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Home / The Country

Best friend safe but Canterbury flood pain remains

By Adam Burns
Other·
8 Jun, 2021 01:41 AM2 mins to read

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Greenstreet dairy farmer Dave Stewart and Max are safely back on the farm at Greenstreet, near Ashburton. Photo / Adam Burns

Greenstreet dairy farmer Dave Stewart and Max are safely back on the farm at Greenstreet, near Ashburton. Photo / Adam Burns

Dave Stewart and his family may have emerged from the floodwaters safe and well.

But the heartache of a flooding catastrophe that ravaged the district has not subsided for the Greenstreet dairy farmer who was evacuated alongside wife Maree and son TJ on Sunday.

The image of 10-year-old dog Max being guided onto a truck by a member of the New Zealand Defence Force during the evacuation circulated across national and international channels as news broke of the Canterbury region being lashed by a one-in-100-year rain event on Sunday.

As Stewart (67) surveyed the damage to the family 200ha farm yesterday, which he said was going to absorb significant time and costs, there was only one feeling that came to mind.

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"Soul destroying," he said.

It is a long way back for the Greenstreet dairy farming family following last week's flood event. Photo / Adam Burns
It is a long way back for the Greenstreet dairy farming family following last week's flood event. Photo / Adam Burns

The Ashburton River is currently running through the farm after a river stopbank was breached and one of the two family homes on the farm suffered flooding damage.

None of the family's stock succumbed to the flood, with areas of land to be out of action for several months.

Enclosed by both the north and south branches of the Hakatere River, Greenstreet has been one of the worst affected areas of the flood.

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The Stewart family had been anticipating nasty weather on the Sunday and began the process of co-ordinating their cows.

It was not long before farm vehicles were abandoned at the cowshed and Dave, Maree and son TJ were being hauled into an army truck along Hills Rd.

"I was struggling to get up there," Stewart said.

Max is helped onto a New Zealand Defence Force vehicle by private Joshua Ley last Sunday as the Stewart family is evacuated. Photo / Supplied
Max is helped onto a New Zealand Defence Force vehicle by private Joshua Ley last Sunday as the Stewart family is evacuated. Photo / Supplied

"And the guy said 'here give me the dog' and he just totally relaxed in the army guy's arms."

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Driving away in the defence force vehicle and facing an uncertain outlook in terms of the family farm, Stewart remembers the experience as heartbreaking.

"Me and [son] TJ were inconsolable," he said.

"We didn't know what tomorrow was going to bring," TJ said.

There the canine was taken to a vet in Ashburton where he resided for two days as the Stewarts took care of proceedings at the farm.

"He's back home now, he's a bit upset that he's in a kennel and not inside by the fire," Maree said.

"It's just the cats aren't used to him."

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