"We were lucky we got the maize off in time, so the maize is saved but when the stock returns? We don't know."
Stock on low-lying properties had to be swum out over the weekend. Helping with the evacuation was Morrinsville dairy farmer and Waikato Regional Councillor Stuart Husband.
"The biggest thing for me is just the human tragedy in it," he said.
Mr Husband also chairs the Integrated Catchment Committee.
"You've had two back to back cyclones which hasn't happened before and it's caused massive flooding as you can see, but basically nothing's breached. Everyone keeps saying it's breached but nothing's breached. It's just overtopped where's it's supposed to overtop. But there's never been this extent before of overtopping, and it's just devastating. I mean the cleanup cost of this is in the millions," Mr Husband says.
It'll be months before farmers will have access to their land beneath the temporary lake of water.
In the meantime, the Waikato-Hauraki-Coromandel Rural Support Trust is hosting a series of meetings connecting farmers in need with organisations that can help.
Mr Husband says there is support available for farmers - all they need to do is ask. Or he encourages people to call 0800 FARMING for help with feed or cleaning up.
"The problem is the cleanup, the problem's the fences, the cleaning of fences, redoing the wires, it's huge work, it's months of work."
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