A man found dead in his Hawke's Bay house following the devastating Cyclone Gabrielle floods lost his wife to an aggressive form of cancer just eight months earlier.
Friends and family have paid tribute to Waiohiki resident Ian McLauchlan, aged in his 70s, whose body was discovered on 16 February.
Police are yet to identify him publicly, but announced last Friday that a man in his 70s had died in Waiohiki.
"The person is believed to have died after being caught in floodwater," a police press release said.
"With heavy hearts and teary eyes, we wanted to share that Ian passed away earlier this week in his home in Napier, NZ. He was found in his house approximately 48 hours after the worst hit," a friend wrote in a Facebook group dedicated to Ian and his late wife's memory.
McLauchlan's wife, Lucie Ryan, passed away in June 2022, a day after her 80th birthday, after a short battle with an aggressive brain tumour, glioblastoma multiforme.
"I can't wrap my head around the idea of this world without our friends, Ian and Lucie, especially in less than a year's time," wrote friend Ronda Le Brane.
Another commented: "I heard a man in his 70s had died in Waiohiki and was hoping and hoping it wasn't Ian."
An obituary published in Hawke's Bay Today said McLauchlan was a dearly loved husband, father, and cherished brother.
"I met Ian and Lucie last year when I went to care for Lucie in their home two mornings a week. I really enjoyed my time getting to know them all, and promised Ian I'd keep in touch after Lucie's passing," Marian Keighley commented.
"I reached out to him at Xmas saying we'd catch up for a coffee, to which he replied, let me know, and I'll put the jug on. Sadly we never got there."
In 2021, Ian and Lucie relocated to Ian's homeland in New Zealand, after living long-term in Cambria, California, and settled in Waiohiki, a rural community in the Hastings District.
"The only good thing is he is back with his much loved Lucie, together again," Keighley wrote.
The official death toll from Cyclone Gabrielle is 11; with most of those deaths in Hawke's Bay.
* This article was originally published in The New Zealand Herald.