Man catches a
FISH form his balcony after flooding in
Narrabeen (ORIGNAL)
Man catches a FISH form his balcony after flooding in Narrabeen (ORIGNAL)
Man catches a FISH form his balcony after flooding in
Narrabeen
Man catches a FISH form his balcony after flooding in Narrabeen [
VIDEO]
Man catches a FISH form his balcony after flooding in Narrabeen [VIDEO]
Man catches a FISH from his balcony after flooding in Narrabeen
Catching a fish from the balcony
Narabeen man shows off fish he caught in floodwaters
A
Sydney man has been seen reeling in a FISH from the balcony of his home after wild weather caused flooding in the area
Sydney man shows off a fish he caught off his BALCONY during floods
Wow! The floods are so bad in Narrabeen,
Vincent Cotte was able to catch a fish from his balcony on
Lagoon St. The water's usually a good 30m away! However, while this is fun, floods are very dangerous- do stay safe and don't take ANY risks.
Well that's dinner sorted! Man catches a fish from his BALCONY as heavy flooding puts homes underwater
Man catches a fish from his balcony in Sydney's northern suburbs
Vincent Cotte's property is usually about 30 metres from the lake
Wild weekend weather brought the water to his apartment
Nearby
North Narrabeen Caravan Park evacuated amid flooding fears
A man managed to make the most of stormy Sydney conditions and catch a fish from his second floor balcony.
Vincent Cotte's property is usually 30 metres from the water, so when the Narrabeen
Lake in Sydney's north flooded he decided to take the opportunity to throw a line in from the comfort of his balcony.
To his delight, he reeled in a small fish before throwing it back into the rain-swollen lake.
'
It's like
Christmas,' he said. '
Look at them, there are heaps of fish.'
Earlier, residents from the nearby North Narrabeen Caravan Park and the
Sydney Academy of
Sport and
Recreation were evacuated after fears the lake would flood.
SES crews are currently door-knocking areas around
Narrabeen Lagoon and Narrabeen Lake on Sydney’s
Northern Beaches warning residents their homes may be inundated as the rain continues to fall.
Crews are asking residents to place important items up high and monitor the rising flood water.
Winds of up to 125 km/h and up to
200 millimetres of rain is expected to have hit
Newcastle and Sydney overnight as the wild east coast system moved through.
An evacuation centre has been opened near the
Tweed River, in the
Northern Rivers district of
New South Wales, after fears the river could breach its banks.
'
We are going to experience over the next 48 hours increased rainfall and heavy winds - the public needs to take care in these conditions,' Acting
Assistant Commissioner Kyle Stewart said on
Saturday night.
'Our message is clear - do not put your life and that of emergency services personnel in danger.'
The SES has responded to thousands of calls for help, including five people rescued after their car got caught in flash floodwaters at
Murwillumbah in
NSW's north.
'Our major concern right now is making sure everyone realises this is going to be more intense - it's intensifying from what we're seeing now,' SES spokeswoman
Stephanie Sullivan told
AAP.
- published: 05 Jun 2016
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