Small low developed near Double Island Point. In the lead up rains a girl drowned at Samford on the 6th. A man and a woman in a Campervan swept into creek at Kennilworth when bank collapsed on afternoon of the 8th. The man drowned.

On the 8th at the Sunshine Coast flooding and landslips closed dozens of roads. Wind blew power lines down causing blackouts and several houses had roof damage. SES sandbagged homes against flash flooding in Nambour, Palmwoods, Coolum, Mudjimba and Pacific Paradise.

Landslides affected the Obi Range Road between Mapleton and Kennilworth, Jimna Creek Road, Cedar Pocket Road and Tin Can Bay Road. Kilcoy was Isolated by floodwaters. At Brookfield a schoolgirl was rescued from Mogill Creek. In the Valley a landslide closed off Ivory Street.

The road to Bribie Island was cut. SES volunteers attended wind and flood damage operations in the Laidley and Gatton area. Fallen trees cut several roads. Double Island Point automatic weather station (AWS) recorded a gust of 63 knots at 0047 UTC 8th, while the AWS at Cape Moreton registered a gust of 56 knots at 0119 UTC 8th.

A peak wave height of 8 metres was measured on the waverider buoy off Main Beach Southport at 1300 UTC 8th. On the 9th top 24 hour rainfall totals to 9am were Maleny 404 mm, Mary Cairncross 370mm Nambour 332 mm. In Brisbane Strathpine recorded 182 mm.

A boy was drowned when he was swept into a stormwater drain at Palmwoods. Another boy was rescued after being swept from a park in Nambour. A man was drowned when he was swept over a weir while boogie-boarding in the Caboolture and a man was trapped by the rapidly rising South Pine River at Albany Creek and drowned.

In the north of Brisbane, 160 roads were cut with the Bruce Highway being the worse affected with the road cut in several key locations. 17,800 houses were without power in southeast Queensland. A man drowned in a creek on the Gold Coast.On the 10th the body of a man was found in a creek just outside Conondale.

The Mary River at Gympie peaked at 21.95 metres (The highest level this century). 150 business and 20 houses were inundated.

This event is classified as an East Coast Low.

More about East Coast Lows

Harden Up
Bureau of Meteorology
The Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research report