'It's just crazy' – Tickner opens up on Cyclone Gabrielle havoc in his hometown

“Cricket to me is obviously my life as well but it is nothing compared to what people are going through at the moment”

Vithushan Ehantharajah22-Feb-2023As Blair Tickner addressed the media at Basin Reserve in Wellington on Wednesday, he began to choke up. Tickner, the 29-year-old quick bowler, earned his maiden Test cap for New Zealand against England in Mount Maunganui, but the tears were not because of the realising of a boyhood dream. They were for the devastation brought upon his childhood home by Cyclone Gabrielle.Hawke’s Bay, located on the east coast of New Zealand’s North Island, has borne the brunt of what is being described as the worst storm in the country’s living memory. Flooding, high winds and landslips have destroyed homes and basic amenities in the area. Of the estimated 62,000 households without power nationally following the cyclone, almost 40,000 were in Hawke’s Bay. On Sunday, police confirmed the deaths of two more people in the region, taking the national death toll to 11. With around 1700 people still uncontactable and uncertainty about what is to come, it will take time before the full scale of the trauma is realised.Following the conclusion of the first Test within four days, Tickner and Will Young were given special dispensation to return to their homes for a couple of days to check in and help out.Related

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“My father’s house has been fully destroyed,” Tickner said. “It was good to get back and help them out. And, obviously, it’s hard times for the whole region so helping out neighbours and whoever we could. Luckily enough, the Central Stags cricket team was helping alongside us. It has been tough. It’s really tough at the moment. But [people at] Hawke’s Bay are staying strong.”Obviously, you grow up there as a kid and it’s just… it’s just crazy. A bit hard to talk about, really. There are so many damaged little parts of Hawke’s Bay I haven’t even seen yet. You sort of just get to work: people are just walking down the road and just asking people if they need help and it has just been awesome to see the region pulling together.”What he saw was harrowing: livestock dead on the side of the road, families devastated, familiar places now scenes of destruction. “Their whole life’s been flipped upside down. Cricket to me is obviously my life as well but it is nothing compared to what people are going through at the moment.”At times like these, community spirit goes a long way and Tickner’s return was not simply just to lend an extra pair of hands. As it happens, his father, John, has an equipment-hire business, which meant access to lifting machinery.

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