鈥 were able to self-evacuate from their property by foot.

Esk Valley was left underwater on Tuesday morning. Photo / Adrian Dorman

Esk Valley was left underwater on Tuesday morning. Photo / Adrian Dorman

They were able to flag down a passing motorist on a 4WD who took them down to the Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park which is now being used as an evacuation centre.

The Harris鈥 escaped with the clothes that were on their backs when the shocking force of Cyclone Gabrielle hit.

Everything else from their previous lifestyle is now sadly gone.

鈥淲e have lost everything,鈥 John said.

鈥淏ut we didn鈥檛 care about anything . . . all we were worried about was surviving. Stuff was floating about, but we didn鈥檛 worry about trying to save anything, it was all about surviving . . . you just have to survive.鈥

Added Katrina: 鈥淲e just wanted to get out with our lives. Who cares about photos!

鈥淚f we had of gone out in the water, we would not have survived. The house saved us in a way.鈥

The Harris鈥 are one of several families who are currently staying at the Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park.

The Esk Valley is a small yet incredibly tight-knit community.

Virtually everyone knows each other, and families have grown up together.

Publican Adrienne Morrin said both the immediate and lasting impact of Cyclone Gabrielle on those who called it home will be 鈥渄evastating鈥.

Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park publican Adrienne Morrin has opened her doors to devastated Esk Valley locals who were evacuated out of the area devastated by Cyclone Gabrielle. Photo / Neil Reid

Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park publican Adrienne Morrin has opened her doors to devastated Esk Valley locals who were evacuated out of the area devastated by Cyclone Gabrielle. Photo / Neil Reid

鈥淚 have only seen pictures of what has happened over there,鈥 she said.

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 seen it myself, but these guys have lost everything. Some of them didn鈥檛 even come out of it with their clothes on . . . they had their clothes ripped off them [by the surging water].

鈥淚t sounds like it was fast and furious.鈥

After the devastation that left havoc on Esk Valley on Tuesday, a sense of calm now is present at the country pub.

This morning, some people were seeking solace in their own thoughts, and some were sharing a joke in the toughest of times on the stairs up to the Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park.

鈥淭hey are actually quite calm,鈥 said kind-hearted Morrin, who has offered up her hotel as a place of refuge.

鈥淏ecause the experience was so frightening, they are thankful that they got out with their lives and their families.

鈥淚 suppose it is just working through day by day [for them].鈥

The local Bay View community were rallying around their neighbours.

Items such as clothing, nappies, food and bedding had been donated to those who have lost everything.

A medical centre with nurses and a doctor has also been set up at the pub. A grief counsellor has also been made available.

The Bay View Hotel & Holiday Park is an important part of the local community.

In happier times it is a place where locals down a cold beer in the summer months, or gather to watch footy with mates during winter.

Morrin said there had been 鈥渘o hesitation鈥 in opening her pub鈥檚 doors to those who had lost everything in the cyclone.

鈥淚 was helping out at the fire station and I said we would open the pub,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e can cook, we have some beds and it鈥檚 warm and dry. There was no hesitation.

鈥淲e had some idea it would happen [the need for the pub to be an emergency centre] at some point . . . whether it was an earthquake [or a storm]. You are always a little bit prepared for it.鈥

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