On July 29 Havelock North woman Olivia Nysse was shaken awake by a powerful earthquake, while asleep on the small Indonesian island of Gili Air.
She jumped out of bed, and took off on a bike up to high ground, worried about the risk of a tsunami, but none came. Twenty people died, and hundreds more were injured in the quake.
But Mother Nature had more in store for the islands of Indonesia. The earthquake had simply been a foreshock for a more powerful one, which hit on August 5, thrusting the island of Lombok 25cm out of the sea and leaving devastation in its wake.
Nysse, who has been practising yoga and diving in Indonesia for seven months, says the island is in desperate need.
"It is a crisis here, we need help."
More than 430 people died in the quake, with 200,000 now homeless and struggling to access basics such as food and water.