The New Zealand Herald

Race for baby Thea

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As Luke Thomas rushed his heavily pregnant wife, Jessica, to hospital, leaping flames licked the scrub and trees above their harboursid­e home.

Just hours after the Thomas family fled from their fire-threatened Governors Bay home, baby Thea made her arrival in the world — a week early.

“It’s kind of typical. If it was going to happen, it was going to happen on the night the fire beat down and people were evacuated,” Luke told the Herald yesterday.

Expecting their first child, the Thomas family had watched the smoke from the fires billow over the summit above their home since Monday night.

At about 11pm on Tuesday, they checked the fires and decided it was safe to go to bed.

But by midnight, a sudden wind shift had pushed the blaze down towards Governors Bay village.

At 2am yesterday, 32-year-old

Jessica went into labour.

Luke walked to the nearby fire station where he could see “tall flames on the hillside”.

“They were about to start evacuation­s a little bit further up the hill and said that if we wanted to get out then now was a pretty good time to do it,” the 28-year-old IT consultant said.

That night more than 100 Governors Bay locals were evacuated, with many sheltering at the primary school, which became a makeshift welfare centre.

Luke ran home and within minutes he was bundling his wife, who was having contractio­ns, into the car, with three cats and a dog in the back seat.

“It was crazy. As we drove around the hill, you could see this huge, glowing orange in the night sky right behind our house. It was pretty upsetting,” Luke said.

They drove to a friend’s house in Christchur­ch to drop the pets off.

A midwife met them there and, after a quick check, told them to get to Christchur­ch Women’s Hospital immediatel­y.

At 6.47am yesterday, weighing 3.2kg (7lb 1oz), baby Thea was born.

“Mum and baby are doing great and the labour went perfectly. It was very quick, especially for a first birth,” Luke said. “I’m sure it was sped up by the situation of getting out.”

Last night, as the fires raged on and hundreds more Cantabrian­s were evacuated from hillside areas, the Thomas family were reflecting on the day’s events.

“We’re stoked. There’s a lot going on, and a lot of the people in Governors Bay are part of the volunteer fire brigade as well, and those guys are doing amazing work,” Luke said.

“We will always remember the day Thea was born.”

 ??  ?? Jessica and Luke Thomas hold the newborn Thea, who arrived a week early.
Jessica and Luke Thomas hold the newborn Thea, who arrived a week early.

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