Nelson Mail

Volunteer backbone keeps gruelling battle going

- Cherie Sivignon cherie.sivignon@stuff.co.nz

Volunteer firefighte­r Grant Lawrence slumped exhausted against the Takaka fire truck yesterday morning at the end of a double shift battling the Tasman district forest fire.

As an eerie-looking orange sun climbed in the smoke-covered sky above the Waimea Plains, Lawrence recalled joining fellow crew members from the Takaka brigade to drive over the hill from Golden Bay almost 24 hours earlier to help with the massive firefighti­ng effort.

Initially, their focus was on the area around the Eves Valley sawmill, where crew members sprayed fire retardant foam on the sides of the roads to help ensure other fire trucks and heavy machinery could have safe access.

Next, they removed a fuel tanker from an area near the airstrip at Teapot Valley, before being deployed to Wakefield station, from where they were sent to help protect the Teapot Valley Christian Camp on Thursday evening.

‘‘We were putting out hotspots and fighting the fire,’’ Lawrence said.

Other crew members from Takaka came in as replacemen­ts about 8pm, but Lawrence offered to stay on for a double shift.

A volunteer firefighte­r for six years, Lawrence said he took on the role to help the community.

The camaraderi­e among the Takaka crew was also a drawcard, along with the experience of working as a team.

‘‘It’s a job that pushes you,’’ Lawrence said, adding that it also provided a sense of achievemen­t.

As he prepared to head back over Takaka Hill, Lawrence said he intended to go home and ‘‘say hello to my family’’.

Takaka fire chief Philip Woolf has clocked up 42 years as a volunteer firefighte­r. The Takaka brigade was well resourced, and it was great to be part of the wider response team in the Nelson-Tasman region, he said.

Watching a fleet of helicopter­s preparing to head into another day of firefighti­ng, Woolf said he was impressed by the organisati­on of the multi-agency response to the blaze.

Stoke fire chief Tane Simpson was equally pleased.

‘‘The command structure is outstandin­g,’’ said the volunteer of almost 25 years. ‘‘They are keeping up with anything and everything we need.’’

As he and fellow volunteer Stoke crew members Bob Hancock, Bradley Reichert and Penny Parker prepared to head out for the day, Simpson said the primary aim was still the containmen­t of the fire and protection of property.

The urban brigade was called in just before 7pm on Tuesday, a few hours after the blaze started.‘‘We were unsure whether we were going to get a call-up, but as the fire developed . . . we were pretty well prepared,’’ Simpson said.

The Stoke crew was initially sent to Eves Valley to help protect the homes and the sawmill. All structures were saved in that mighty Tuesday evening battle, including the home of Tasman district deputy mayor Tim King, who was humbled and grateful, calling the firefighte­rs’ efforts ‘‘unbelievab­le’’.

‘‘When we were in Eves Valley, there were two properties we were almost certain that they would have been affected,’’ Simpson said. ‘‘They were still there the next day – it’s just incredible.’’

A forest fire was a completely different beast to an urban blaze, he said.

‘‘The topography is one of the biggest things – and water. Being an urban brigade, we are sort of blessed with water on tap. Out here, you’re forever looking for further water sources.’’

Simpson said he and his team

‘‘It’s a whole community of emergency services workers.’’ Tane Simpson, Stoke fire chief

worked about 17 hours that first shift. So how did they keep going for such a long stint?

‘‘We just had to – that’s why we work in a crew. It’s a whole community of emergency services workers.’’

Supporting that community of emergency workers are layers of other key people – from the employers who release their workers so they can don their volunteer firefighte­r hats, to welfare officers and the likes of members of the Rotary Club of Richmond, who have been on deck providing food and drinks to the frontline staff from 5.30am to 9pm every day.

Club president Kevin Gear said the Rotary club in turn was supported by Margaret Goff and her team operating out of Saxton Field, who were collecting, preparing and distributi­ng donated food and drinks. ‘‘I basically give her a shopping list,’’ Gear said.

Tasman Mayor Richard Kempthorne said the volunteers were the backbone of the operation.

‘‘They’re in every part of this,’’ Kempthorne said, describing their efforts as phenomenal. ‘‘I’m so appreciati­ve of everyone involved, particular­ly the volunteers.’’

There was still a long way to go, he said, and ongoing volunteer support was needed – as was significan­t rain.

‘‘But that’s not coming any time soon,’’ the mayor said of the rain a day after his council granted urgent powers to staff to impose further water restrictio­ns on properties connected to the reticulate­d supply, with no end in sight to the tinderdry conditions.

 ?? MARTIN DE RUYTER/STUFF ?? Takaka volunteer firefighte­rs Callum Reid, front, Kyle Gardiner and Grant Lawrence are exhausted at the end of their shift fighting the out-of-control forest fire that started in Pigeon Valley.
MARTIN DE RUYTER/STUFF Takaka volunteer firefighte­rs Callum Reid, front, Kyle Gardiner and Grant Lawrence are exhausted at the end of their shift fighting the out-of-control forest fire that started in Pigeon Valley.

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