Fire investigators Jason Goffin, left, and Gary Beer search the ashes of the Taemaro Bay home with help from neighbour Gary Watson. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Two Far North men are being hailed as heroes in their isolated coastal community after dragging a kuia from a burning home and performing CPR until emergency services arrived.
Sadly, the 72-year-old died despite their efforts — and those of other neighbours plus the St John medics, volunteer firefighters and police who responded to Monday night's blaze.
Yesterday investigators were still sifting through the ashes hoping to find the cause of the fire at Taemaro Bay, on the east coast between Mangonui and Taupō Bay.
There was no power to the century-old house with the woman relying on candles for light and gas for cooking.
Gary Watson was among the first to notice the blaze just after 10pm from his home up the hill.
''I yelled and yelled and I heard her murmur. Then when I looked into the fire I saw her legs. I went in, grabbed her legs and pulled her out. As soon as I got her out the front just took off and the house pretty much collapsed.''
The kuia was still conscious enough to tell Watson off for being rough as he dragged her outside.
Meanwhile, Mark Peterson was asleep a few houses away when the sound of Watson's teenage son tearing past on a motorbike woke him.
With no cellphone coverage in the bay the young Watson was on his way to one of the few homes in the bay with a landline phone so he could raise the alarm.
Seeing a red glow outside Peterson jumped out of bed and raced to the fire, where he found Watson calling for help as the kuia lost consciousness.
The former firefighter started CPR while another neighbour, who did not want to be named, started administering shocks with the bay's defibrillator in a bid to restart her heart.
They continued until St John paramedics arrived.
Volunteer firefighters responded from Mangonui and Taupō Bay but with the settlement located at the end of a long, steep, private road, there was nothing left to save once they arrived.
The two men were described as heroes in the tight-knit community yesterday but it was a term they rejected.
''It's just normal, it's natural instinct. If you see anybody in a fire and you have a moment to save them, you jump in and do it,'' Watson said.
''I think we were just helping each other out,'' Peterson added.
The Advocate has chosen not to name the woman until police have informed all next of kin.
She is understood to have two children in the Wellington area who were yesterday on their way north.
She returned to ancestral land about 15 years ago and had lived alone in the oldest house in Taemaro Bay since her husband's death some years ago.
Taemaro resident Sandra Heihei said the whole community gathered together to help, from those who brought tea and biscuits at 2am to the kaumātua who arrived at first light to bless the site.
She was ''really, really thankful'' to the emergency services who had attended, despite Taemaro's challenging access.
She described the deceased as an active and kind-hearted woman who ''gave and shared a lot without saying anything''.
With her children living far away she became something of a communal nanny with locals taking turns to mow her lawns, take her shopping and bring her books.
Though her home was small and in poor condition she refused to leave.
''She loved Taemaro and that house. That's why she'd never leave.''
While Watson and Peterson were unable to save her life, they saved her body which meant she could have a proper farewell. The details of her tangi had yet to be decided yesterday.