Glad to hear from you Tan.   Helluva report.

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 9:11 PM, Tanya Love <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi guys!
>
> Thanks so much for your concern!  We are high and dry, thankfully.  I have
> largely been offline and just FB'ing on my iphone as we have been told to
> conserve water/power etc as much as possible.  I have been tempted to get
> out and take some pics but just can't bring myself to do it as there is so
> much suffering going on and the government is imploring people not to do so.
> My husband works in the city in one of the worst affected areas of flooding
> at the biggest hospital in the state.  Due to a few emergencies, he was
> required to stay back amongst it all whilst our (uninsured!) car was parked
> right in the middle of the flood zone.  I was very panicked cause if we lose
> that car, we are buggered, with five kids and all.  I was also freaking out
> that he would try and be a hero and get to it somehow (it is a raised 4wd so
> could most likely be driven out if he could reach it).  Anyways, as it
> turned out, he had to walk through waist deep water to get to it, but was
> able to save it and get back to the hospital in time to assist a lady
> delivering a 25 week old baby via emergency c-section.  It is not known if
> the baby will survive. :(
>
> That pales in comparison though to another story that was just publicised in
> the area of Grantham (where almost all of the fatalities have been, and
> continue to be discovered).  A lady gave birth to her baby on her kitchen
> bench with her husband standing in knee deep water to deliver it.  Then all
> three of them had to spend the night on the bench as the water rose around
> them.  Thankfully, they were airlifted to safety early in the morning, just
> as the water was about to consume them.  How's that for an amazing story?
>
> It is sunny and bright here today.  A typical summer's day.  Dry around our
> house and our suburb.  It is a surreal thing to know that if I got in the
> car and drove for 10minutes, I would be entering a veritable war zone and
> witnessing utter destruction and tragedy.  There are helicopters constantly
> going over to remind us of it, and yet, if it wasn't for the empty
> supermarket shelves and the fact that we now have to boil our drinking
> water, things would be oddly normal for us.
>
> Yesterday, when dropping my husband at work between tides, I made a wrong
> turn and ended up on a one way street over the bridge to Southbank/West End,
> due to road closures.  I had two of my kids in the car and it completely
> freaked me out as I don't know the area well at the best of times and trying
> to find a dry road to turn down was scary.  It took me an hour and  a half
> to navigate the suburb just to find a way back to the bridge and to safety.
> It was in the peak time as the water was rising heading to high tide and I
> was really scared when the gravity of it hit me.
>
> Things to note that you might not understand in the US - there is two lots
> of flooding that you may be seeing on the news.  One is the flash flooding
> that occurred in the Toowoomba/Withcott/Grantham/Marburg area.  This is
> where the fatalities have occurred as it was described as an "inland
> tsunami" and not only was everything wet/muddy, but it was violent and
> destructive too.  The images/stories that you are seeing of people trapped
> in cars etc are from this event.  It is true that they won't be finding many
> of the victims for coming days as due to continued rain in the area,
> recovery operations weren't able to access them.  It is a sad fact that yes,
> there were entire families trapped in cars and possibly drowned. :(  One
> particularly heartbreaking story was of a family of a mum and her 10 year
> old and 13 year old boys being rescued from a vehicle.  The 13 year old told
> the rescuer to save his little brother first, which they did, and the 13
> year old and his mum were subsequently drowned.  Another was of a family
> being rescued in a boat and their life-jacket wearing 4 year old fell over
> the side and was swept away and drowned.  I can't think of any more
> insurmountable horror in my mind then seeing my 4 year old baby swept away
> and drowned in raging flood waters.   I had to stop myself from watching the
> news after hearing this one, to say that it is heartbreaking is an
> understatement.
>
> So, the second type of flooding is what Brisbane/Ipswich is experiencing
> now. It is a result of all of our creek/catchment systems converging and
> carrying downstream the masses of water that has accumulated from other
> flooded regions.  All of this water is trying to get out to sea, and
> basically, Brisbane is in the way.  Brisbane is built over and around the
> river that is carrying all of this water, and the banks are/were unable to
> contain it thus, it is seeping out into the city/suburbs.  This is the
> flooding that I witnessed in Southbank/West End yesterday.  It is an eerie
> thing.  All of the power has been cut, so the suburbs are really quiet.
> People were just standing around watching the water as it was rising
> silently and engulfing their lives.  It was almost like a fog sweeping in,
> just menacingly edging in and bit by bit covering everything in its path.
>
> Thirdly, the thing with Brisbane is that the Brisbane River is tidal.  So,
> there are continued "peaks" with each tide.  And, between tides, the
> flooding drops significantly, only to return again 12 hours later.  The peak
> that occurred at 4am this morning was due to this, and was considered to be
> the highest that the water levels will come up.  Then, at high tide this
> afternoon, it will be up again but not as high as this morning, and with
> each high tide subsequently, it will be lower than the previous one, until
> it starts to pull away from the areas not normally flooded.
>
> This experience for us anyways, in some ways has been similar to our
> experience of 9/11, in that we are kind of outside observers but glued to
> the television/internet, not wanting to turn away for a second in case it
> suddenly changes and heads in our direction.  It has commanded our full
> attention and basically rendered us all incapable of continuing every day
> tasks, even though we are still dry, if that makes any sense?  Obviously the
> after effects and global scale of it are nowhere near the same as 9/11, but
> I am sure you get what I mean.  We are thanking our lucky stars, just as we
> were during 9/11 that we are where we are and that not being able to buy
> groceries and having to boil our drinking water is as bad as it gets for us.
> Personally, I am also very relieved that my older kids are visiting their
> Dad in North Qld at the moment, so are completely unaffected by it all.
>
> We are planning on taking it in turns to go into the city and volunteer in
> recovery efforts in coming days, as one of us will always need to be here
> with the kids, as we really want to help. It is hard though as many of my
> clients are interstate/international and are still demanding photos on
> deadlines, not realising the full gravity of what we are experiencing here
> at the moment.
>
> The thing is though, whilst so much media attention is on Brisbane, with it
> being the state capital, there are many other towns since Christmas that
> have been in dire straits (such as Rockhampton/Emerald where my
> mother/family live), and the rainfall that we have been experiencing has now
> moved southward and will be creating havoc in NSW, VIC and SA now.  We also
> have alerts out now about gastro/mosquito related illnesses/disease, so I
> guess we have all of that fun to look forward to in coming weeks too.
>
> Thanks again guys/gals, we are safe, which is much more than many of my
> friends/family are!
>
> Hugs,
> Tan.x.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stan
> Halpin
> Sent: Thursday, 13 January 2011 11:21 AM
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: Re: Queensland Floods
>
> I only rarely log onto Facebook, but just went there to check on Tanya's
> current status. (Which is as good as can be expected. There was a scare that
> her husband might not make it home from work through flooded streets but he
> and the car made it.) While there I noted a post from Jay Taylor. The
> fundraising for his daughter's funeral (and her son's future expenses)
> continues. Go here http://funds.gofundme.com/1nuo0 to donate.
>
> stan
>
> On Jan 12, 2011, at 6:31 AM, Mark Roberts wrote:
>
>> Tan has been posting comments on Facebook. The's still above the water
>> line at last report.
>>
>
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