Source: Radio New Zealand
Flooding on Kio Kio Station Road, where residents were evacuated overnight. Supplied / Colin Payne
An Ōtorohanga resident has described his dramatic and unexpected rescue in the early hours of Saturday morning, after he awoke to find himself waist-deep in floodwater.
A state of emergency was declared in the district at 1am.
Kio Kio Station Road resident Colin Payne said waters close to three metres high had come through his property overnight.
The octogenarian had woken at about 4:30am to find his bedroom sodden.
“That had come in at, well, when I went to bed about 10 last night, it wasn’t even up to my barn, but it must have come up over the last four hours, four to five hours after that,” he said.
“I have an American barn and then attached to the American barn is a cottage and that is another metre higher than the American barn. So the actual increase in the water from the road to the top is approximately two-and-a-half to three metres.”
Payne called a neighbour and found out other residents on the rural road had woken to similar circumstances.
“Well, I must admit I was floundering for a few minutes until I found a torch because the power was off, and I then rang one of my neighbours and she thought I was away, so she hadn’t done anything, genuinely. And then I found out that they’d been rescuing people for a good hour or so.”
Like many of his neighbours, he was rescued soon after, using a boat that had been brought from Rotorua, and wading barefoot through water.
“They had to come around the front of my property and we had to remove a very large polythene screen so that we could get in and they brought the boat right onto the deck and then two or three of them helped me into it.”
Flooding on Kio Kio Station Road, where residents were evacuated overnight. Supplied / Colin Payne
The only thing Payne managed to take with him was his medication – everything else in his home is likely a write-off, he said.
“Totally and utterly devastated. It was more than wet. There was two big fridges, freezers rather, just floating. My TVs are all floating and the annoying part about it is I couldn’t reach it, but as I opened the door, my wallet floated past with all my credit cards and my driver’s licence and everything in it. So I hope the cops will be understanding if I get pulled up for a ticket.”
That was unlikely, as his large campervan had been “totally submerged”.
Kio Kio Station Road was about 3-4 kilometres long and had a number of lifestyle properties dotted along it, Payne said, estimating about 250 people would have needed rescuing.
“I would say some of them have even been worse than my place, and believe me, I’m pretty bad at my place, but I would say everybody else has suffered as badly as what I have,” he said.
“There’s little wee babies that have been hugging into their mums, there’s four families with young children right next door to me, and they’ve all been rescued. And I’ve spoken to quite a few of the others up and down and everybody’s feeling the same as what I am, you know, pretty devastated by what’s occurred. And you know, it is devastating and you can’t do a damn thing about it.”
Flooding on Kio Kio Station Road, where residents were evacuated overnight. Supplied / Colin Payne
Meanwhile, the deluge of rain continues.
“The thunder and lightning is still occurring, but the rain is, it’s very, very heavy and I don’t think we’re going to see any let up for two or three hours, maybe even longer. But yes, it’s torrential rain and it’s just about continuous torrential rain.”
Payne is no stranger to flooding, having been a jet boat rescuer himself in the 60s and 70s, and he commended those working overnight.
But now that the shock was wearing off, the last few hours were beginning to take a toll.
He was also concerned about his pet goat, Sophie.
“My greatest concern is for my dear little goat, Sophie. I just hope that Sophie has managed to get herself elevated somehow… most of the locals around my way know Sophie. In fact, quite a few of the locals come up and feed Sophie. She loves silverbeet, but I don’t think she’ll be getting any silverbeet today.”
Campers evacuated
A group of campers were evacuated from a campground amid the flooding, slips and heavy rain in Ōtorohanga overnight.
Joy Wickham told RNZ she was with a group of NZ Motor Home Association members who parked for the night at Ōtorohanga College on Friday.
The school is next to a river, and the waters rose up and into the school grounds, prompting the evacuation, Wickham said.
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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand