Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | March 3, 2011

where were you?

Usually I skip over the emails from my MP.  Today, his first paragraph hit home, because it is something I have been thinking about for a few days.  The generation previous to mine all knew where they were and what they were doing when JFK was shot. For my generation, it was Princess Diana. For NZ – it will be the day Chriustchurch shook to the ground.

Wairarapa MP John Hayes (we are in the northern most end of his electorate) said:

“Most of us will go to our graves remembering where we were last Tuesday when news of the earthquake that shattered Christchurch reached us. Then the television pictures in our homes showed crumpled buildings, grieving families and rescuers working tirelessly to save lives.  It all seemed so hard to believe given the huge effort to deal with the first quake. The second quake changed so much so quickly. It reminded me of an expression I heard regularly when I was New Zealand’s High Commissioner in PNG: “Expect the unexpected”.”

I have stolen a few sentences from the rest of the email. Okay, in hindsight, here’s most of it 🙂

This event is a huge tragedy. Families in our community – and all around the country – are dealing with the loss of relatives and friends.  No words will ease the pain.  We are a small nation, and most of us have connections to Christchurch.

 The Prime Minister has promised that the Government will do whatever it takes to get Christchurch back on its feet.

 For the first time in our history, a Civil Defence National State of Emergency has been declared. This means we can make decisions very quickly about hospitals, roads, communications, and essential services such as water, power, and support for those directly affected by the earthquake.

The government’s immediate focus after the quake was to throw its weight behind the huge search and rescue effort. But we also got welfare centres up and running, contacted elderly people to check that they were OK, and used Civil Defence payments to financially support those in urgent need.

We made sure that health services in Christchurch – and throughout the country – were prepared to support those injured in the earthquake. And we accepted many generous offers of support from around the world.

And hasn’t Bob Parker done an outstanding job using his superb communication skills to keep the whole New Zealand community apprised of developments.

According to Treasury the total cost of damage from the latest earthquake is likely to be two or three times the $5 billion estimated cost of the quake on 4 September last year, including private insurance and government costs.

 He went on to say….

It is obvious that we are responding and working as one country, one people. That’s tremendous. Certainly the government is providing the sheet anchor but individuals and communities have come together and are contributing tangible help to those in need beyond our immediate area.

 There would be a huge benefit for us all if we could continue long after Christchurch is rebuilt to all paddle our waka in one direction for the collective good. I am optimistic that this terrible event in Christchurch will mark a turning point in the way we work together into the future. There is a lesson here for us all and applying the lesson would be a wonderful epitaph for all who lost their lives on 21 February 2011.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | March 2, 2011

the mail always gets through

Great to hear this morning that NZ Post has started delivering mail around parts of Christchurch.

No power, no toilets, house falling down around you, but hey, here’s a bill and a Warehouse flier.

Sarcasm aside, it is one aspect of normal life Cantabrians will be pleased to see.

Every person I have spoken to in the past week knows someone in Christchurch. Even one lady today said her husband had cousins down there they contacted over the weekend (probably not for the past 10 years, but hey, you’ve had a natural disaster). Again, what is it with the sarcasm today Kate?

Listeners to Jamie Mackay’s Farming Show were treated to three minutes of rivettingkatetaylor this afternoon.  A bit about Young Farmers doing their bit as part of the Federated Farmers-led Farmy Army (gotta love the name – it probably comes from the same staff member who coined a Lord of the Rings phrase for the Horizons One Plan … “one plan to rule them all…”) , the fact I used to work for CTV (albeit in another building) and then into some of the media coverage of the events down there.

I shouldn’t have named one reporter, she wasn’t the worst by any means, but she asked a young guy who had just made it out of the CTV rumble “You’re covered in blood, and dust, and smoke… how are you feeling?” That shouldn’t be in quote marks because it might not be exactly the way she asked it. Her replied….. “alive”.  Stark. Like the reporter at Aramoana near Dunedin in 1990 (shall remain nameless, but not me) who asked the man who’d lost son or daughter, an in-law and a grandchild how he felt. To which he replied, “how the bloody hell do you think I feel?”  Too right.  That’s a phrase that should be banned from all media lips forever unless you’ve just won the Rugby World Cup.

The unedited footage from TV3 straight after the quake was a bit much to handle. What if someone had come out with absolutely mind-numbingly horrific injuries or that PGC building had collapsed further with that nice lady sitting on top.

Even the Press managed to get a paper out the next day and had footage on its website that night.

 It’s all a far cry from the Hawke’s Bay earthquake of 1931.  A 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck the region at 10.47am on Tuesday, February 3, 1931, killing 256 people. It remains NZ’s deadliest natural disaster. For how much longer? They are expecting 200+ in Christchurch despite modern building codes etc.

Within four days of the quake, cinemas around NZ offered news specials about the disaster. Amazing. And here we were, within an hour, getting live coverage.  Like the Press, the papers of HB did their best to keep publishing. Immediately after the 1931 earthquake, the only published editions of the region’s papers were daily news bulletins, as the newspaper offices and plant were badly damaged by the quake.  (While the Press building in Cathedral Square suffered major damage, the actual printing press was several kilometres away from the CBD.)

Both the Hawke’s Bay Tribune (which lost a reporter under masonry from the Post Office) and Napier’s Daily Telegraph, which also lost a staff member inside the building, both had news sheets out with two days. The first full-sized paper wasn’t published for a couple of weeks.

(The Hawke’s Bay Herald building was destroyed and its paper was printed by the HB Tribune until the two merged in 1937 anyway (later merged with Napier’s Daily Telegraph to become the current HB Today).

Anyhoooooooo, like back in 1931, people were expected to be able to cope on their own for three days.  The lovely man on the telly has been telling us to be prepared for months and months and months now. We should be prepared to last on our own for at least three days!

I have the food, blankets, torches, battery-operated radio and water in a wheelie bin out in the woodshed if we can’t get into the house in a state of emergency.

Rural people tend to be more well prepared anyway, because we’re used to only going to the shops once a week or once a fortnight or less frequently than that even.  We have fully stocked pantries, usually vegetable gardens, we have lots of bits and pieces on the farm to fashion a makeshift fireplace and there are usually muttons running around in the paddock.

Are you prepared?

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | March 2, 2011

thought for the day

 

What you believe and focus on becomes your reality. If you go out looking for trouble, you’ll find it. If you focus on happiness, it will appear. Once you decide what you’re looking for, your brain will go to work to find it and make it your reality.

~Michael McMillan

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | March 1, 2011

Young Farmers get in there

In days gone by, Christchurch was my home. I didn’t grow up there but turned pub-age there (it was 20 back then!) and served an internship at Canterbury Television (at its old building, not the one that fell down).

I was also a member of West Melton Young Farmers at the time. It’s great to see Young Farmers getting stuck in alongside the student army of volunteers. Of course YF come complete with farm machinery and tractors, which are no doubt a strange site on residential streets (but no stranger than tonnes and tonnes of silt aye?)

stolen from NZ Young Farmers facebook page

Just one of the mammoth tasks following the Feb22 quake is to remove huge amounts of silt and sand from private properties. The Christchurch City Council has set the goal to have all private homes cleared of mess from liquefaction by the end of the week



NZ Young Farmers is calling on its extensive network of past and present members to help reach this goal, aid in the clean-up and bring a little hope to the residents of Christchurch. Volunteers are being asked to donate their time tomorrow and Thursday.

  

NZYF member Lisa Chapman is helping to coordinate the Federated Farmers-led relief effort and says that more volunteers are needed. She says there are alot of people out there who want to help but don’t know the best way to go about it.

 

“Come to the A&P grounds, sign up and we’ll point you in the right direction. It’s really rewarding and good to know that you’re making a difference in people’s lives following a very traumatic experience,” she said in a NZYF press release.

 

Volunteers are asked to call NZYF National Office to advise of their desire to help and then register at the Canterbury A&P Showgrounds any day this week by 10am, with a focus on Wednesday and Thursday for major clean-up days. For those wishing to stay at the Showgrounds, a tent and sleeping bag is needed, food will be provided but volunteers should bring as much drinking water as possible. Volunteers are also being asked to bring shovels and strong wheelbarrows; small tractors and diggers are also needed.

 

Pendarves Club chair Matt Whiteman has been helping out with the relief effort too. Matt doesn’t know anyone badly affected by the quake but just wanted to help the people of Christchurch.

 

“People are just so stoked to have us there, they can’t quite believe that people from all walks of life have just come together to help – they’re just overwhelmed by the support. “Some of these areas are pretty devastated and it’s a big task ahead of us so we can always do with more help. If you’re able to give a day or two of your time; get in touch with NZYF and make a difference.”

 

The Young Farmers press release went on to say: For those who might be unable to assist with the physical labour but still want to help; Selwyn District Council also needs volunteers to accompany building inspectors as welfare officers. Every house in East Christchurch needs to be visited and the welfare officer’s role is to check on how people are doing for at least the next two weeks.

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 28, 2011

No opportunity lost by spammers (via Homepaddock)

Some people just deserve to be padlocked on the main street and stoned.

The email from the bank started sympathetically: Dear ANZ Customer Our thoughts are with everyone affected by the earthquake on February 22. If you’re a ANZ customer in the affected area, we know you’ve got a lot going on at the moment and we’re doing everything we can to make things easier for you. Any ANZ Home Loan and Business Banking customers that live in the Christchurch area who have been affected by the earthquake will be offered: * three … Read More

via Homepaddock

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 28, 2011

toilet talk for young quake victims

Psychologist Nigel Latta was on TVNZ’s Breakfast this morning – one of his pearls of wisdom was telling children (in Christchurch)  the aftershocks are the earth farting. I love it.

(Nigel fronts the Politically Incorrect Parenting Show.)

Basically you tell them there’s a build up of pressure and the earth had to fart to let it out (he also made a side mention of liquefaction in this direction, but please, let’s not go there!)

Make it a game in your house – instead of cowering with aftershocks, the kids run around yelling “stop farting! stop farting!”

Why not. Toilet talk (as in the use of pee, wee, poo, fart….anything that drives under 10s to giggle) drives me nuts under normal circumstances but not in this case.

The business/work world has stopped in Christchurch. It will remind us all, hopefully, that work is not the be-all and end-all. Family must come first. All the time – not just in the aftermath of a massive natural disaster.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 27, 2011

silver lining (of a sort)

Having just had time to scan news sites for stories other than those earthquake related, I find news of Hone Harawira resigning from the Maori Party.

I’m happy – not about his move, I couldn’t care less what he does. I applaud what the Maori Party have done and tried to do since working with the National Party (which isn’t a white supremist organisation, Hone).

Hone has made racist comments in the media for too long. 

His news was overshadowed. Good.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 27, 2011

writing about the ChCh quake

Why haven’t I written about the Christchurch quake – now five days old? I don’t know what to say.

I typed a lot of information into a blog on the Tuesday afternoon then in a blurry-eyed haze, deleted it all. I was repeating information from radio and TV to get hits on my blog. I had nothing new to add, nothing new to say. It is horrific and it brings a lump to my throat thinking about it.

The death toll has risen from 10 to 25 to 68 to 75 to 110 to 145 with 200 still missing. Incomprehensible. Unbelievable. So, so, so, so sad.

I did have moments of imaginable terror as I thought of my sister and her family in Christchurch. I did fear the worst when I couldn’t reach them. But gradually over the space of the first afternoon, along with thousands of other New Zealanders, the news came that friends and family were safe (and friends of family and family of friends). Others weren’t so lucky.

Around me I know of people who know people who are missing. Firefighters who are putting their names on the list for a 24-hour’s-notice callup to head south. Civil Defence and Red Cross people heading south to help their counterparts cope with what must be the most harrowing experience of their lives.

The media’s intrusion into this has been annoying me. Yes they are doing a great service at the same time and like thousands of others, I am glued to every update on the internet, TV or radio. But they just keep going with the prodding of some people.  Going to the wedding of a woman from the CTV building. She was happy and smiling in the interview afterwards until the reporter asked her if it was especially poignant not having one of her colleagues there with them. Bang, there go the tears again. Could they have not just mentioned it in the story and not reminded her of it? I’m sure it wasn’t far from her mind anyway.

Some journalists pretending to be medical staff so they could get into patients. Some journalists asking completely naff questions of the Prime Minister or Bill English at the Civil Defence bunker in Wellington. I can’t remember exactly what they were – but you could almost hear the interviewee thinking “you’re joking. You dick, that’s your question?”

Questions need to be answered about why the CTV and PGC buildings collapsed the way they did. But within the first week of one of New Zealand’s worst natural disasters is not the time. Wait until all families have loved ones safe and sound (in all manner of speaking) before recriminations please.

The woman who sat talking to a dying “Joe” on the rubble-strewn Cashel St is probably wishing she’d kept it all on the down low.

And yet, I remain glued to every “Breaking News” flashing on the screens (I think it has been there permanently since Tuesday).  I loved Mrs Malcolm and her four daughters. She is such an awesome, positive lady. Although I am no Robyn (actually I’m more like Jo – the reporter sister 🙂 ) I can imagine my mum would be a bit like her in the face of adversity. Mum would probably have a vegetable garden growing in the window box of her hospital room and floral art arrangements in each welfare centre. The world needs more Mrs Malcolms (and more mum like mine).  (Mum’s in Dunedin, but she got a call on Tuesday afternoon just in case. Love you. xx) 

I have enjoyed this morning’s coverage by Simon Dallow as I ate my breakfast and did last night’s dishes (mowing the lawns is such a menial task when there is such a drama unfolding in our back yard). SPCA and vets about pets and wandering dogs, Red Cross about the unity of all the organisations working in the welfare centres (Salvation Army, Victim Support…), the engineers and Urban Search and Rescue  (these people are awesome).

Opera at Oruawharo is on this afternoon (an amateur performance by locals (we’re just lucky a local married a German opera singer 🙂 ) at a beautiful, historic homestead near Takapau).  Hopefully organisers will be handing around a bucket for the earthquake victims. I have been meaning to, and will, donate to both the Red Cross appeal and Bob Parker’s Mayoral Fund (now there’s a man who needs a break).

Our lives go on while those in Canterbury have had the pause button hit for them.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 21, 2011

well done blasting those possums

A pat on the back for the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council.

During a visit to Hawke’s Bay on Friday (to open a new $20million extension to the McCain’s factory) Minister of Agriculture David Carter heard all about the successful possum control programmes happening in the region.

The cooperation of the farming community has been credited with the success of the possum control (both the Council’s PCA programme or Possum Control Areas and the Animal Health Board’s programmes).

 The PCA programme involves farmers working in groups to manage traps and bait stations to keep possums to a low level . In the longer running PCA projects, possum levels are now at 2% or less, which means for every 100 monitoring traps only two or fewer possums are caught.

As rivettingkatetaylor does some work for both the Council’s biosecurity team, through its Spotlight newsletter, and also for the Animal Health Board as secretary of the Hawke’s Bay TB Free committee, I was invited along to this occasion (a presentation at the Council then morning tea with some farmers at the dog trial rooms at Kahuranaki Station). As well as the nice cup of tea and huge slice of chocolate cake ( 🙂 ) it was a pleasure to see members of our farming community warmly welcome three politicians into their fold.

Mr Carter was joined by great local MPs Chris Tremain and Craig Foss. Discussion wasn’t limited to possums though, or the weather, with one discussion revolving around the demise of Bob’s pub at Lincoln after the earthquake! I know politicians can put on the public face to impress who ever it is they’re talking to at the time, but I beliebe the enthusiasm shown by the three in their discussions with these local farmers was genuine. Comments were heard to that effect after they left as well – one saying they couldn’t believe how easy the Minister was to talk to (they are just normal people, affter all!)

On a business note, the Minister was told about the programmes and their benefits for both TB control and biodiversity, as well as research being done into being able to prove the economic benefits of the work. Mr Carter said he was also impressed with the way the Council was involving urban ratepayers – with possum control happening on Napier Hill and the outskirts/bush areas of Havelock North for biodiversity reasons. 

I can’t tell you too much more, or show you anymore photos, because I’m getting paid to put them elsewhere 🙂  but I will say Kahuranaki made a great backdrop!

Minister of Agriculture David Carter and local farmer Hugh Pearse with one end of Kahuranaki in the background

Now I’m off to take photos of industrial sites looking after their stormwater drains….

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | February 10, 2011

the drone in the background

Literally, the drone in the background.

The drone of a top dressing plane humming away on paddocks nearby as another muggy, still day envelopes Central Hawke’s Bay.

I find this noise ironic right now. I have not heard it all day. But now I am writing a story about aerial sowing. Funny that.

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