Not again! BoM issues Flood warning for Qld and NSW.
Not again! BoM issues Flood warning for Qld and NSW.
"A major rain event will engulf most of eastern Australia during the next 48 hours, prompting the Bureau of Meteorology to issue flood watches from southern Queensland to the NSW South Coast.
"Greater Sydney could be soaked by up to 200mm from late Thursday to early Saturday, potentially leading to major flooding along the Hawkesbury-Nepean River, while Brisbane and Canberra also face the prospect of heavy rain."
I think it's easy to forget how much rain there had already been before the last big floods. I don't think anywhere on the east coast has had anywhere near as much rain this year so far. I can't see an event like this having the same impact. We'll see I guess.
That being said, the pessimist in me thinks we're just at the start of Autumn.
If there's already heavy rains at the start of April, then what's going to happen in May, June, July, August, and September?
It's also the same communities that are likely to be impacted — places like Richmond, Lismore, and the towns along the Hawkesbury.
The cleanup and rebuild is still ongoing from last time. Another round of floods would be the final straw — financially and emotionally — for many people and small businesses in those regions.
And if there's two bad flood seasons in two years, no insurer is going to touch those towns.
Hopefully it doesn't come to that.
But another bad flood season would not just be devastatingly bad. It would be "state government seriously considers relocating entire towns to higher ground" bad.
@ajsadauskas@maniacalmanicmania Weather patterns switch up all around the globe. Sometimes excessive rain and precipitation and other times a lack thereof.
I dunno about down south, but here in Brisbane it's at least felt pretty similar. We've had weeks of on and off miserable rainy weather.
Personally I don't feel too worried, because where I live the biggest concern is the Brisbane River flooding, not creeks or overland flow. And with the Wivenhoe Dam at just 80% (100% only means maximum usable for drinking water, it can store over 200% during flood events), it'll take a lot more before flooding is likely here.
I'm not certain of Brisbane, but my family has a little farm about 4 hours north of Sydney. Part of it is floodplains (go under in even small floods) so we tend to be reasonably familiar with the conditions that cause the big floods.
At the moment it's not desperately dry, but the soil can hold a lot more water and there hasn't been enough rain to cause run off so the dams are almost empty.
There's a bit of a downpour now and if it's particularly long and intense there may be a small flood round there, but nothing like the conditions surrounding those devastating floods last year.
Also for a lot of those rivers an occasional small flood is healthy because it helps to clear out the excess water weed that may be building up etc.
@naevaTheRat@ajsadauskas Plant some casuarina trees. They don't mind wet feet and are drought tolerant. Added bonus they make spooky whoosing sounds during storms.
got powerlines over the property so height limited. Probs not a terrible idea though if we can find dwarf cultivars. The flowering natives tend to be a bit sensitive to wet feet (although the teattrees do great)
They also grow stupid fast. Most of our river banks are casuarina, bottlebrush and ironbark (the right variety of bottlebrush may be a better bet if you want a smaller tree and flowers)
@ajsadauskas@sydney Same thing has applied to parts of California and the US, Canada, Europe, Asia. Then the weather patterns will change again and the excessive precipitation will be in other areas whilst some get dryer. History repeats itself time and time again. When you over 40 or 50 you'll realize it more and more then shrug it off as most of us who are older do.
The really odd thing is that we're supposed to be in an El Niño phase, which should mean South America gets a lot of rainfall, but that it's very dry here in the western Pacific. Instead we've ended up with a year just as wet as during the last La Niña event.
@ajsadauskas@sydney OOOOHHH! 200 mm? We had between 200-370 mm in one day years ago in Florida. Has happened more than once here and elsewhere in the world. Lots of flooding. Ponds and streams refilled.
@No1 Very true and depends on over how long of a period of time. 25-80 mm in a matter of 20-30 minutes isn't so great anywhere, much like 400-600+ mm over a two day period.