Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
National

Record-breaking rainfall leaves long-term Croki dairy farmer searching for way forward

Croki dairy farmer Craig Emerton says he's facing a tough time ahead. (ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Weather conditions across the NSW Mid North Coast have eased and water levels are receding but, for some, the impacts from this week's floods will be felt for months.

Taree received record rainfall — 305 millimetres fell in the 24 hours to 9am on Thursday.

Nearby low-lying townships, including the village of Croki, were inundated, and some roads and pastures submerged as residents coped with their third flood in 12 months.

Croki dairy farmer Craig Emerton said 90 per cent of his farm was still under water and he had only just managed to plant his winter feed crop.

"We haven't been able to utilise our paddocks properly since February this year. We have been under that much continuous wet weather," he said.

"We were running six weeks behind in our planting and finally finished up our planting last week. Now it's all gone under water … so it's going to leave us with a huge feed gap.

Mr Emerton says it was the most rainfall he had seen over a two-day period in the 33 years of running his farm. (ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

The farm has been in Mr Emerton's family since 1856. He's been running it for more than three decades and had planned to pass it on to his daughter.

Now though, he is not so sure

"We're trying to work through a farm succession plan but we keep getting thrown these curve balls with the weather," he said.

"We wouldn't like to hand it over to them at the moment … because it'd just destroy them to work under this."

Evacuated residents return home

An evacuation order was in place for low-lying areas of Tuncurry and residents have now returned home. (ABC Mid North Coast: Keely Johnson)

Further south, residents in low-lying parts of Tuncurry have returned home after being forced to evacuate during the height of the flooding.

"It's a bit smelly and there's lots of rubbish and brown water," resident Craig Murray said.

David Hardaker, the local emergency services coordinator for the Salvation Army, helped coordinate operations at the Tuncurry evacuation centre and said it had been a very stressful few days.

"There was a lot of flash flooding and people were caught in vehicles, it was full-on."

Lakeside Caravan Park at Forster during this week's flooding. (ABC Mid North Coast: Keely Johnson)
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.