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Hundreds of Melbourne residents have been ordered to evacuate their homes as the wild weather continues.
More than 40 suburbs in the heart of the city are on high alert as the Maribyrnong River continues to rapidly rise.
Residents in inner-city Maribyrnong were ordered to evacuate early Friday morning, with areas around Melbourne Showground, Footscray Park and Flemington Racecourse under threat.
Brunswick, Coburg, Fitzroy and Northcote in Melbourne’s inner-north and Essendon, Sunshine, Footscray and Yarraville in the west are also on the list of ‘at-risk suburbs.
Dozens of schools have been closed and train lines are cut across a great swathe of the north as the state waits for the worst of the wet weather to clear.
Outside of Melbourne, residents in six towns have been urged to leave their homes and get to higher ground before they’re cut off.
They include Wedderburn, Carisbrook, Seymour, Benalla and Rochester. Seymour residents were told on Friday morning it’s now too late to leave as flood reached record levels.
Large parts of New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania have been hit with wet and wild weather on Thursday as a large rain band smashes the east coast.
Parts of NSW are also on flood watch for the second time within a week, including Wagga Wagga in south NSW and Forbes in the state’s central west.
Satellite images captured a massive cloud band extending 5,000 kilometres from the Tropical Indian Ocean to Australia east coast.
As forecasters warn the worst of the miserable weather is yet to come, here is a wrap-up of what is happening with the weather in your state.
Thousands of residents in the heart of Melbourne have been ordered to evacuate. Pictured is the suburb of Maribyrnong underwater on Friday
Thousands of Australians have been forced to flee their homes as a colossal rain bomb hammers three states and triggers widespread flooding (pictured, rain in Melbourne)
Residents in 42 Melbourne suburbs, including Footscray, Sunshine and Yarraville, have been put on alert as the Maribyrnong River continues to rise (pictured, areas in red told to evacuate)
Victoria
Residents in the heart of Melbourne were ordered to flee their homes as early Friday morning.
Evacuation orders were issued for dozens of properties in Maribyrnong, less than 10km from the Melbourne CBD.
3AW reporter Pat Mitchell described the situation as ‘getting quite urgent’.
‘There’s some houses that have already been inundated and it’s just a matter of time,’ he told Ross and Russel from the scene on Friday.
‘Certainly there are some people a few hundred metres away from the river that probably didn’t think they’d be in this situation.’
Homes near Melbourne Showgrounds, Footscray Park, Flemington Racecourse are also under threat.
It comes after 42 Melbourne suburbs, were put on alert on Thursday night.
At least 40 schools and early childhood centres have closed with office workers in Melbourne asked to stay home amid fears the Yarra River will also flood.
Residents in Rochester, Seymour and Carisbrook were ordered to leave their homes immediately amid rising floodwaters by 10pm on Thursday night.
A warning of an imminent dam failure at the Skinners Flat Reservoir prompted order to evacuate Wedderburn immediately.
Residents in low-lying areas of Lake Eildon have been told to relocate as floodwaters encroach on bridges, homes and parks in the embattled town of Bendigo.
More than 450 properties in Rochester are expected to be impacted when the swollen Campaspe River peaks early on Friday morning.
At least 9,000 homes across the state have been left without electricity after a power station became flooded in Castlemaine, 100km northwest of Melbourne.
A too late to leave was issued for Seymour on Friday morning.
An evacuation earning remains current, but it is now too late to leave. If you haven’t evacuated you should shelter in the highest location possible,’ a VicEmergency alert states.
Attention remains on Rochester, a town about 180km north of Melbourne that sits on the swollen Campaspe River – which is expected to peak early on Friday morning.
More than 300 homes are expected to be inundated by floodwaters with residents in Rochester urged to evacuate by 10pm on Thursday night.
The Victorian SES warned the floods could be reminiscent of those in 2011 when 80 per cent of the township and surrounded rural areas were flooded.
In the town of Echuca, residents have been told to boil their water before they drink it after stormwater contaminated the town’s water storage tanks.
Regional train and coach services have been cancelled due to the heavy rain and flooding in addition to the Sydney to Melbourne line.
The big wet was starting to clear out of western Victoria on Thursday night and forecasters predict conditions will improve for the state’s central parts and then into the east on Friday.
‘Other than that rainfall over Gippsland and the eastern ranges (on Friday), the rest of the state’s really not going to see much … so, less than five millimetres for most places,’ the bureau said.
‘Then over the weekend, it’s just really isolated showers most likely in the south of the state.’
Large parts of New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania have been hit with wet and wild weather as a large rain band smashes the east coast (pictured, flooding in Bendigo)
This satellite image shows the cloud band stretching 5,000 kilometres from the Tropical Indian Ocean to continental Australia
Satellite images have captured a massive cloud band extending 5,000 kilometres from the Tropical Indian Ocean all the way to southeastern Australia
More than 300 homes are expected to be inundated by floods on Thursday evening as residents in Rochester are urged to leave by 10pm (pictured, flooding in regional Victoria)
More than 200 properties in Rochester in central Victoria are expected to be flooded when the swollen Campaspe River peaks early on Friday morning (pictured, a car in Bendigo)
Victoria’s emergency management commissioner Andrew Crisp has warned the state’s flood risk won’t end after today, or even after this weekend (pictured, red areas told to evacuate)
Cars are pictured crossing floodwaters in Heathcote in central Victoria as rain batters the state
New South Wales
In New South Wales, hundreds of people have been told to evacuate Forbes in the state’s central west before major flooding hits the area – with the SES urging people to leave before 8pm on Thursday.
The orders affect about 250 homes as rain batters the region and moderate flooding affects Wagga Wagga after the Murrumbidgee River peaked on Thursday morning.
The Lachlan River is expected to reach a major flood peak of 10.6 metres later on Thursday or early on Friday morning.
Senior forecaster Jonathan How said on Thursday that Broken Hill in the far west of NSW had copped an overnight deluge.
‘They’ve now set a new record for the highest October daily rainfall record – more than 50mm overnight,’ he told the ABC.
In Echuca, residents have been told to boil their water before they drink it after stormwater contaminated the town’s water storage tanks (pictured, a flood level in Bendigo, Victoria)
In New South Wales, hundreds of people have been told to evacuate Forbes in the state’s central west before major flooding hits the area (pictured, children play in floodwaters)
Fears remain for Rochester, a town about 180km north of Melbourne, as the swollen Campaspe River is expected to peak early on Friday morning (pictured, flooded scenes in Bendigo)
Meanwhile, a search is under way for a 63-year-old man believed missing in western NSW floodwaters who was last seen on a rural property on Lachlan Valley Way.
He vanished from Hillston around midday on Tuesday, when he told a friend he would return shortly and failed to return.
Local police, PolAir, Police Rescue, the SES and paramedics failed to find any trace of the man on Wednesday and the search is now focused on the Riverina farm and along the swollen Lachlan River.
Heavy rain with six-hourly totals of 30 to 50mm will extend across southern NSW, with damaging winds in alpine areas.
However, rain will ease on Thursday night, with showers moving across the coast on Friday morning before finally moving offshore in the afternoon and evening.
Residents have been tirelessly loading sandbags to prepare for more rain in Latrobe, Tasmania
Tasmania
In Tasmania, fears animals may have been swept away by floodwaters at the Wings Wildlife Park come as devastating floods hit the northwest coast.
The Walloa Creek, which runs through the park, is said to have overflowed and caused damage to the cafe and animal enclosures.
Staff took to social media to admit the last 12 hours at the park in Gunns Plain had been a ‘nightmare’ with it ‘likely’ some animals had been lost in the floods.
‘The members of the Wing Family and all the park staff are well and accounted for but are all devastated by the impacts of this flood and will now need time to assess the future of this amazing family experience and how they can move forward from yet another devastating event,’ owner Ian Waller wrote on Facebook.
Earlier on Thursday, a major flood warning was issued for the Meander, Macquarie and Mersey Rivers impacting locations like Kimberly, Elizabeth Town, Merseylea, Sunnyside, Railton, Sassafras, Latrobe, Tarleton, and surrounds.
Residents from Liena to Latrobe have been urged to leave their homes as at least 25 people are evacuated from a local caravan park.
Flooding is also occurring in Sheffield, on Tasmania’s northwest coast, after the area received a downpour of over 100mm of rain in just eight hours.
Residents from Liena to Latrobe have been urged to leave their homes as at least 25 people are evacuated from a local caravan park (pictured, the Mersey Bridge in Latrobe, Tasmania)
In Tasmania, fears animals may have been swept away by floodwaters at the Wings Wildlife Park come as devastating floods hit the northwest coast (pictured)
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