Saturday, February 26, 2011

Earthquake update from Christchurch

Hi guys,

First, thank you to Sis and Jill for your thoughts after you heard about the earthquakes here last Tuesday.

This might be a long one as I have a few photos but I'll start with the story.

Our day normally begins with me dropping the wife (Sonia) off to her to place of work and then on to my workplace, this whole journey takes us about 45 minutes but after the quake the journey in reverse took 4 and a 1/2 hours.

I was sitting at my desk in the office when the quake struck and the office moved about 5 feet back and forth and shook for just over 30 seconds. The official measure was 6.3 - BUT - this one was centred within 10 km from the city centre and only 5 km deep. As of right now, the death toll is 146.

Our back room at work
Back to the office, things were falling off the shelves, brochure shelf units fell over, some light fittings fell from the ceiling and as soon as it stopped shaking,

I made sure that the staff got out and away from the building.carpark before we wen't back in to secure a few things, lock the safe and get the hell out.
There were some pretty good aftershocks as we were all standing in the


I sent the staff home to be with their families and said I'd be in touch (this was Tuesday) and headed to pick up Sonia. She works on the 5th floor of a building and I was very concerned for her safety and all I wanted to do is get to her. I did after a couple of hours as traffic was crazy with everyone getting out of the city. I found her and we just stood there and hugged - it was very emotional.

We then headed home to see what sort of state our house was in and we could not get within 3 blocks of the house. Some roads were impassable and our street was under water.

Just around the corner from us
We had to roll up our pants and wade in. The water was halfway up our driveway and had not reached the house which we were very happy about. We got inside and we had crap everywhere. Stuff had fallen over, all our draws werer open, we have cracks in some of the tiles in the entrance hallway and our puppies were very happy to see us.




This is our street looking right from our driveway
That night I got out in the street and managed to clear the drain and shovelled a heap of the silt away - enough to clear most of the water at the end of the street. All that seemed to follow for the next few days was digging and moving the massive amount of silt from the liqufication that had occured - just crazy scenes!!

We were without water, power, sewage or cell coverage for days, got water on Friday and we got the power back yesterday - still no sewage as yet.



Looking left from our driveway













This is the entrance to our street













This is lookingup our driveway, you can see the water line 














Our digging work

A spring appeared in the middle of our street

Sonia pointing to our street lake

our sleeping arrangments in the longe - close access to the table















So much more to say so will add more later - a very close friend is staying with us for a while as her house is totally wrecked and unliveable. We spent 2 hours this morning getting everything out of the house for her and it is probably due to be demolished in the next few days - so sad. Here is a couple of pictures of the cracks in her house.
Her garage seperating from the neighbours wall













 
her wall - the whole house moved
















you can see where the deck and wall has seperated from the house
So sad for her but pleased that we can provide a roof over her head. She is a very special person that would do (and does) anything for anyone, we are just lucky that we can help her out and she will be welcome to stay with us for as long as she needs. This is her second home but it may take a while for the puppies to adjust as they seem to think that this is their house !!!

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Another quake

Hi guys,

quick post - we had a massive earthquake on Tuesday. Smaller (6.3) than the one last September but this one caused massive damage and thus far 75 dead and 300 missing.
Building are down in the city - we are fine, alive but shaken. Our house is in the east of the city and we are still without water, power or cell coverage. I am at a friend place with power charging the laptop.

Crazy time here and wife very shaken. Understand that the pictures are all over the media but we are yet to see anything. Can't get into our street due to 2 feet of silt with the liquifaction - will post pictures as soon as I can.

Take care - no surf or training thus far unless you count 5 hours on the end of a shovel clearing the street each day training??

cheers
Steve

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Monday Brain Exchange

Jill over at her blog - "Finishing is Winning" is doing her Monday Brain Exchange where she asks us to answer a question that she posts and then link to her blog - she's great, she loves triathlons so go and check out her blog - here's the link - http://onelittletrigirl.wordpress.com/

This Weeks Question: Do you deal with any types of extreme weather where you live? Heat warnings, a lot of snow, frequent tornados? How do you keep your workouts fresh and fun when you are stuck indoors?

My answer in a nutshell is no – we are lucky enough to live in a country where we don’t have extremes – we can train year round outside, but it does get a bit chilly in the winter but you just get rugged up nice and warm - here is a little bit of info about our countries weather from the New Zealand Met Service website.

New Zealand has a largely temperate climate. While the far north has subtropical weather during summer, and inland alpine areas of the South Island can be as cold as -10 C in winter, most of the country lies close to the coast, which means mild temperatures, moderate rainfall, and abundant sunshine.

Because New Zealand lies in the Southern Hemisphere, the average temperature decreases as you travel south. The north of New Zealand is subtropical and the south temperate. The warmest months are December, January and February, and the coldest June, July and August. In summer, the average maximum temperature ranges between 20 - 30ºC and in winter between 10 - 15ºC.

And the second part of the question Jill – treadmills are not fun at all.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Surf report

Big week this week with busy work and heaps of training - I've got my self a coach (more to follow on this subject later)

BUT

Gotta love it when you look at the surf report for the weekend - looks like I'm getting wet!!

Middle - North East Coast:


Strong NE winds will continue into your Saturday and whip up a solid 3 foot plus of wind swell. Not many options on Saturday as the NE winds will stay strong all day and then clock NW overnight and fresh SW on Sunday morning. Stay off the turps Saturday night as the Sunday dawnie is lining up to be epic. If you sleep in, you will pay the price with NE winds on the cards by lunch becoming strong in the afternoon.