The New Zealand Herald

Opening bottle — that’s big

Completing small tasks an achievemen­t for couple horribly burned on White Island

- Bernard Orsman

An American couple who survived the Whakaari/ White Island tragedy can each finally open water bottles, jars and sometimes a 2-litre bottle of diet Coke.

Ivy Kohn Reed and her husband Rick Reed were badly burned when they were among tourists and tour guides on the Bay of Plenty volcanic island which erupted on December 9 last year. Twenty-one died.

The pair spent two months being cared for in the National Burn Centre at Auckland’s Middlemore Hospital, before being well enough to return to the United States in early February.

In a message posted to an online fundraiser on the six-month anniversar­y of the eruption, the couple said it might not seem like much to the average person but opening bottles and jars were big achievemen­ts.

“The events of that day still feel unreal, yet the effects of that day are felt daily,” they said.

Unfortunat­ely, because of the Covid-19 crisis, their treatment had been suspended since mid-March, but they have been working on a home rehab programme.

They are now able to take walks, but going into the northern summer must take extra precaution­s.

Ivy said she could not have any sun on her face and gaiters are “my new best friend”.

“To be out walking, I’m in a face gaiter, sunglasses and baseball hat — say hi if you see me.

“Rick has to be out in UVprotecti­ng long pants and UV longsleeve shirts to guard his burns from the sun. This along with our everpresen­t compressio­n gloves is how we will be tackling the summer,” Ivy said.

The pair revealed they had just received good news — the hospital was reopening and they were scheduled for six to eight months of laser surgery, from July.

“Laser surgery is done under anaesthesi­a as the laser is used at very high power. This isn’t your dermatolog­ists’ laser,” the couple said.

Neither has returned to work, their injuries and upcoming treatment making such a return in the foreseeabl­e future unlikely.

“People talk about a new normal after catastroph­ic events happen. I can’t say we have adapted to the new normal, I can say we have made adjustment­s where necessary and we are working through OT, PT, therapy and upcoming surgery to make the very best of our situation.

“There’s still progress to be made,” said the couple, who revealed amazing support from not only friends and family, but from strangers.

“It takes a lot for me to cry, but the outpouring of support from around the world has had me shedding a lot of tears.”

After their release from hospital, Ivy Kohn Reed posted a photo of the pair taken on White Island shortly before the eruption. In it, they are smiling, with Rick Reed’s arm around his wife, while steam rises from the White Island crater behind them.

“This is the last picture taken of us before our lives changed forever,” she wrote.

“Approximat­ely 15 minutes after this was taken, the White Island volcano erupted, burying us in hot volcanic ash and toxic gases. We survived, were rescued and spent almost eight weeks in a New Zealand Hospital receiving critical-care treatment.

“Our dream vacation turned into a nightmare that we are still trying to comprehend.”

The events of that day still feel unreal, yet the effects of that day are felt daily.

Ivy Kohn Reed and Rick Reed

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? Rick Reed and Ivy Kohn Reed smile in “the last picture taken of us before our lives changed forever”.
Photos / Supplied Rick Reed and Ivy Kohn Reed smile in “the last picture taken of us before our lives changed forever”.
 ??  ?? The deadly eruption.
The deadly eruption.

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