Cantabrians awoke to find the region blanketed in snow. The ‘Big Snow’, as the 1992 storm came to be known, was the region’s heaviest for 30 years. Schoolchildren rejoiced when they learnt that their holidays had begun a day early, but the storm couldn’t have struck at a worse time for farmers – the middle of lambing season.
From midday on 27 August weather forecasts alerted residents to the likelihood of snow, which began to fall that evening. As forecast, it snowed literally down to sea level. New Brighton beach was barely recognisable.
By mid-morning on the 28th power was out throughout much of the region. Most of Christchurch city had electricity restored by the afternoon but it took several days for line gangs to reach some rural areas. Residents able to listen on battery-operated radios were advised not to go to work unless it was absolutely necessary, and then only if they had a four-wheel drive or chains. Many inland roads were closed, as were schools, courts and other services, including Christchurch airport. Hospitals stayed open with assistance from the army and Red Cross, which transported essential staff. Some dairies and bars also opened to serve the brave few who ventured outdoors.
Sugarloaf, the site of the city’s radio and television transmitters, became inaccessible and soon ran out of fuel for its emergency generator. It was two days before bulldozers enabled a tanker to bring in fresh supplies. Fortunately local television station CTV was able to stay on air and kept residents informed.
While life, and television viewing, was disrupted in Christchurch city, it was the rural community that was hit hardest. Not only was it the middle of the lambing season, but many farmers were still recovering from the effects of a snowstorm in July. Farmers faced losing newborn lambs, ewes and older lambs weakened by the earlier storm, and sheep freshly shorn in preparation for lambing. They were advised by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry to focus on those they could save. Other regions pitched in with supplies of hay and the government covered the road-user charges incurred in collecting and distributing the feed. It was later reported that more than one million sheep had died, at an estimated cost to farmers of $40 million (equivalent to $64 million in 2015).
Further snowstorms hit the region in 1996, 2002 and 2006. South Canterbury was the area worst affected by the 2006 storm (also often referred to as the ‘Big Snow’), which left many residents without power for weeks.
- Further information: Philip King, Canterbury: the big snow 1992, Philip King Booksellers Ltd, Christchurch, 1992
Read more on NZHistory
New Zealand disasters timeline – New Zealand disasters timeline
External links
- The big snow (Te Ara)
How to cite this page
'Canterbury's 'Big Snow'', URL: /page/%26%23039%3B-big-snow%26%23039%3B, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 5-Jun-2015