We live in an area where heavy rain, violent storms and flash flooding are relatively common. The period between late October and mid-April is referred to as “storm season”, and there are years where it is not abnormal to have a hot, sweltering day morph suddenly into an epic thunderstorm, with a side order of hailstones. The temperature can drop by ten degrees Celsius in a couple of minutes, it goes from sunny to black as pitch in minutes, and we can get up to 100mm of rain in a twenty-minute storm.
The year we
returned from living in Canada, our final flight into Brisbane was diverted to
Sydney because of a storm. We could see
the lightening out of the plane windows; when we were finally allowed to return
to Brisbane several hours later, we saw the damage caused on the taxi ride to
our accommodation. The taxi had to take
the long way home, due to flooding in a couple of tunnels and underpasses. That particular storm caused millions of
dollars damage in a group of suburbs, destroying homes with its strong winds
and torrential rain.
A month
after we moved into our current home, there was a massive flood, which
inundated many of the suburbs around where we live. Our suburb is bordered on three sides by the
Brisbane river, and the water came from the river breaking its banks in some
places, by the creeks flooding and by water coming back up from storm water
drains. Our home wasn’t flooded, but the
nearby power station was, meaning that we had no power for six days. Several friends had significant flooding in
their homes – one basically required an entire rebuild of the ground floor. Essentially the entire Brisbane CBD was
flooded. Parks all over the city were
unable to be used for months due to possible soil contamination due to sediment
washing into them during the floods. The
Army was called in to assist with the clean-up.
Another
time, driving home from work with my two daughters in the car, a storm hit
suddenly. The rain was so heavy that I
could barely see, but there was nowhere safe to stop, so I crept along at a
crawling pace, windscreen wipers on their highest setting, headlights on high
beam. We made it home safely, the storm
ended abruptly about ten minutes later.
We had an average month’s worth of rain in the 25-minute storm.
The week
later, a similar storm started up. This
one came with heavy rain and stronger winds, and a large amount of hail. When the winds brought down two of our deck
screens within a minute, I took the children downstairs to the only window-less
place in the house – the hallway. We sat
on cushions on the floor and read stories while the storm roared. My husband arrived home from work just as it
was ending. Even though we have a garage
with an automatic door, when he walked into the house, he was dripping
wet. He’d arrived home to find large
tree branches down over our driveway, and he’d had to get out of the car in the
pouring rain to pull them out the way.
He said he’d had to turn around three times on his way through our
suburb because of fallen trees.
Another
time, the tail end of a cyclone made its way across the state, drenching
Brisbane in 330mm of rain in about 36 hours.
Schools were shut for two days because of the risks posed by the heavy
rain. It rained so much that the soil
was totally waterlogged, and we had deep puddles in our back yard for two or
three days afterwards.
Every year
at the start of storm season, there are multiple ads (from state and local
government, insurance companies, banks) reminding people to prepare for the
season. Suggestions include reviewing
your insurance to make sure you’re properly covered, trimming trees and
clearing debris from your yard, parking your car under cover to prevent hail
damage, having 2 – 3 days’ worth of dry goods and water in the house and having
candles, batteries and battery powered torches and radios on hand.
In addition
to having lived in Brisbane for 15 of the last 18 years, I grew up in the north
of Western Australia, where cyclones are common. Cyclone season warnings were similar – have
food and water on hand, be aware that the power will almost certainly go out
and you’ll need battery powered lights and radios, and it may take some time
(days, even a week or so) for services to be re-established and it may be days
before trucks with food supplies could get through.
When I was
a kid and a cyclone was heading our way, there was rarely ever panic
buying. Everyone kept non-perishable
food and batteries around. People might
need a few extra batteries, or they might buy a little extra something
(particularly fresh fruit and vegetables or bread), but no one ever raced out
to buy everything in the shop the day before a cyclone came through. Pretty much everyone had what they needed at
home, and everyone knew that if you ran out of something important, your
neighbours would certainly help you out.
And so we
cut to nowadays.
Even with
all the reminders, whenever there is a (big) storm warning or potential hazard,
people will race out and buy far more than they need. Even people who already have all the things
they’ll need at home. It’s almost like
the panic one person feels when they realise there’s not enough <insert item
here> at home and they race out to buy is catching, and everyone is suddenly
“infected” with the need to buy more.
Just before big storms here, certain things (like bottled water) sells
out fast.
Now, in a
storm or flood, sometimes we do lose power (and potentially clean water) for a
while. Sometimes it is impossible to get
to the local supermarket because of physical barriers or dangers (trees down,
flooding). Sometimes, the supply trucks
can’t get through. So there is something
more to the “panic” associated with that type of situation because you may
indeed find yourself out of something critical (like drinking water) with
limited ability to get more. This, of
course, does not explain why there is still massive panic buying whenever COVID
shutdowns occur.
Let me
point out – years of living where natural events can impact access to food and
water supplies has ingrained in me the need to have enough non-perishable food
and water for at least two weeks. Quite
frankly, it’d be boring food by the end of that two weeks (with some
potentially crazy food combinations required as the supply dwindled down), but
we wouldn’t starve, nor would we die of thirst.
If there was still power (and my freezer remained in play), we could
probably manage another week or two.
I’ve never panic bought anything in my entire life – I have always
bought a few extras of things (pasta, rice, tinned goods) until I built up an
appropriately sized “stockpile” of dry goods.
Early last
year, when the potentially enormous impact of COVID was becoming apparent, I
did pay a little more attention than normal to what I kept at home. Normally I don’t bother with a lot of frozen
meat or vegetables – buying fresh is always easy where I live. I did stock up on those sorts of things to
ensure that we had two weeks’ supply, and I bought extra milk to freeze as well. By the time lockdown went into place where I
live, during that period of time where people were fighting strangers for the
last rolls of toilet paper, we were barely leaving the house and definitely not
going anywhere near supermarkets.
Strangely enough, the feeling that I should be panicking (and panic
buying) was strong, even when I looked through the cupboards and fridges and
freezer in my house and saw what we had available to us.
A few
months ago, when we had a three-day lockdown, it happened again. Lines of people waiting outside of supermarkets,
limits implemented immediately on some items.
Supermarkets were not going to close during the lockdown, nor were we prevented
from going shopping (with a mask on).
But still people panicked. And
again I felt that undercurrent of “you need to panic!”, even though I was
perfectly certain I did not.
Maybe it’s
because life has become so organised and orderly and easy now. We can make a call (well, use an app most
times) and get food delivered within a short period of time. We can order our groceries and have them
brought to our door. We can have the book
we want right now through an e-reader, or the movie we want to see by
purchasing it through our tv. When we search
for something that we want nowadays it’s from the couch in our living room, scrolling
through the pages on our phones. We can
do all manner of things reliably from the comfort of our home without even
speaking to another person. If we want
to go away somewhere, we do, booking tickets and accommodation via apps and
websites, finding the things that we want to do and fitting it into when we want
to do it. And COVID stopped a lot of
that.
Travel was
gone. Deliveries weren’t as reliable or
as quick. Things were out of stock and
not restocked immediately. We couldn’t
have the things we wanted straight away, and we’ve forgotten what that’s
like. And so when there were suddenly
restrictions (one packet of toilet paper, two tins of beans, one box of pasta)
we all started panicking that nothing would be available anymore. The irony of all of that is that if we’d just
stopped with our panic buying for a week or two, the shops would have been able
to fully restock and we could go about our normal business (with masks and
social distancing, of course).
The general
ease of our lives pre-COVID made the restrictions to attempt to control the
virus seem much harder than it would have even twenty years ago. Generations before us have lived through world-changing
events without the panic that we experienced.
Even if we were prepared in terms of having enough food in the house, none
of us were prepared for the impacts of something like COVID.
No comments:
Post a Comment