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Cut-off farmers give thanks for Gabrielle relief donations

Months after a national relief effort, a Hawke’s Bay farming couple cut off after Cyclone Gabrielle have given thanks to the people and the generosity that helped get them through.

 

Anna and Nick Dinneen, who farm sheep and beef in Puketitiri about 50 kilometers northwest of Napier, woke up on February 14 to the ominous sounds of rushing water, and rocks rumbling down the nearby hillsides.

 

 

“It was like having the Waikato River suddenly emerge on your farm - the roar was pretty sobering,” Anna said.

 

“It was just incredible,” Nick said, “the slips were everywhere, all the fences were washed out, it was pretty surreal really.”

 

They still had cell coverage and as the morning went on, the couple received the alarming news that many bridges in the region had been washed away.

 

Access to their property became impossible after an embankment was scoured away by the river.

 

Beyond that, Rissington bridge, on the main route between Puketitiri and Napier, was completely washed away.

A property engulfed in silt near the Rissington Bridge, after flooding during Cyclone Gabrielle.

A property engulfed in silt near the Rissington Bridge, after flooding during Cyclone Gabrielle.

 

Isolated on their farm, the couple began the daunting task of trying to assess the damage – nothing short of a disaster.

 

Animals were washed away, about 20km of fencing was lost, and slips had come down across almost every track on their property.

Looking south over farmlands near Puketitiri, with deep slip scars across the landscape, caused by Cyclone Gabrielle.

Looking south over farmlands near Puketitiri, with deep slip scars across the landscape, caused by Cyclone Gabrielle.

 

“Yeah … it is challenging, after a storm like Gabrielle - it really knocks you back, and you think, oh God, what do I do first, and how do we get through it?” Nick said.

 

For the next three weeks the couple would be totally isolated on their farm, and were cut off from town for about two months.

 

HELP IS ON THE WAY

 

Across the region, as people were coming to terms with the scale of the damage, plans were being made to get relief to people like Nick and Anna.

 

As well as support from government agencies, including Civil Defence and the Red Cross, organisations like The Evergreen Foundation were swinging into action.

Tumu Group Managing Director and The Evergreen Foundation Trustee John O'Sullivan, centre, with Michelle O'Sullivan, left, and Tumu Transport Manager Bevan Hall.

Tumu Group Managing Director and The Evergreen Foundation Trustee John O'Sullivan, centre, with Michelle O'Sullivan, left, and Tumu Transport Manager Bevan Hall.

 

The Evergreen Foundation Trustee and Tumu Group Managing Director John O’Sullivan said a $100,000 initial relief fund was created the first weekend after Gabrielle, targeting the horticultural and agricultural sectors.

 

A cross-sector industry panel was also established to manage the allocation of the funds.

 

“We quickly realised there were a lot of cut-off communities, so initially we were co-ordinating the gathering of things they needed, and getting it flown into those areas,” John said.

 

At first, that included helicopter and fixed-wing flights, carrying supplies like fuel, pet food, satellite phones, groceries and farming gear - and even the occasional box of beer.

A supply drop facilitated by The Evergreen Foundation.

A supply drop facilitated by The Evergreen Foundation.

 

John said the Evergreen board was always conscious that their efforts should complement those of Civil Defence and Red Cross, rather than overlap them.

 

As the relief fund grew, with donations from many different organisations and businesses, the scope of the relief they could offer widened.

 

On top of supplying food and supplies to isolated residents, they also helped fund security systems for a community concerned about looting, as well as supporting many community events, which helped those communities come together and support each other.

 

The Foundation also helped ensure students could continue their education, by giving boarding schools funding to sort out logistics for affected pupils.

 

It also supported Hawke’s Bay Clean-Up teams, that were out removing silt from inundated properties, and donated fencing gear to farmers to help them get back on track.

A pie chart showing where funds donated to The Evergreen Foundation's Cyclone Gabrielle relief fund have been used to date.

A pie chart showing where funds donated to The Evergreen Foundation's Cyclone Gabrielle relief fund have been used to date.

 

John said Evergreen has a particular focus on the agricultural and horticultural sectors, and in the weeks following Gabrielle, it realised the need for a programme to help growers retrieve and clean their unsanitary silt-covered produce bins, which were scattered across neighbouring properties.

 

Evergreen’s bin programme has so far collected, cleaned and returned 11,000 bins free of charge, with many more to go.

 



“They were long days for the team, but satisfying - because you knew there was a need, and as a part of the community, you know there’s a time to stand up." 

John O'Sullivan - The Evergreen Foundation Trustee

 

 

Back in Puketitiri, the Dinneens said those flights, and the constant checking in with them, made them feel a lot better about their situation.

 

“I would say, in the first five days, we had more choppers in here than we had cars in the previous five years,” Anna laughed.

 

GETTING MONEY TO THE RIGHT PLACE

 

One of the larger donations to Evergreen’s relief fund was made by ANZ New Zealand, which gave an initial donation of $550,000.

 

Those funds came from the $3 million ANZ pledged to support horticulture and agriculture groups, businesses and Iwi organisations with the response and recovery following Cyclone Gabrielle.

  

ANZ CEO Antonia Watson said, as New Zealand’s largest bank, ANZ recognised the need to step up and help Hawke’s Bay and Tairāwhiti communities when they needed it most.

 

“No one knows their region better than locals, so when we were choosing where to donate we were really mindful of that,” Antonia said.

 

“After seeing what The Evergreen Foundation has accomplished, and continues to accomplish in Hawke’s Bay and Tairawhiti, we couldn’t be happier.”

A farmer receives a relief donation at an event which was supported by The Evergreen Foundation.

A farmer receives a relief donation at an event which was supported by The Evergreen Foundation.

 

The Evergreen Foundation Trustee Brendan O’Sullivan said ANZ’s donation couldn’t have come at a better time, as when it came through, the amount of funding available was beginning to dip.

 

“We’re incredibly thankful to all of those people and organisations who have donated funds, and we’re really proud to have been able to coordinate that relief,” Brendan said.

 

For those on the receiving end, sometimes it can be unclear exactly where the help is coming from – but as Nick and Anna said, it is always appreciated.

 

“You never really knew who had funded it, whether it was Red Cross or Civil Defence or some other private funder - but if anyone ever gets the chance to donate to something like that, just know that there are people out there on the receiving end, and they are really, really grateful,” Anna said.

 

“It was very good community support - people looking after one another,” Nick said.

 

“A big thank you - come and have a beer.”

 

More information on the relief work The Evergreen Foundation has done is available on their website here.

The Dinneen family, on their farm Inangatahi Station in Puketitiri.

The Dinneen family, on their farm Inangatahi Station in Puketitiri - from left, Anna, Nick, Sam and Ralph.

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