White Island survivors Nick and Marion London with their daughter Louise, top row left, son, Matt, bottom row left, and his partner Ashley Kollath. Photo / Supplied
Among the first words Whakaari / White Island survivor Marion London was able to tell her children after the tragedy that claimed 21 lives was that she loved them.
Marion, 56, and her 58-year-old husband Nick suffered life-threatening external and internal burns in the December 9 volcanic eruption.
More than two months since the popular tourist destination off the Bay of Plenty coastline erupted the couple remain in hospital.
The past 10 weeks have been a hellish roller-coaster for the Sydney-based family. They had to deal with the horror of what happened on White Island, and have endured many medical setbacks. More positively the family has celebrated milestones in the ongoing recovery of Nick and Marion.
Matt tried his parents' mobile phone numbers but had no joy getting through. But his sister, Louise, did.
"She was very lucky enough to call my dad's cellphone and have a nurse at one of the hospitals pick the phone up and give us a little bit of information on what had happened. That is how we found out [of their parent's plight]."
After the eruption, the Londons had been among the injured placed on boats and rushed to Whakatāne for emergency treatment. They were then put in the same ambulance and taken to hospital.
"But after that it is a two-week gap in their life that they don't really have any recollection of," Matt London said.
The London's children travelled to Christchurch where their parents had been sent for specialist hospital care.
After spending two days with them, they returned to Australia to await their airlift home.
"Based on what they told us we have been really happy with how they have been healing and getting better."
As well as being appreciative to everyone who had donated to GoFundMe account set up to raise money for his parents, London said his family would never be able to show their full gratitude for the care provided by the medical teams.
"[What they did] is literally the difference between life and death," London said. "There is no way to really repay those people for the help they did for everyone.
"Being in hospital for a long periods of time . . . there is no point sugar-coating it . . . it is a pretty terrible experience.
"But they [medical teams] have done a lot to be as accommodating as they can and the medical team and doctors have done a great job fixing them up and taking care of them."
The online fundraiser states the pair had been "very lucky to make it off the island with their lives".
London said his parents had talked "a little" to them about what happened after White Island erupted.
"Things come and go a little memory wise with them," he confided.
"It is a difficult thing to try and recall in your mind, but they have been doing their best to talk through it every now and then.
"It is the kind of memories that have a lot of emotional investment, so not a lot of detail of exactly what happened and where. It is how they felt and what was going through their heads at the moment."
He said he wasn't prepared to go public with what his parents had told him "because that is up to them to divulge if they want to talk about that."
London added his beloved parents had a huge passion for travelling, and did not think their harrowing experience on White Island would put them off further travels when they had recovered.
"They are at the point of life that they have been semi-retired for a little while and enjoying the empty-nesters life," he said.
"It [travelling] has been a pretty regular thing for them. They are still looking forward to the future and looking forward to seeing the rest of the world still."