Drought-stricken Aussie farmers now battered by floods
More Australian ranchers who struggled to keep their cattle alive during a prolonged drought last year are now battling to save herds from record-breaking floods inundating the northeast of the country, officials said on Wednesday.
Australia’s military has been called in to drop fodder to cattle stranded by floodwaters in Queensland state to stop them from starving, Agriculture Minister David Littleproud said, with their owners still marooned in their farmsteads.
The losses for farmers from the floods were likely to be in the "hundreds of millions of dollars" he said.
While the late arrival of the monsoon in mid-January initially sparked joy among graziers as it brought much-needed rain to the parched lands, celebrations turned to horror as incessant downpours destroyed herds and washed away properties.
"Stock losses will be much higher than normal, because drought-weakened cattle are more susceptible to being caught and drowned in floodwaters or dying of exposure in the wet, cold winds," Guerin said.
Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Vinord Anand said some drought-affected communities received hardly any rain in December and the start of the year before the heavens opened.
"It’s like the flicking of a switch — it’s been dry, dry, dry and then suddenly you get a year’s worth of rain in 37 days," he told AFP.
Farmer Rachael Anderson said she expected that some 200 cattle at a station she manages near Julia Creek township have so far died.
"We thought that they would have been OK, but with the way this flood has come, we really don’t think there is much hope," Anderson told national broadcaster ABC.
We’d probably almost (would) have been better off in the drought."