Saturday 23 May 2009

NSW Northern Rivers flood information updates 23.05.09


Photo of the Clarence River at Grafton from The Daily Examiner

Latest river heights courtesy of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology Issued at 5.15am on Saturday, 23 May 2009:

Lower Clarence River
Clarence R at Lilydale 4.30am Sat 17.16 falling Plot Table
Orara R at Karangi 4.30am Sat 2.71 rising Plot Table
Orara R at Glenreagh** 4.30am Sat 10.41 falling moderate Plot Table
Orara R at Bawden Bridge** 4.30am Sat 17.92 rising Plot Table
Clarence R at Rogans Br. 3.30pm Fri 12.92 rising Plot Table
Clarence R at Grafton (Prince St) 4.00am Sat 7.36 rising major Plot Table
Clarence R at Ulmarra 4.30am Sat 5.74 rising major Plot Table
Clarence R at Brushgrove 4.30am Sat 4.64 rising moderate Plot Table
Coldstream R at Tyndale 4.30am Sat 4.34 steady Plot Table
Clarence R at Maclean 4.30am Sat 2.83 rising major Plot Table
Clarence R at Palmers Channel 3.30pm Fri 1.12 steady Plot Table
Clarence R at Yamba 8.30pm Fri 2.03 falling Plot Table

Wooli River
Wooli R at Caravan Park 4.56am Sat 0.90 rising Plot Table
Wooli R at Entrance 12.00pm Fri 0.27 rising Plot Table
Woolgoolga Ck at Woolgoolga 4.00am Sat 0.75 steady Plot Table

River heights for the Tweed, Richmond and Upper Clarence areas here.

Predicted River Heights/Flows:
Grafton - peaking near 7.3 metres with major flooding- remain above major flood level over the weekend
Ulmarra - peak near 5.8 metres around 5 am (23/05/09) with major flooding
Maclean - peak near 3.2 metres around 6 pm (23/05/09) with major flooding coinciding with the high tide.

Road closures in the Clarence Valley here.

Latest weather warnings for the New South Wales here.

Photograph of the Lismore district from The Northern Star

Splendour in the Grass, Belongil Fields Byron Bay, 25-26 July 2009


Splendour In the Grass is an annual music, arts and youth culture event which has taken place on the outskirts of Byron Bay each July/August since 2001.
As well as the latest and best in music from Australia and overseas, the festival also features local arts and crafts, creative performance and cuisine.

The festival is on the top of most discerning Australian music fan's wish-lists of must-go Festivals, which combined with the event's relatively small capacity compared to many of the summer festivals, results in feverish activity on the day tickets go on sale. This year's festival will be the eighth Splendour In the Grass. The two-day event accommodates 17,500 people and has sold out in advance in each year of its existence, often within hours of going on sale – all tickets to last year's festival were snapped up in just 5 hours, while the preceding three years' events sold out in a little over a day.

Many who attend choose to immerse themselves in the full 'Splendour experience' by taking advantage of the on-site camping adjacent to the festival site. Campers set up their tents right outside the festival gates and quickly establish their own Splendour village for the weekend.

For all things splendid and ticket info go here. Camping and event tickets have sold out.
If you missed out on tickets ... don't despair, we’ve got some news that will cheer you up. From 9.00am June 15th those who bought Splendour in the Grass tickets but can no longer attend will have the option to offer them for re-sale (less booking and admin fees) via www.qjump.com.au so that those who didn’t secure a ticket in the general release have a chance to grab one. For more info on this re-sale option, head to www.splendourinthegrass.com/faqs. We also have a number of sideshows happening this July, with more to be announced over the coming weeks.

A little weekend pollie trivia....


Last time I looked (was about Wednesday) over at Twitter KevinRuddPM had 44,443 followers (181 updates) and TurnbullMalcolm had 10,301 followers (481 updates).
Sorta like the opinion polls isn't it?

Friday 22 May 2009

Clarence River flooding 22.05.09

ABC North Coast Radio today:

Thousands of residents in northern New South Wales have been asked to evacuate, as the Clarence and Wilson Rivers threaten to flood surrounding towns.

At least 9,000 Grafton residents have been told to leave, with the town predicted to flood tonight.

However, there are differing reports about the number of residents being asked to evacuate, with the SES putting the figure at about 20,000.

Residents in villages north of Grafton around the Lower Clarence River have also been told to evacuate.

Earlier, more than 5,000 people left the city of Lismore over concerns the Wilsons River would peak.

SES spokesman Dave Mackey says the Clarence River in Grafton could reach 7.8 metres about midnight.

"Given the fact that we've had so much rainfall and it doesn't seem to be letting up too much, that prediction of 7.8 is very close to [the] levee overtopping," he said.

"At this stage we do not believe it is worth waiting until dark to make a call for an evacuation.

"This height water is below the levee but the following areas will be inundated: the town of Grafton and low-lying areas of South Grafton, except for Bent Street Hill and the high ground to the Armidale Road.

"Residents and business owners in Grafton and the lower parts of South Grafton are to activate their personal and business flood plans and evacuate as soon as possible."

Mr Mackey says an evacuation coordination centre has been established at the Coffs Harbour Showground.

He says residents who are able to drive themselves out should head south on the Pacific Highway.

Mr Mackey says residents in Grafton can expect the worst if the towns get flooded.

"Power supplies will need to be shut down. Telephone services will fail, which means people will not be able to call for help," he said.

"Sewerage facilities will fail with raw sewage possibly entering houses. Roads will become flooded and vehicle movement will be restricted."

Ulmarra and Brushgrove residents have also been ordered to evacuate.

The Pacific Highway is cut by water at Maclean and the only road inland from Yamba is cut by water.

The Wilsons River is beginning to recede, but Lismore residents cannot access their homes and businesses yet.

The Tweed, Byron Bay, Ballina, Lismore, Kyogle and the Clarence Valley local government areas have all been declared disaster areas by the NSW Government.