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Deadly storms hit Australian city 'like a quake'
#1
Sun Jun 10, 4:18 PM ET

Rescue workers are urging thousands of people to evacuate their homes after deadly storms lashed Australia's east coast, leaving parts of one city looking like an earthquake had struck, officials said Sunday.

After days of torrential rains, flood waters surged into areas north of Sydney, isolating towns, swamping farms, homes and businesses and causing millions of dollars in damage.

The death toll rose to nine when police found the body of a man who died after he was swept into a storm water drain on a flooded road.

Authorities earlier found the body of a man who died when his car was swept off a highway into a swollen creek.

His wife and three young children, aged two, three and nine, who were travelling with him, also died when the road collapsed underneath them, but their bodies had been found earlier.

Although bringing much-needed rain to Sydney and towns to its north, the storms have wreaked havoc since slamming into the city and the Central Coast and Newcastle to the north on Friday.

Among the dead are a 29-year-old man crushed when a tree fell on his car near Newcastle and a couple who perished when their vehicle was swept off a bridge while crossing a flooded river in the Hunter Valley.

Officials said Newcastle looked as if it had been hit by an earthquake.

"What I saw were parts of Newcastle that resembled the kind of damage that followed the (1989) earthquake," New South Wales state premier Morris Iemma said after visiting the city.

"Construction sites and scaffolding, debris on roads, abandoned cars, homes that were damaged, trees having fallen on homes, extensive damage. It was quite disbelieving," he added.

The 1989 earthquake packed a magnitude of 5.6 and killed 13 people.

Newcastle resident Harry Gregory told The Sunday Telegraph he fled his home after his bed and fridge started to float in the flood waters.

"Everything's ruined," he said. "I have a lounge (sofa) stuck in my front fence and I have got no idea who it belongs to."

Emergency workers evacuated 400 people from their homes along the Central Coast overnight, including by boat and helicopter, and were Sunday urging some 5,000 residents in Maitland, to the north, to seek shelter away from rising flood waters.

State Emergency Services spokesman Steve Delaney said the Hunter River could peak at 11 metres (36 feet) higher than normal later in the day.

"This will meet their predictions. It won't go below. It will meet their predictions by midnight tonight," he told ABC radio.

"So there is a real, clear possibility that the levy might overtop this evening."

Meanwhile, the clean-up began in Newcastle and flood waters were receding in Singleton.

Accompanied by gale force winds, the storms have driven a massive freighter aground in Newcastle, forced the suspension of ferry services in Sydney Harbour and blacked out tens of thousands of homes.

Prime Minister John Howard said those affected by storms and flooding would be entitled to cash payments in addition to natural disaster funding offered by the state government.

"I know I speak for every Australian in saying that the country is thinking of you and we're heartbroken by the loss of lives and the tragic circumstances in which a number of people have lost their lives," he said.

"It is an immense disaster."

Maritime officials said salvage crews were hopeful that the 30,000-tonne vessel Pasha Bulker, still stranded on a Newcastle beach after running aground amid huge seas on Friday, could be refloated as violent conditions eased.

"There's every hope that a plan to safely remove the ship from the beach will be progressed pretty quickly," spokesman Neil Patchett said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070610/wl_...37CDIDW7oF
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#2
Evacuated Australians return home as floodwaters ease

By Michael PerrySun Jun 10, 8:45 PM ET

Thousands of Australians started returning home on Monday after floodwaters in the wine-rich Hunter Valley eased, but residents further downstream near the coal port of Newcastle may be evacuated, officials said.

"It is like a ghost town," Lee Bennett told local radio when he returned to the town of Maitland which was evacuated on Sunday.

"The SES (state emergency services) are collecting sandbags. Its just a matter of waiting for people to return."

The major storm which has been battering Australia's east coast, causing the worst flooding in the Hunter Valley for 30 years and beaching a coal ship, eased on Sunday.

Nine people died in the storm.

Around 5,000 residents from Maitland were evacuated on Sunday fearing the swollen Hunter River would break levees overnight. Floodwaters failed to breach sandbag levees, leaving the town dry but surrounding farms flooded.

"We now have the all clear," said New South Wales State Emergency Services spokesman Phil Campbell. "Those people behind the levees...may return to their businesses and homes."

However some 400 residents from the farms outside Maitland were unable to return home due to floodwaters.

The floodwaters moved downstream on Sunday towards Newcastle, one of Australia's major coal export ports, but were not expected to cause severe flooding.

SEWAGE OVERFLOWS

Emergency officials warned people returning home to avoid floodwaters due to raw sewage overflows.

"You can imagine the amount of rubbish that is coming out of drains and out of gutters. You wouldn't swim in a sewage farm and basically I can't understand people who play in floodwater," said SES spokesman Steve Delaney.

Some 50,000 homes are without power as a result of the storm and electricity officials said some would remain without power for a week as power lines and poles had been destroyed.

Despite the flooding rains, Sydney's main catchment area received very little rain, with just 40 mm falling in the city's main Warragamba Dam.

The wild seas which beached the bulk carrier "Pasha Bulker" on Friday had eased and a salvage crew was examining whether to try and refloat the ship, said Newcastle port authorities.

"That is what the salvage team is looking at the moment," said Keith Powell from the Newcastle Ports Corporation.

"They will inspect the structure and the integrity of the vessel and then it will be up to that salvage team to make recommendations about that salvage," he said.

Authorities had feared a marine disaster if the giant ship broke up and spilt its 700 tonnes of fuel and oil.

All coal loading operations in Newcastle have been suspended until the seas calm down, leaving some 50-plus ships anchored offshore.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/australia_flo...tRybMDW7oF
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#3
To all of our Australia members and guests. Let us know you are.
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#4
sorry.... Skipped a word. Let us know HOW you are.
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#5
All's well down my neck of the woods...but it sure is wet and cold.  I wanted to shoot up to Gippsland this weekend for a spot of Bream fishing...perhaps if they lower me in with a helicopter I could.:crybaby: 

This time the year before last I came back with almost a car boot full of them and that was keeping within our Fisheries BagLimits of 10 fish per person per day.  There was 4 of us, and we spent 2 days fishing...the whole weekend.  We kept the largest ones and threw back the rest.  We threw back 10 times more than we kept.  Wildfire fishing considering they averaged over 1 kilo each and the largest was 4lbs.  I wish I could've gone again this year.:crybaby: 

[user=148]Astrojewels[/user] wrote:
Quote:Glad to see that they have used science as the excuse, I do believe we will have relief from the drought this year, but it is all politics and nothing else.
[user=152]AndrewX[/user] wrote:
Quote:I agree with Karen...I too feel that we'll have alot of rain this coming winter/Spring.  Everyone I tell it too seems pesemistic though which is an indication of just how long it's been.
Below is a picture taken today of a large junction on the main highway I would have been driving on right now on my way to my Gippsland fishing spot.  Oh my fishing spot is flooded right out!!!:crybaby:


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#6
Well I am going to rave on here.

In the last hour of the people’s desperation, god heard the words and showered them with their desires, so we are led to believe! Our prime minister told the people of Australia to pray for rain, do Aussies have a direct link to god?

So we have gone from drought to floods, its all in a days work from HAARP, because now people will complain and focus on fear about the damage of these storms, and you know the most fascinating thing is I was told insurance companies have changed their policies, no flood cover, so I rang mine and yep its true, I asked could I add flood damage to my policy, nope he said, why? We only cover flood if you live next to a river.

I said but what about if the rains come in a mass amount, he said sorry we do not cover? And either do any other companies, I rang around.

This was proof enough for me months ago that we were going to get a deluge, because now the people will have to get help from the government< create the chaos, to control the order>, the famous words of the freemasons.

Currently, we have floods in Australia and England, fires in USA, earthquakes in Hawaii, heat wave in Europe, anything I forgot?

If you can not see past the illusion, open your third eye, it is all fear and control, but the point is, yes they can control the electromagnetic energy of our earth, but it can only be amplified through the natural energy that resides here, huh what? The global consciousness of the people, the fears of the people though manipulation is what is reflecting on the earth, do not fear the unknown or what is to come.

I live in a safe place, and we have had some very nice rain, the wind has been a bit much and the poor trees are fighting to stay upright, but if something was to happen here, I will deal with it then and not now, not create negative energy around me by thinking what will we do if? They are trying so hard to influence people into the ‘end times programming’ so it really comes down to each individual and their choice of energy they prefer to strengthen.

 

Andrew X,

Just think if you wait a couple weeks, all the rivers will be full and the fish will be jumping in your boat. I am sure you will catch more than ever before.

Glad to hear you are safe.
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#7
Astrojewels Wrote:Currently, we have floods in Australia and England, fires in USA, earthquakes in Hawaii, heat wave in Europe, anything I forgot?
Floods in Texas and Okalahoma.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/...nes-nation
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#8
Hey your not wrong Karen, how did you know that's the way it goes?? I didn't think you were a fisherperson. Yep, it's a cycle they go through with every flood. Flood waters flushout the entire river system of old debris and bring down all the new food supplies from way upstream down to the coastal esturines. Once these floods subside in Gippsland, it "a hunting I will go, without a crossbow though". But I have the feeling it may be longer than 2weeks.

I don't think you have anything to fear up where you are Karen.

The worlds in a bit of climatic turmoil at the moment though, that's for sure. Mid Europe is half on fire from the extremes of heat. I'll just add that one onto Richard's entry.
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#9
Andrew X,
I am not a fishing person but I find it amazing how intense fish are, they are so sensitive to the elements of the earth, and how one down pour can structure them to rush around, fornicate and produce offspring for their species, it is a life and death situation. where I live is so dry, but in the summer we might have a month of extreme weather, no rain but as soon as a tiny bit of rain comes, the frogs are out, singing and socializing, they just patiently wait under the ground for that rain, no matter how long it takes. I feel safe where I am, and I know the only natural disaster that could come is fire, and it will in the next couple of years because of the idiotic greenies thinking they are saving the forest, but they will cause destruction. Yes the world is in a bit of turmoil but it is just a reflection of the mind-patterns we all carry currently. You will have to tell us about your fishing trip when you go.
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#10
Quote:You will have to tell us about your fishing trip when you go.
 

Will do when I go Karen, but seeing as that may be a while, here's a few pics of fish I've caught in the recent past that I think you'll appreciate because you know the types of indigenous species these are and how big they normally are when sold in out fish markets and shops.

Here's a 4lb Bream I caught at the mouth of the Patterson River in Carrum last month at high tide using live blubberWorm for bait...


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