spinofflive
MetService projection of Cyclone Gabrielle in the early hours of Tuesday.
MetService projection of Cyclone Gabrielle in the early hours of Tuesday.

SocietyFebruary 12, 2023

‘Do what you can. Right now.’ Latest advice on preparing for fast-approaching Cyclone Gabrielle

MetService projection of Cyclone Gabrielle in the early hours of Tuesday.
MetService projection of Cyclone Gabrielle in the early hours of Tuesday.

Auckland Emergency Management has just completed a briefing on what to do, who to call, and what to look out for as NZ’s biggest city braces for more severe weather. 

“You’ve still got time, Auckland. Please prepare yourself and your home and make a plan. There will be destruction from this cyclone, and we all must do what we can right now to stay safe.” That’s the message from deputy mayor Desley Simpson, introducing an Auckland Emergency Management briefing. 

With the worst of the weather expected to strike on Monday and Tuesday, Georgina Griffith of MetService warned: “Don’t be fooled – you may not be affected till Tuesday. And just remember, today? Today is the good day.” 

Forecasters have warned of floods, slips, gales, coastal surges, power outages and road closures, with the risk that some communities may be cut off. “We are looking down the barrel of a severe and potentially devastating weather event and you must take official advice seriously,” said AEM deputy controller Rachel Kelleher.

Twenty-four Civil Defence Centres and Shelter sites will be available in all Local Board areas across Tāmaki Makaurau from this evening. Locations are listed here. “If mass evacuation is required, further large-scale sites will be stood up quickly and we will continue to assess the need for these sites,” said Kelleher.

People in Auckland and other affected areas are advised to have grab-bag ready (clothing, medication, documents and ID, important items for children or babies) should they need to evacuate. Bring your pets if you have to go to a shelter site (dogs on a leash; cats in a container).

ICYMI

Important messages on preparing for the cyclone include the following: 

  • Schools and other education providers will “make their own decisions” about whether to stay open tomorrow. “Our advice is that you should plan for things to change if they need to.”
  • Auckland Emergency Management will issue an Emergency Mobile Alert today to mobile phones in the region. Those who need help are encouraged to call 0800 222200. If there is any risk of life, call 111.
  • Ensure you have supplies to last three days, but only buy what you need – panic buying helps nobody. Supermarkets will remain open, unless affected by flooding. 
  • Make sure you have alternative power supplies; lamps, torches and batteries; a radio; a camp stove or BBQ. Remember to keep phones charged and use a car charger (and radio) if you need to.
  • Those in affected areas are urged to stay off the roads unless absolutely necessary, and not to drive or ride through floodwater.
  • If your property flooded recently, consider staying with friends or family tonight, or make a plan to evacuate if you see floodwaters rising.
  • Make sure you have supplies of prescription medication to get you through next week, contact your GP if you’re concerned about health issues, and if you rely on electricity for medical devices, stay in touch with your health provider and your electricity provider and arrange a back-up power supply or contingency plan. 
  • If your house has a red (“entry prohibited”) placard, you must stay away. If your house has a yellow “restricted access” placard, follow the restrictions given on the placard and seriously consider avoiding any entry for the duration of the event at least. There is the potential for new landslides to occur and for existing landslides to reactivate. 
  • If your house is next to a property that has a placard, if you see any signs of instability, or if you’re concerned about the stability of the land around your house, you’re advised to take extra caution and consider finding alternative accommodation during heavy rain.
  • If you are concerned about landslides (new cracking or movement of the ground, new cracks appearing inside the house, unusual sounds such as trees cracking, pavements sinking, or new debris on or around your house are a clue), consider finding alternative accommodation during heavy rain.
  • Sandbags continue to be restocked at pickup points around Auckland, but people are urged only to collect if necessary. 
  • You can help by checking and clearing gutters and channels around your property of obstructions such as leaves, tennis balls and what have you, as well as having a gander at drains on roadsides nearby and removing any obvious blockages such as chip packets or whatever. 
  • Tie down loose items outdoors, including furniture and trampolines, or bring them inside if possible.
  • Removal of flood-affected material from kerbsides has been halted. Please bring it out of exposed areas. The Council’s usual kerbside waste collection has been cancelled for Monday and Tuesday. Please keep their rubbish on properties until collection resumes.
  • Due to severe wind gusts, reduced speed limits are in place on the Harbour Bridge, and there is a possibility the Bridge may close.

How to prepare your household for Cyclone Gabrielle

Keep going!
Illustration: Maria Francesca Melis
Illustration: Maria Francesca Melis

The Sunday EssayFebruary 12, 2023

The Sunday Essay: It’s the little things

Illustration: Maria Francesca Melis
Illustration: Maria Francesca Melis

I’ve finally learned there’s a middle ground between panicked eco-zeal and Kardashian-level consumerism and that ground contains thousands of intricate, magical, planet-enhancing insects. 

The Sunday Essay is made possible thanks to the support of Creative New Zealand.

Illustrations by Maria Francesca Melis

Shockingly, secondary school didn’t equip me with many life skills. The only use I’ve ever had for algebra was looking at my x and wondering y. But thankfully, Mr Kersley’s class meant that I wasn’t flung into adulthood completely incompetent. We were allowed to watch movies in class, and the fact that they were grim documentaries about the planet’s devastation like Home and An Inconvenient Truth was balanced by the prospect of not having to do any work. Full of prophetic wisdom, Mr Kersley once told me, over a vegan salad, never to buy coastal property. Ten years later, on an ecologist’s salary, I can’t afford a cardboard box, let alone a house, but if I could I’d take my teacher’s advice and avoid low-lying sections. 

Thanks to Mr Kersley I became the environment prefect in my final year at high school. I rallied for the canteen to stop using unnecessary plastic, implemented recycling and compost bins and forced the same protocols on my own household. I even spoke at school assemblies, which terrified the absolute shit out of me, but nothing lights a fire under an introvert like a climate crisis. 

At university I studied zoology and ecology, did post-grad, worked in marketing for a sustainable brand and eventually became an ecologist. But somewhere between Mr Kersley’s class and adulthood, I changed. Of course I still care; I just don’t have that bright-eyed enthusiasm I had in high school. Frankly, absorbing any more of the creative ways we’re destroying the planet has become unbearable. When the news is wildfires, floods and melting ice caps, I know that everything Mr Kersley said was true. But I’ve adopted the tired environmentalist’s approach to life: do as much as you can but not to the detriment of your own sanity – the world’s fucked anyway. 

Reality is best served with a healthy side of denial. Sure, in this profession, I’m continually confronted with saddening information but, outside of work, I avoid further torture. My reading material, for example, is curated. On a recent visit to the library, the first book I picked up started with: “We are facing a global emergency.” I snapped it shut and walked away.  The next, Silent Earth by Dave Goulson, began: “I fear the majority of people don’t much like insects” – at last, something we can all agree on and, impending doom absent, it made the cut. Turns out old mate eventually gave me the same message: global emergency, planet is dying and so are the insects – at a rapidly alarming rate.

Some truth bombs dropped included the fact that there’s been a 75% decline in insects over the past 50 years and one dose of your pet’s flea treatment contains enough insecticide to kill 60 million bees. So if you blast the hose at your neighbour’s cat for shitting in the garden, you may inadvertently be committing mass murder. But there’s a trick to functioning amid ecocidal mayhem: care enough to avoid Kardashian-level personal emissions, but don’t care so much that you let the fleas get your cat. I googled natural flea remedies and spraying my cat with vinegar and lemon juice is not a path I’m ready to go down.

As well as selective compassion, what helps is admiring all the cool things we have on this planet, like insects. Goulson’s right; not many people do like insects. But this leaves me wondering where we go wrong, because like many small children, I was fascinated with bugs. When I was seven, my mum gave me a beautiful box from Bali she kept her rings in. Biffing aside her jewellery collection, I filled the box with bees, butterflies, beetles – any dead bugs I could find. Now, I wear all her rings but no longer collect insects. 

Thankfully, not everyone loses interest, or develops irrational fears. At university I met friends who were still collectors and are today some of my favourite people. One had a series of disastrous collections: a huge and beautiful pupurangi/kauri snail shell turned out to contain a potent cocktail of decomposed snail juice that stunk out her car for weeks; a bird’s nest she’d brought home to display on her windowsill resulted in a dorm room infested with mites.

But I love that this friend is drawn to gorgeous things in nature that many of us walk straight past. I know some people who would miss a locust invasion while scrolling Instagram. Increasingly I like to put my phone inside a sock inside a drawer and slowly battle with the re-emergence of my own thoughts. Once the excruciating boredom passes and you remember what it’s like to function without a rectangular extension to your hand, you’ll have some fun. Phoneless sights include the forest ringlet butterflies spotted while tramping in the Ruahines in Hawkes Bay, or the metallic green and gold Christmas beetles that show up in Mum’s garden in December. 

Insects are a key part of studying zoology as they account for an astonishing amount of the world’s biomass. They’re literally the most successful organisms on the planet. Of course, when it comes to soothing eco-anxiety, a love of insects is far from a panacea. Those forest ringlets are endangered, and this Christmas I didn’t see a single beetle. Insects are one of the sharpest reminders of the state of the planet, but they deliver the message on a scale that I can absorb.

When I was younger I read that aerodynamically bumblebees shouldn’t be able to fly. They’re too fat for their wings, and it’s a miracle they can amble from one flower to the next. But because they don’t know it’s physically impossible, they just go ahead and do it anyway. 

I googled it recently, and much to my disappointment, it’s a misconception. But for a while, it served as a triumphant little message and it was probably the beginning of a lifelong love of bees. From rescuing and ushering any that came indoors to freedom, providing sugar water for thirsty stragglers and apologising whenever I get stung, I am enamoured. But when most of the world’s food crops are pollinated by bees, they don’t need an anecdote like the one I believed to make them impressive; they just are. 

When my mum first saw the bumblebee tattoo I got at 23 she grabbed my wrist, licked her finger and rubbed my forearm in the vain hope it was all an elaborate prank. I think she’s since grown to accept its existence and even though she said I’d regret it, I don’t. It’s a permanent reminder of the crucial role bees and, of course, every insect and animal has in the health of our ecosystems.

When you care about insects, you inadvertently care about every environmental factor in existence. You care about invasive species because they’re eating our native insects. You care about climate change because it’s disrupting the resources and environments these creatures rely on. You care about pesticide use because it kills a lot more insects than your neighbour’s cat. Most importantly, when you care about insects you also begin to notice more of what’s around you. 

On my path from ecowarrior to ecologist, I found a middle ground. These days I don’t dwell too much on the negative and I take the time to stare wonderingly at the fly floating in my pinot gris before I neck it. Some call it ignorance, I call it survival.

‘Hutt Valley, Kāpiti, down to the south coast. Our Wellington coverage is powered by members.’
Joel MacManus
— Wellington editor