logo
Tasman begins to regroup after Motupiko River bursts banks

Tasman begins to regroup after Motupiko River bursts banks

RNZ News04-07-2025
Across the sodden Tasman district, with rain still falling, the clean-up continues.
Almost every winter, a flood hits Quinney's Bush Camp, with the Motupiko River spilling into the back of the holiday park, while they are closed.
Manager Andrew Quinney said he saw the forecast and did their usual flood prep last week, before hunkering down with his partner and their six-month-old baby, but this time, the water swept through the front of the property.
"It did come up quickly," he said. "It was a good five minutes from almost nothing to probably shin deep and flowing quite fast.
Andrew Quinney faces months of mahi to tidy up, after the Motupiko River flooded across his bush camp.
Photo:
RNZ/Tess Brunton
"Then it just got worse and worse, to the point where it was almost a metre, probably in some parts, more than a metre high."
Quinney tried to move their animals to higher ground, risking his life to protect their guinea pigs.
The flood was the biggest he could remember, with the stream out front joining up with the river, after it breached its banks.
For 24 hours, they were trapped on the property, with water to their doorway most of the time.
Now they were facing a huge clean-up, with lots of damaged fences and equipment, debris and muck, but their campground bathrooms and kitchen were OK.
"It's quite daunting, looking around and seeing all of the damage, and all of the mess you need to clean up."
Quinney said they were fortunate to have insurance, as he expected it would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to clean up and hoped to get some contractors to help ease the load.
They aimed to open as usual on Labour Weekend.
"We have had a lot of damage here in the campground, but I don't want people to forget that it's the whole valley," he said. "The whole valley's been destroyed.
"Everyone in the valley's experienced loss, experienced damage and we've all got a lot of work to clean up."
Nearby in the Korere Tophouse Valley, Tarsh and Daniel Newport's farm was inundated with water, and they lost chunks of their land to the Motupiko River.
They expected more than 100mm of rain, but they got more than 250mm in less than two days.
"You know, when you can hear [the river] from your house, which is probably half a kilometre away, when you hear boulders bowling down the river, you know there's a big volume of water and you certainly don't get much sleep," Daniel Newport said.
Daniel Newport surveys the damage to his farm on the banks of the Motupiko River.
Photo:
RNZ/Mark Papalii
The flooded river not only scoured out their paddocks in several places, but it washed away 200 tonnes of rock, installed recently by the council for river protection.
The couple had experienced floods before, but nothing like this. They were cut off for about three days and Civil Defence was unable to check in on them for almost a week.
"We'd seen the river come into our property in places we hadn't seen before, and it was quite deep already and we had damage to our gullies, so that's our hill access," Tarsh Newport said. "The second day, the damage and the amount of land we lost was just mind-boggling really."
Korere Tophouse Valley farmers Tarsh and Daniel Newport had land wiped out by flood.
Photo:
RNZ / Mark Papalii
Along with losing land to the river, the floodwaters wiped out access to the half of the Newport farm in the hills, paddocks were covered in rocks, and some fences were missing or damaged.
They were grateful their home was unscathed and they didn't lose any stock, and said it would be a case of chipping away at the recovery work.
"Luckily, it's a time of year when dairy farmers aren't quite calving and milking cows yet, or not quite lambing, so that's fortunate from that respect," Daniel said. "You've just got to count your blessings, look for the positive things and take care of your neighbours."
In Tapawera's main street, Mackenzie Laurie has served up hot drinks and food for residents from her coffee cart, and hearing how they have been affected.
Mackenzie Laurie has heard many of the stories from people struggling with storm damage.
Photo:
RNZ / Mark Papalii
"I'm seeing broken people come in here, because their whole yard and garden is just mud and rocks and sand now. It's awful actually.
"All along the side of the river, the whole river just burst its banks and spread all down the main road. It lifted bits of road like pieces of paper, so much is destroyed."
Tapawera Campground manager Julie Jacobson said the flooding a week ago caused sewage problems and the town was still contending with a boil water notice.
Julie Jacobson and Aaron Ray are among those still contending with a boil water notice.
Photo:
RNZ / Mark Papalii
"The toilet waste pipes bubbled up with water, backing up from the river, so water was just pouring out of actual piping to the sewage treatment plant, which is just across the road over there."
The campground itself, which had 14 people staying when the heavy rain hit, was saved from worse flooding by the Great Taste Trail, which was atop a bank that ran between the camp and the Motueka River.
"If it hadn't have been there, we would have been underwater."
At the local community centre and op shop, Della Webby has worked non-stop for the past week to co-ordinate the flood relief.
She works part-time as a community connector for Tapawera Connect, but after the flooding, she has become a point of contact for those in need of help.
"I've just been here taking calls from people who need help and people offering it, and just trying to get help to where it's needed the most."
She said everyone in the small town, which had around of about 350 residents was affected in some way.
"There's obviously the farmers who have been devastated, losing their fencing, losing hectares of their paddocks, changing rivers, but there's a lot of people living in cabins and tiny homes and small dwellings that have been inundated.
Tapawera Connect's Dalla Webby: "It's hitting home what's happened to them."
Photo:
RNZ / Mark Papalii
"They are the ones I am trying to hep the most and the some of the locals who have had the river through their houses."
Webby said she still heard from people in the surrounding valleys, who lived without internet and cell phones, and only had landlines, which in some cases had been wiped out by flooding, so she would make sure their details were passed on to Civil Defence.
"It's just really emotional," she said. "A lot of people have been running on adrenaline through this time, so I'm getting more calls now where people are really upset and feeling the strain.
"It's hitting home what's happened to them."
She said more wellbeing support was needed now than there had been and she was doing everything she could to make sure that those needing help were getting it.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Better prepare to help those displaced in natural disasters
Better prepare to help those displaced in natural disasters

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Better prepare to help those displaced in natural disasters

A car submerged during the Auckland Anniversary floods in February 2023. Photo: Supplied Auckland Emergency Management has told the coroner's inquiry into 2023's deadly storms they're better prepared to help displaced people in a natural disaster. The inquest is looking into the 19 weather-related fatalities from the two storms nationwide, including three men who died in the months following the weather events. Hearings began in June, and this week continues to scrutinise the emergency response. Auckland Emergency Management (AEM) general manager Adam Maggs said they had now identified and fortified 132 venues, the majority of which were council owned buildings, to be used as Civil Defence Centres (CDC) should another natural disaster arise. A CDC is an evacuation centre where people can seek shelter and provisions during a natural disaster. "We work with Parks and Recreation facilities and we look at all the amenities that are within that facility," he said. "Depending on the type of hazards, so flooding is one bit, but if we had a tsunami or volcanic event we can now locate the most appropriate venue based on the services and amenities it provides. "Now, we've got a lot great visibility around flooding risk and the locations of our CDCs." Maggs said in addition to these potential CDC locations, 10 mobile caches were dispersed around the Auckland region, containing provisions such and food and bedding. Maggs said these changes had arisen after council faced major challenges on the day of the Auckland Anniversary floods on January 27th 2023. In particular was AEM's struggle to establish CDCs which were safe locations for evacuees to go during an emergency. "Coordinating the response on the 27 January 2023 faced a number of significant challenges," he said. "The Incident Management Team meetings had to be remote as a number of were outside of Auckland and the flooded roads meant asking people to travel to a physical location to coordinate the response could have put them in danger. "Standing up CDCs on the night was also a very complicated task as many council facilities that would normally be utilised were either unserviceable or could not be accessed due to flooded roads or flooding around the location. "Along with the response manager and logistics manager on the night, I was helping work with our community facilities team to try and find serviceable CDC locations. We did this until approximately 4am," Maggs said. He said the reason staff worked until the early hours of the morning was because of difficulties in reaching these locations because of roads flooding. "It didn't help that the Area Managers couldn't physically get on site, in several cases our response teams did reconnaissance trips in their vehicles and then were later able to identify, look you can't use that facility, it's not safe and we would go back to the drawing board." Maggs said some newly established CDCs had since been put to use, with AEM opening four CDCs during the response to this month's tsunami warning, providing shelter to people who live on boats. Auckland Emergency Management has also bolstered its full-time staff, now employing 45 people compared to the 33 of the 2023 storms while more than 500 volunteers have also been brought on. The Auckland phase of the inquest into the deaths of those who lost their lives during the two devastating and deadly storms of 2023 continues on Thursday. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

NEMA identifies mobile phone alert problems during tsunami warning
NEMA identifies mobile phone alert problems during tsunami warning

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

NEMA identifies mobile phone alert problems during tsunami warning

Photo: RNZ The National Emergency Management Agency has revealed what caused people to get multiple alerts to their phones - or no alerts at all - during the tsunami scare caused by the 8.8 earthquake off Russia last month. The answer boils down to a combination of individual device settings, cell tower coverage and where the tsunami alert was sent - for example, those living far away from coastal areas were not included in the alerts. "We know explanations are little consolation for those who were awoken by alerts in the middle of the night," said NEMA director Civil Defence Emergency Management John Price in a review the agency released on Wednesday. "We are very sorry that this happened, and we're looking at ways to address this in future. However, we make no apologies for getting the message out to keep people safe." "NEMA only issued two alerts - at 4.13pm on 30 July and 6.30am on 31 July - but some people received multiple alerts during the night. We've discovered this is likely related to overnight software updates and device settings. "As for those who didn't receive alerts, tsunami alerts are only sent to coastal areas, so if you were inland then we didn't send you the message because you were not at risk." NEMA's John Price. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Some people reported receiving up to 50 mobile alerts. Marlborough resident Terry Costello told RNZ he got the first alert on that Wednesday afternoon, followed by many more. "By the time I went to bed at 10pm, they were still going on and there'd been 32 of them by then. And I turned my phone off at 10pm and went to bed. And I turned it on again at 7am this morning and since then I've had another 16. So that's 48 altogether I've had." NEMA laid out several reasons why this might have happened: "As we don't have any control over how individual devices behave, we can't completely stop these issues from happening again - but we are looking at ways we can reduce their impact," Price said. Alerts use cell broadcast technology known as geotargeting to send alerts through cell towers in a selected area which can be the entire country or down to a small section of a city. "We identify the cell towers from all three telecommunications companies in the hazard area, draw a shape around them, and send the message to the area inside that shape," Price said. Some reported not getting the alerts at the same time as others. People might have received the 4.13pm or 6.30am alerts later because they entered the broadcast area. "We continued to transmit these alert broadcasts for several hours. This was so people entering the area later still got them. You might have got an alert when commuting home at 5.30pm, or into work at 8am. An emergency alert sent on Thursday, warning of strong currents and surges following the Russia earthquake. Photo: RNZ "The most likely answer is that you were outside the coastal areas we sent the alert to. But then you entered the broadcast zone at a later time, triggering the alert on your phone." If a person's phone was off or in flight mode they would receive the alert once it was turned back on. Some may not have gotten an alert at all during the tsunami scare, but that could be because it was aimed only at coastal regions - which admittedly covers most of the country, but not all of it, Price said. "Do you live in Hamilton? Palmerston North? Geraldine? Or perhaps an inland suburb of a coastal city? Then don't worry - we never sent it to you." In some households, there were reports that one person got the alert but another person did not. This is typically due to being on the border of the geotargeted broadcast area, Price said. "The geotargeted areas aren't a clean border. It depends on where the cell towers are and how far they transmit. "If some people in your household get the alert and others don't, you're probably right on the border and those who didn't get the alert may have a different network provider or are connected to a different cell tower than those who did." NEMA also has a section on their website where people can troubleshoot issues with alerts. The second tsunami alert that came at 6.30am on 31 July also drew a lot of criticism at the time on social media, with one person on Reddit calling it "an anxiety inducing alarm clock". However, NEMA said it has a statutory responsibility to warn of the ongoing risks as people began their day. NEMA chief executive Dave Gawn defended the early hour, writing in an editorial that "this is where the tough decision making comes in". "We knew we would wake some people up. We knew there'd be criticism. But we also knew the tsunami activity - while not spectacular or scary to witness - posed a grave risk to every one of those people. "We're hard-wired in our profession to plan for the worst case scenario. Imagine if a mother or father - having not received any alerts since the previous afternoon - assumed the threat had passed. Later that morning, they take their toddler to the beach for a paddle, only to helplessly watch their child get swept away by a fierce current." The magnitude 8.8 Russia earthquake caused tsunami alerts around the Pacific. Photo: AFP People cannot opt out of the mobile alerts, and the only way to avoid them is turning off your phone entirely or putting it in airplane mode. Price said that despite the kinks in last month's tsunami alert, NEMA had confidence in the system overall. "The good news is that there is no problem with the systems we use to send the messages," he said. "The alerts were effective in reaching the targeted coastal areas and getting the message out to stay away of the water while dangerous tsunami activity was happening. "We sent alerts to over three million mobile devices around the country, and when you consider the sheer variety of makes, models, and software, it's inevitable some variations will emerge at the receiver end. "After every emergency, we debrief to identify what went well and what needs to improve. We're working through this now to ensure we're doing the best we can at keeping people safe from tsunami and other threats." NEMA said they are still analysing the tsunami event and have not yet identified any potential changes in the system they may make. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Bluebridge cancels two sailings due to conditions in Cook Strait
Bluebridge cancels two sailings due to conditions in Cook Strait

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Bluebridge cancels two sailings due to conditions in Cook Strait

Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Bluebridge has cancelled two sailings on Wednesday due to rough conditions on Cook Strait. The service says its 1.30pm sailing this afternoon from Wellington and its 7.15pm ferry from Picton have been affected. Interislander sailings are going ahead as normal. Bluebridge says all affected customers have been notified. Several Cook Strait ferries were cancelled on Tuesday with a strong southerly weather system forecast to bring large swells to Cook Strait. The sailings of both Bluebridge and Interislander were affected. MetService also issued a strong wind watch for Wellington for Tuesday afternoon, with southerly winds forecast to approach severe gale in exposed areas. There is no similar warning in place for today. ⬆️The cold southerly flow is driving most of the shower cloud onto northern Hawkes Bay and Tairāwhiti Gisborne late this morning. Check weather radar here And all your forecasts Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store