Monday, Apr 29, 2019 at 00:15
I can remember Winter 1974 in the S.E. Wheatbelt of W.A. as a Winter of constantly flooding rains.
We had a dry Autumn, and I can remember building our 60' x 40' workshop in the approximately first 3 weeks of June 1974 - and every day of those 3 weeks was sunny and fine, giving us superb working weather.
We finished the workshop on the 19th of June - and on the 20th June it started to rain - and it virtually never stopped raining, until the end of September that year!!
The S.E. Wheatbelt crops in the regions between Narembeen, Kondinin,
Hyden,
Lake King,
Lake Grace, Dumbleyung and
Wagin, went under water for kilometre after kilometre, until they looked like rice paddies.
I can recall driving along the Karlgarin
Hill North Road, about mid-August 1974, from the Kondinin-
Hyden Road to Whyte Road (a distance of about 15kms) - and the floodwaters rarely got below halfway up the doors of my HQ Holden ute, for that entire 15kms.
Huge sections of the S.E. W.A. Wheatbelt were in similar condition. Major hwys throughout the region were closed for weeks, as the floodwater flow took ages to subside.
Crops were an absolute wipeout in the S.E. that year, quite a number of wheat receival points never even opened through the area.
Funnily enough, that disastrous 1974 W.A. Wheatbelt flood followed on the heels of the even more disastrous Jan 1974 floods in
Brisbane.
I seem to recall the flood that filled Lake Eyre in 1974, came from the same weather system that flooded
Brisbane?
Cheers, Ron.
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