Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Caitlin Cassidy

Victoria floods: nervous night in Shepparton but Goulburn River peaks lower than expected

Carol Adams is standing in her driveway with flood water around her bare feet. The flood waters have just reached the sandbags along the front of her house behind her
With flood waters lapping at the sandbags, Carol Adams keeps an eye on the levels in Shepparton, Victoria after the river peak on Monday morning. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

When Carol Adams went to bed on Sunday night at her home in Shepparton North, she wasn’t sure if she would wake to flood waters breaching the sandbags lining her driveway.

“I didn’t go to sleep until 4am,” she said. “I couldn’t go anywhere, where am I going to go? I’ve got a dog, and four cats, and my brother-in-law out the back.”

The Goulburn River peaked just shy of the predicted 12.2 metres, reaching 12.06 metres on Monday morning. It meant the water was lapping at Adams’ roses, but not her front steps.

A child in a canoe paddles down a flooded street. The flood waters are part way up the fences of the houses and there is a brown dog standing on a patch of grass
Children negotiate flooded roads in canoes in North Shepparton as the flood waters rise. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Adams has lived in Shepparton for 20 years and said she had never seen flood waters like this. “This is crazy, and a lot of it’s coming in through the drains,” she said.

“Luckily there’s a young mob of kids running around with their cars and trailers bringing [sandbags] out for you … and there are people worse off at the moment.”

Many people had to be rescued from harm’s way overnight, with the State Emergency Service (SES) confirming about 100 rescues in the Shepparton-Goulburn Valley district.

Shopfronts in Shepparton where sandbags have been placed at the doors and flood waters have risen over the pavement
Branditt Avenue shops in Shepparton North were sandbagged on Sunday afternoon. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Thousands of homes have been inundated or cut off, but the lower-than-predicted flood peak had spared thousands more.

“That 15cm makes a significant difference to the number of properties either isolated or impacted,” the Victorian SES chief, Tim Wiebusch, said on Monday morning.

“We believe around 4,000 properties are now either isolated or have some levels of inundation. Again, impact assessment will occur over the next week and that is because the Goulburn River will still be at the major flood level for another four to five days.”

Further down the street from Adams, Jennifer Cannon was on her front porch with a cup of tea, enjoying the sunshine and her new waterfront view.

Cannon has lived on the same block of land for almost five decades, and remembers the 1974 floods – the worst in the Goulburn Valley’s recent history.

She was in her 20s at the time, and said there was nothing to do but “sit around and watch the water come up”. “You weren’t as scared then, like with a lot of things,” she said. “All you could find out was on the radio and the TV.”

In 1974 the flood waters breached their house and destroyed the yard. Decades later, it’s been rebuilt on higher ground, as have many houses on the street. “It’s better off now, there’s no water, there’s no nothing,” she said.

Brown flood waters have inundated peoples gardens on a street in Shepparton under a blue sky
Flooded houses in Hayes Street in Shepparton. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Greater Shepparton mayor, Shane Sali’s mind is already turning to recovery. He has barely left the emergency relief centre at the town’s showgrounds since Friday.

“You lose track of what day it is,” he said on Monday morning. “The community has been amazing, though. Since we put in a callout they started filling sandbags. It’s been an overwhelming response.”

Hundreds of volunteers and community groups have poured through the centre in the past four days, shovelling sand until 4am and distributing food and essential supplies to hundreds of evacuees.

Nearly 200,000 sandbags were filled by volunteers alongside the Australian defence force and a rapid response team before the expected major flood peak on Monday.

Sali said there was a sense of relief that the worst-case scenario had not been reached overnight. But with thousands of homes in greater Shepparton affected by flood waters and major roads in and out of town still cut off, the job was far from over.

“It was quite a nervous time last night heading into the early parts of this morning with the expected increase,” Sali said.

“But we were fortunate to wake up with a small amount of positive news … we’re hopeful it starts to recede over the course of the next day or two, when we’ll need community support more than ever.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.