A mother made a desperate bid with a garden hose to save her Island Bay house from going up in flames before the inferno destroyed her family of four鈥檚 鈥渄ream home鈥.
Schamet Horsfield, together with her husband Gray and two sons, escaped mostly unscathed from Monday鈥檚 blaze, which began in the garage but quickly took over the rest of the house.
She said the kindness of her neighbours and friends has helped bring the horror incident into perspective.
Now the family to help with the costs of rebuilding their lives.
Horsfield, 51, was on the computer early on Monday evening when she heard the 鈥渂loody鈥 smoke alarm go off and thought the device was being oversensitive.
鈥淚 was getting up and kind of annoyed, and then I heard screaming,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 heard my boys screaming and I went out there and, oh my god, the garage was on fire.鈥
Gray (left), Octavius, Halifax and Schamet Horsfield, with dog Snowy Starla, lost their home in a fire on Monday. Their pet cat, Thirteen (pictured), is missing after the blaze.
Horsfield did not want to speak about the cause of the fire but said investigators have ruled it was an accident.
鈥淚t was a bit stupid, but I went to grab the hose to try and put it out and that just did nothing,鈥 she said.
The family fled the blaze, with Horsfield trying to go back to rescue her cat and her wedding album.
She remembered a friend who lost his home to a volcano eruption in Hawaii, who had said his biggest regret was not taking his wedding photos when he escaped.
Horsfield burned her hand while trying to go back and realised it wasn鈥檛 worth risking her life.
鈥淢y intuition, you know, that higher self part of you is like, 鈥楽chamet, no. Don鈥檛 you even think about this right now. You cannot do this. You will die.鈥 And I went, 鈥極h, yeah. Dying, leaving my children alone because I鈥檓 trying to rescue my kitty and the wedding album is probably not, you know, a good idea right now鈥.鈥
Schamet Horsfield (sixth left) says her neighbours (pictured) have surrounded her with love and support after the fire that burned down her dream home in Wellington's Island Bay.
Days later, she is yet to find her beloved pet, called Thirteen. The family are desperately seeking sightings of the fluffy Himalayan cat in the suburb.
鈥淚 always told her not to go out, so she鈥檚 afraid of going out ... if she stayed in, she鈥檚 not alive, she鈥檚 under rubble somewhere.鈥
Horsfield miscarried a baby girl some years ago and said she felt as though Thirteen had become her 鈥渓ittle girl鈥, so the loss of her pet was affecting her deeply.
鈥淪he follows me everywhere I go... she鈥檚 so beautiful and she鈥檚 so sweet.鈥
Nearby residents have set up traps and left out food for Thirteen, and Horsfield is hoping to get the word out to more people in the area.
The Island Bay house quickly went up in flames. Photo / Blair Knuckey
The help of her neighbours had blown Horsfield away.
鈥淭he neighbours were so wonderful. They came out, the whole street came out with blankets. They covered me in, I think I had five blankets.鈥
They gave the family clothing, shoes and blankets for warmth, and helped care for them as they watched their home burn down.
鈥淚 have never, ever experienced this level of kindness and support,鈥 Horsfield said.
鈥淥ur street is the best neighbourhood I鈥檝e ever lived in.鈥
The love of the people around her was what motivated Horsfield to speak to the Herald about her ordeal.
鈥淚 want all of the neighbours that came to my support... I want them to read this article and their hearts to be full of love.
Schamet Horsfield's cat, named Thirteen, went missing in the fire.
鈥淲e need more good news. Yes, a tragedy happened, it鈥檚 horrible. We鈥檙e all traumatised... [but] what came out of it was so beautiful.鈥
Gray鈥檚 family have given the Horsfields somewhere to stay until they can find a new home, and his workplace, W膿t膩, delivered a load of groceries including all the foods the boys liked, Gray鈥檚 favourite tea and Schamet鈥檚 favourite cheese.
鈥淲e always think that abundance is the dream home and the comfort and the bells and whistles and all that external stuff. The abundance is actually community. It鈥檚 connection, it鈥檚 family, it鈥檚 not all this external stuff,鈥 she said.
鈥淭he external stuff can just go right up in a puff of smoke within an hour and then it鈥檚 all gone.
鈥淲hen you have something like this happen, you get really clear on what is the most important thing. My family and my community are the most important things.鈥
The oceanview property on High St was Horsfield鈥檚 鈥渄ream home鈥.
鈥淚 actually manifested the house in detail,鈥 she said, noting she was a spiritual person.
The house was exactly what they wanted, filled with their treasures from a lifetime of travel.
鈥淚 think that鈥檚 the most devastating part, is that it wasn鈥檛 a house, it was my home.鈥
Because of the cost of living and rising insurance prices, the Horsfields had recently lowered the amount their house was insured for and raised their excess.
鈥淵ou just think it鈥檚 never going to happen to you.鈥
The family have started a Givealittle page to help rebuild their lives. The funds from the page will support the couple as well as their boys Octavius, 17, and Halifax, 14, and their dog, Snowy Starla.
Melissa Nightingale is a Wellington-based reporter who covers crime, justice, and news in the capital. She joined the Herald in 2016 and has worked as a journalist for 12 years.
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