“In just a quarter of an hour, I could see the tarseal of the road and then it was up to the running boards and we got out of here.”
The flood ruined two freezers in the garage.
“We will put the rubbish out when we have finished cleaning. We have plenty of time.
“It will be a while before we can fish again, at least a fortnight with all this mud.
“I washed a hell of a lot of it out of the garage - now we have to start the rest of the clean-up.
“From here to Portland Island and around to Napier, you are not going to do any rod fishing.
“We would have been here in Lion Street, definitely for fifty years, and we have never had had that water come down here.
“During Bola, it came level with the road. This is the first time we have had to get out of the house.
“I could mow the lawns with Gabrielle last year. We just have to fight the battle and carry on. Mother Nature has won this one.”
At the other end of Kopu Rd towards Spooners Point, Gail and Robert Campbell said they wished there had been some well-resourced river management in the lead-up to the weather event.
“Food was not an issue in those days and families were ten times bigger.
“The river was part of our staple, if you had too much, you just drove around and gave it to family, friends, strangers. We all did it, Pākehā and Māori.
“Things have changed so much.”
The Campbells said they had wondered about dredging the river regularly, which would bring jobs, but felt that also raised a question of where all the mud would go.