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'I haven't seen them': Residents hit hard by cyclone fear for friends; 13 still uncontactable

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Sun, 26 Feb 2023, 9:48am

'I haven't seen them': Residents hit hard by cyclone fear for friends; 13 still uncontactable

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Sun, 26 Feb 2023, 9:48am

As the clean-up in Hawke鈥檚 Bay continues after the devastating Cyclone Gabrielle, fears are growing in a rural community for locals who are still 鈥渦ncontactable鈥 12 days on.

Areas such as Esk Valley, Puketapu, Dartmoor and Pakowhai were devastated by the raging flood waters, silt and mud when the cyclone struck. The official death toll from Cyclone Gabrielle is 11; with the majority of those deaths in Hawke鈥檚 Bay.

Police have confirmed that there are still 13 鈥渦ncontactable people鈥 in the Eastern District. 鈥淕etting in touch with those remaining 13 remains a priority for police and we are working as fast as we can, using a number of different methods,鈥 a spokesperson said.

Puketapu resident Nelson Wang told the聽Herald on Sunday聽he and others in the area had fears for people they knew in Dartmoor who no one had heard from since the cyclone struck. 鈥淲e know people in Dartmoor who are still uncontactable,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are people we know [not yet contacted] . . . you see each other in the pub, go hunting together and help each other out. I haven鈥檛 seen them for a while.

聽鈥淚t has been pretty inaccessible and communications are still pretty patchy. But having driven down there, even for a kilometre, it is absolute devastation. It makes this place look like a walk in the park.

鈥淎nd, unfortunately, we did have one death in our village, in the Puketapu area, and we feel very sad about that.鈥

Puketapu resident Nelson Wang with his two boys, Jamie, 4, and Lachie, 1, at their badly damaged home. Photo / Ian Cooper

Puketapu resident Nelson Wang with his two boys, Jamie, 4, and Lachie, 1, at their badly damaged home. Photo / Ian Cooper

The body of Marie Greene was found by searchers in the roof cavity of the Puketapu cottage she lived in.

鈥淗ouses can be rebuilt, and things replaced, but people can鈥檛,鈥 Wang said.

Access to one of the other Hawke鈥檚 Bay areas hardest hit by Cyclone Gabrielle 鈥 Esk Valley 鈥 was reopened to residents on Saturday afternoon.

The valley was evacuated by Civil Defence, with the help of the New Zealand Defence Force, on Friday given further flooding fears ahead of heavy rain.

It meant residents whose properties hadn鈥檛 been destroyed by the floodwater, silt and mud 鈥 as well as those who were working on their badly damaged properties 鈥 had to leave the area.

A section of SH5 was reopened shortly after 2pm with several homeowners taking the chance to return to the devastated valley.

As they turned into SH5 they were greeted by a cardboard sign saying: 鈥樷榊ou loot, we shoot鈥'.

Hawkes Bay Civil Defence group controller Ian Macdonald said that the hydrologists鈥 assessment of the Eskdale River gave him confidence that it was safe for residents to return home.

鈥淭his has been an anxious time for everyone who was evacuated yesterday [Friday], on top of the stress caused by the cyclone,鈥 Ian said. 鈥淲e are continuing to keep a very close eye on the rivers.鈥

The rain has also mobilised more silt onto roads and caused further surface flooding so Waka Kotahi is urging people to take extreme care, watch for debris and slips, and avoid unnecessary travel.

MetService meteorologist Ciaran Doolin said it would be a bit of a 鈥渟eesaw鈥 across the country next week, with sunshine for the south and rain for the north over Monday and Tuesday, then vice versa.

There was a moderate risk of heavy rain in the Coromandel and Gisborne areas around Monday and Tuesday, and low risk of heavy rain for Auckland, Bay of Plenty and Hawke鈥檚 Bay.

Doolin said there was an easterly flow pushing the band of rain across the north-eastern parts of the country.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 probably the more immediate thing to look out for for the North Island,鈥 he said.

Meanwhile, the South Island was 鈥渃ontinuing to see largely pretty nice weather鈥 and that was going to carry on for the early part of the week.

鈥淗owever, they are going to see, in sort of the middle of next week, a front push across them, which means conditions are going to deteriorate.鈥

The West Coast was most likely to be affected, he said.

The weather will start to improve for the North Island at that time.

Wellington will be neither the best off, nor the worst off, he said and will experience a little bit of everything.

Back in Puketapu, Wang 鈥 who is married with two young boys aged one and four - was today continuing to strip his badly damaged house.

Most of the homes in the township have been stripped down, with Wang saying it had been a 鈥渃ommunity effort鈥.

鈥淭his place is completely devastated,鈥 he said.

His own home 鈥 on the main street 鈥 is on a raised part of their section.

Flood water in Nelson Wang's house in Puketapu reached chest height. 
Photo / Mike Scott

Flood water in Nelson Wang's house in Puketapu reached chest height. Photo / Mike Scott

But when the big rain hit, and the nearby river overflowed, not even that could save it from the flooding.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 get any warning,鈥 he said.

鈥淟ucky I have two good alarm clocks. My two boys came in at 6am and said there was a swimming pool in the backyard. I went and had a look and the water was up to the trampoline.

鈥淲ithin 20 minutes it was up to our knees [in the house], and within another 10 minutes it was up to our chest.

鈥淚t was just that fast. If you were outside on the ground level it was flowing very fast and you would have been swept away.鈥

The family grabbed a few belongings and escaped.

Flood waters had surged over nearby stopbanks, which are 5 metres higher than the bridge on the outskirts of Puketapu, which was completely destroyed.

鈥淔or the water to go over the stopbank, you can imagine this biblical amount of water,鈥 he said.

鈥淚f they could have the stopbanks higher, maybe it could have saved our valley.鈥

Wang and his wife Paula Barlow have lived in the Puketapu house for about two-and-a-half years.

Almost two weeks on, the interior of the beloved family home is now a shell.

Carpet and other floorings have been ripped up. Gib and insulation from interior walls have been removed just above the line where the surge of water reached.

All appliances were destroyed and have been removed from the home.

Ruined appliances waiting to be collected line part of the main street through Puketapu. Photo / Ian Cooper

Ruined appliances waiting to be collected line part of the main street through Puketapu. Photo / Ian Cooper

On the main street of Puketapu, scores of white-wear appliances have been lined up for delivery to the dump.

Wang said assessors had yellow stickered his home, meaning that the foundations were still sound but it was not currently livable.

The plan was to try to repair it, with Wang saying his family did not want to move on from their rural retreat.

鈥淚t will be a monumental task . . . we wanted to get everything [the frame] dried out and wait for the insurance to get in touch with us,鈥 he said.

鈥淭here was a question in the beginning whether we would come back. But just seeing the community spirit and the way everyone banded together, this is a community I want to be a part of.

鈥淎fter this, and how it has brought the community stronger together, I would want to live here again.鈥

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