Cyclone clean-up begins, while monsoon damage assessed
Damage assessments are under way after a tropical cyclone battered the west, while residents on the other side of the country take to the air to check stock losses from devastating monsoonal floods.
Floodwaters continue to rise in outback Queensland, dozens of roads remain closed, and communities remain isolated.
McKinlay mayor Janene Fegan said it could be weeks before the full extent of the damage and stock losses is known.
After days of severe rain, conditions only cleared on Wednesday, allowing graziers to launch helicopters.
"We just don't know officially yet - it's just sitting and waiting but it doesn't look good in parts of the northwest of our shire," Cr Fegan told AAP.
"We've been told that the water level is quite high, and there's places that could be higher than 2019.
One elderly man died, his body found inside a submerged car in the far northern town of Normanton on Tuesday afternoon.
Queensland Premier David Crisfulli said Queenslanders were built tough, but the loss of the local man, aged in his 70s, would impact the community.
"To experience a loss of life as a result of the flooding is a deep tragedy for the North West Community ... to lose one of their own," he said on Wednesday.
"Our big focus remains on infrastructure ... it's the roads, it's the bridges. We have to make sure that people remain connected."
While damage assessments are only just beginning the premier acknowledged for many, it was part of living in Queensland.
"Queenslanders are really tough, and they are resilient, and wet season rain happens, and people will always deal with that. But that doesn't mean that people should deal with it on their own," he said.
The Bureau of Meteorology warns isolated heavy falls of 100mm are possible in parts of the Northern Goldfields and Upper Flinders, North West and Central West districts.
Six-hourly rainfall totals between 100 and 180mm are likely, with the potential of isolated falls above 220mm, in areas from about Townsville to Yarrabah.
The bureau's Miriam Bradbury said rain and thunderstorm activity would continue "but we should start to see more of an easing across more widespread areas late in the weekend into early next week".
Disaster relief has been activated for five north Queensland councils following widespread flooding caused by monsoonal rainfall over the Christmas period.
In Western Australia's Kimberley region, emergency services are assessing the damage caused by ex-tropical cyclone Hayley, which crossed the coast as a category three storm over the Dampier Peninsula on Tuesday, causing widespread electricity outages.
It has weakened to a tropical low with wind gusts around 95km/h.
Residents at the Lombadina community, at Cape Leveque on the Dampier Peninsula, reported that two homes had lost their roofs, with winds up to 158km/h and 131.8mm of rain recorded.
DFES and Horizon Power were deploying planes and helicopters on Wednesday to assess damage and direct ground crews to communities that required assistance.
Nine people sought shelter in Broome, with many more seeking refuge with family and friends.
Electricity had been cut in some areas and there were widespread reports of trees being knocked down by the strong winds.
Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm managing director James Brown told ABC radio "there's definitely some damage".
"Even the structures immediately outside the shelter (staff) were in, have sustained roof damage, and there's obviously trees down everywhere," he said.
It would take days to clear the roads and then get boats out to assess the farm, he said.
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