Thousands of New Zealanders are more prepared for a natural disaster than they were before the Christchurch earthquakes - but the shockwaves have been barely felt in Auckland.
A survey of 8550 people has found that one out of eight (12 per cent) of Auckland households have all three items required for "basic" disaster preparation - three days' supply of food and water and a household emergency plan.
That was barely changed from 10 per cent in Statistics NZ's previous survey in 2008-09, and was by far the lowest in the country.
Basic preparedness almost doubled in Canterbury between the two surveys, from 15 per cent to 28 per cent. In Wellington, the figure jumped from 18 per cent to 24 per cent.
The latest survey, taken between April 2010 and March last year, straddled the first Christchurch earthquake in September 2010 and ended just after the disastrous magnitude 6.3 February quake.