Repairs under wraps

My parents belong to the group of Cantabrians you won’t read about in the papers.

Their house was among those damaged — but not beyond repair — in the devastating earthquakes of 2011.

Scopes put repairs well above the EQC $100,000 cap, yet the place was habitable — temporarily.

It’s the same story all along the street: Chimneys were taken down, with the bricks stacked in back gardens. Tarpaulins covered holes in roofs, polystyrene filled gaps in walls, and doors wouldn’t shut properly. People lived in these houses for years without complaining. (At least, not publicly).

While media focussed on liquefaction spewing forth from eastern suburbs, red-faced red-zoners, and the contentious fate of the Anglican Cathedral… the so-called blue chip suburbs kept the bricks in the back garden and further fortified the high stone walls.

It’s been reported there was a conspiracy of silence among Fendaltonions eager to hush up the extent of the damage to protect property values, while others have said it’s simply a “resilient” area.

“Compared to other earthquake-stricken parts of the city, it’s certainly harder to find residents prepared to openly talk about property damage, and that included local MP and Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee, who declined to discuss his personal situation or that of Fendalton in general,” Amanda Cropp wrote in 2011.

Last month, my parents moved out and the work began.

DSC_0394

Don't ask me how she's still standing
Don’t ask me how she’s still standing
Through the floors
Through the floors

DSC_0399

Little Charlie treads carefully
Little Charlie treads carefully

DSC_0401

DSC_0408

DSC_0409

DSC_0419

DSC_0392

DSC_0417

Way back in June 2011, I wrote about my surprise at the lack of progress in the munted CBD:  “The fact Christchurch is still a bombsite really makes it seem like no time at all has passed since February 24.”

At least The Garden City has its gardens.

For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude;
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the daffodils.

Chch – a backwards glance

I meant to post these photos last year, after I took them in October.

A weekend trip to Christchurch made me realise they’ll soon be irrelevant.

Diggers are nibbling, everywhere. The Christchurch rebuild is like fingernail growth.

I cling to the city’s constants: the people, the gardens, Ballantynes.

Update me. Are my pictures history?

DSC_0563

DSC_0572

DSC_0580

DSC_0587

DSC_0605

DSC_0611

DSC_0615

DSC_0627

DSC_0721

DSC_0741

DSC_0658

DSC_0661

DSC_0650

DSC_0669

DSC_0684

DSC_0749

DSC_0763

DSC_0767

DSC_0547

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/9752847/Christchurch-pauses-to-remember