IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Aussie floods bring snakes, crocs — but no beer

Residents in northeastern Australia were on alert Wednesday for snakes in bathrooms and crocodiles in the road after repeated storms sent local wildlife in search of  safe havens.
Image:  The flooded Ingham area between Cairns and townsville in north Queensland
The town of Ingham in Australia's Queensland state is among the flooded areas, with 2,900 homes there damaged.Brooke Baskin / Herbert River Express via AFP-Getty Images
/ Source: msnbc.com news services

Rain-battered residents in northeastern Australia were on alert Wednesday for snakes in their bathrooms and crocodiles in the road following repeated storms that have sent local wildlife in search of dry land or a safe haven.

More than half of Queensland state was declared a disaster area Tuesday because of the rains that started in late December and are expected to continue.

In Queensland's hardest-hit town of Ingham, David Harkin was preparing Wednesday to evacuate after watching floods wash through his two-level home. He said he's seen several snakes around his home since the latest storm hit Sunday.

"That's why I keep the broom here (at the front door) to chase the snakes away," he told reporters. Some 2,900 homes have been damaged in Ingham and hundreds of people evacuated to a temporary shelter.

In the coastal city of Townsville, floods were blamed for washing a freshwater crocodile into the street — where it got run over.

The 5-foot-long crocodile survived and was being treated for an injured eye and several broken teeth, the Townsville Bulletin newspaper reported Wednesday.

In the town of Normantown, Donna Smith, manager of the Albion Hotel, said the town was expected to run out of beer in two days.

"We can put up with a lot of drama, no fruit and veggies, but nobody wants a pub with no beer," Smith told Brisbane's Courier-Mail newspaper.

Smith said a 12-foot-long crocodile had been seen stalking residents and dogs in the flooded main street.

Menagerie of wildlife
Wildlife Carers volunteer Lana Allcroft said the service had been overwhelmed with injured and displaced animals since the floods began.

"A lady rang up this morning and said she had a snake in her bathroom. I said, 'Well, I've got a crocodile in mine,'" Allcroft told the Townsville Bulletin. "We've had wallabies, curlews, snakes and flying foxes, and that's just this morning." A curlew is a kind of bird.

After weeks of storms that have submerged parts of Queensland, the area was battered again Sunday when a tropical storm landed. More rain is forecast this week, including a possible cyclone.

The Queensland Environmental Protection Agency has warned residents to watch out for wildlife on roads and in their yards.

"Crocodiles might move about looking for a quiet place to wait for floodwaters to recede and snakes may swim into peoples' properties," Environmental Protection Agency project officer Brian Wright said after the late January floods.

Like water 'over a wet towel'
Deputy Premier Paul Lucas, who visited Ingham on Wednesday, said he didn't believe the ground could cope with more rain.

"It's like pouring water over a wet towel," Lucas said.

Ingham had received 14.41 inches of rain in 24 hours Wednesday morning, on top of more than 15.75 inches dumped in the previous days.

The state government said Tuesday that the storms had caused an estimated $69.5 million in damage since late December and that more than 56 percent of the state — 376,755 square miles — is eligible for disaster relief. About 17 rivers are flooded and dams are overflowing.

Some coastal areas are completely cut off by flooding and authorities fear the stagnant water could worsen an outbreak of dengue fever.

But cattle farmers in north Queensland have welcomed the floods, after battling drought for years, expecting their pastures to blossom once floodwaters recede.