Recently
my partner, Pam returned home to Hokitika, on the West Coast of New
Zealand's South Island.
This
is what she noticed.
Reflections from Hokitika
by Pam
Crisp
Environmental
Education Consultant
Last
week I revisited Hokitika, my old home town, after an absence of four
long years.
The
weather for mid-June was unseasonally warm, the skies overcast and
sunless.
Meanwhile east of the Alps in Canterbury, a severe easterly wind was whipping up a rain storm, bringing yet more flooding to afflicted Cantabrians - a reversal of normal trends.
Normally at this time of year you'd expect to cozy down under quilts and blankets for a good night's sleep.
Not this time.
My friend and I both complained of high humidity, of feeling hot, and interrupted sleep.
Hardly a trace of snow was visible on the Southern Alps, traditionally snow-covered at this time of year.
Meanwhile east of the Alps in Canterbury, a severe easterly wind was whipping up a rain storm, bringing yet more flooding to afflicted Cantabrians - a reversal of normal trends.
Normally at this time of year you'd expect to cozy down under quilts and blankets for a good night's sleep.
Not this time.
My friend and I both complained of high humidity, of feeling hot, and interrupted sleep.
Hardly a trace of snow was visible on the Southern Alps, traditionally snow-covered at this time of year.
“Oh
it’s just that the rain has washed the snow away- it’ll be back
again with the next good southerly” was the comment from a local
friend.
Noticeable
from the beach was a huge rock barrier erected by the local council
along the length of the beachfront to protect the town from
increasing coastal erosion.
“Oh,
it’s just part of a seven year cycle – we always see this. The
sea comes up and then it retreats back” said another local.
Further
south, local farmers and rural communities are still dealing with the
after-effects of the severe gales that lashed the region in an
unprecedented autumn storm, taking out thousands of majestic totara
and kahikatea trees and changing forever the natural character of
South Westand’s flood plain valleys – gateway to the South-West
New Zealand World Heritage Area.
One
thing hadn’t changed, through – the supermarket car park, chokka
with cars and 4WD’s. New World Hokitika is the one-stop-shop for
shoppers from Hokitika to Haast, and boy, do they pay for it. The
lack of competition, and the cost of freighting produce in to this
isolated region reveals an economic model dominated by large chain
store monopolies at work.
A
12.5 % rates increase was recently announced for the West Coast, in
an attempt to levvy yet more funding one of NZ’s most ageing and
under-employed populations.
Kiwis -
get down to the Coast and enjoy it while you can. And get in behind a
campaign to get our country and our people on track to a more
resilient future, and awake to the immediate reality confronting us
now.
High supermarket prices may encourage people to make more food at home - hopefully !
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