Usually busy streets and highways were empty Friday morning as the cyclone drew ever-closer. Photo: AAP/Jono Searle
For the millions of people in Tropical Cyclone Alfred's firing line, the flurry of preparation and activity this week has become an agonising waiting game.
Alfred's slower-than-expected march towards the Queensland coast is a reminder of how fickle weather systems like this can be.
Catch up with RNZ's Cyclone Alfred coverage here:
- Man swept away by floodwaters
- Is Cyclone Alfred's slow path good or bad?
- Vet determined to stay open
While it might be more than 50 years since the last cyclone traced a path across southeast Queensland and northern New South Wales, the people in the impact zone are no strangers to the damage storms and floods can bring.
The delay has also given people extra time to prepare themselves for what lies ahead, as is so often the case with natural disasters of this kind, with a sense of humour and dedication to community camaraderie.
Sandbag 'guardian angels'
Before Alfred's edges began to bring rain, wind and fallen trees on Thursday and Friday, people in areas likely to be affected sprang into action.
Early in the week, thousands upon thousands of sandbags were filled. Despite the long queues and waits, kindness and community were on display.
In Toowong, Phillipa found herself with unexpected, but very welcome help.
"He's my guardian angel, he's helping me!" she told the ABC's Lia Walsh.
"This will be the first [trip to the car] and I trust him, because I've given him my car key," she laughed.
"Her first question was, 'Are you going to drive away with my car?' and I said, 'No'," the young man said.
"I just live up the road there and I figured I've got nothing to do until work this arvo."
Workers are already out repairing damaged power lines from fallen trees thanks to early winds from Cyclone Alfred. Photo: AAP/Jason O'Brien
"What a honey," Phillipa said.
A lone figure walks across a three-lane street in Brisbane's CBD that is otherwise completely empty.
For those in Brisbane, the camaraderie has echoes of the Mud Army volunteers and Baked Relief, which sprang into action after the 2011 floods, and have helped with the clean-up and recovery of disasters since.
Elsewhere, preparations had a distinct ring of 2020 COVID about them.
As supermarkets in the warning zones announced they'd shutter their doors later in the week, people responded in panic-buying frenzies, stripping supermarket shelves bare.
Toilet paper has been selling fast, mirroring pandemic panic buying. Photo: ABC News/Will Murray
Much like the early pandemic days, toilet paper was again a hot commodity, as was bottled water and long-life milk.
Streets and surf begin to empty
As the week rolled on, schools, childcare centres, and a raft of other retailers and services progressively shut down, as the advice to get ready to hunker down at home became a reality.
Recordbreaking waves generated by Alfred's early approach lured surfers into the water, replaced by dangerous swell and a directive from emergency services for people to resist the temptation to head back out.
Similarly, the crowds of people that flocked to beaches up and down the coast to marvel at the might of Mother Nature dwindled, as people heeded warnings to stay away.
In an eerie, but comforting sight, roads and highways across Brisbane that usually see bumper-to-bumper traffic were completely empty on Friday morning.
It was a clear sign that, with Alfred's arrival likely less than 24 hours away, the bunkering down was in full swing for many.
The anxious unknown
While many in Alfred's path have never experienced a cyclone, the flood-battered towns and cities of southeast Queensland and the Northern Rivers region are well aware of the potential destruction ahead.
By Friday morning, 40,000 people in southeast Queensland and tens of thousands of people in the Northern Rivers area were without power, trees were down and roads closed, and beaches had been pummelled and stripped bare by increasingly strong winds.
The erratic nature of the cyclone, and the changing advice about when and where the greatest impacts would be felt helped create a perfect storm of anxiety and concern for people in its path, particularly for those still recovering from record flooding in 2022.
In Ballina, parts of which were already starting to flood on Friday morning, some locals took the opportunity to fill last-minute sandbags.
The city flooded in 2022, but a possible storm surge this time around is expected to bring a heightened risk.
"We're quite anxious about it," local Graham Rodgers said. "It's just the unknown.
Spectators were out and about in Thursday's early morning sunshine. Photo: ABC Gold Coast/Mackenzie Colahan
"A flood's all right, you know what's going to happen, but with the two combined [flood and storm surge], it's just, who knows?"
There was a similar feeling half an hour inland in Lismore, where some people are still piecing their lives back together after the 2022 floods that decimated large parts of the town.
Pub manager Britney Gwynne says the community is working together to be as prepared as possible.
"Obviously, there's a little bit of angst in the area, just unsure what's going to happen," said Gwynne, manager of the Northern Rivers Hotel, which only recently re-opened after flood damage.
"It's a little bit nerveracking for [the community] at the moment."
Elsewhere, people are hopeful that lessons learned during the 2022 floods - like using satellites to sure-up communications - will hold them in good stead this time around.
Even as the cyclone bears down, some are choosing to find the humour where they can. Photo: ABC / Supplied
Sense of humour shines through
In true Aussie style, many have found the lighter side of the situation.
After being flooded in January last year, locals in the Lockyer Valley town of Laidley have joined together for sandbagging and emergency preparations, including protecting shopfronts and pubs on its main street.
Local Thomas Nicholson told the ABC his message for Cyclone Alfred was "bring it on".
Others shared their innovative approaches to keep pets - including pooches and poultry - safe and dry.
Redlands resident Carmel Holmes shared her essential preparations - cyclone-proofing 15-year-old dog Jessie.
In the suburb of Lawnton, right in Alfred's line of crossing, Nadia changed up her chook Zinger's pen to a portable cot.
Meanwhile, in Toowoomba, Sheree Kilby said hers had "checked into the Chick Inn".
In Woodford, Ally Karin turned her shower into a temporary cyclone coop for her girls Barb and Joscelyn, saying it seemed the safest spot to house them.
"They say the safest place in your house is the smallest room, usually the bathroom," she said. "It will be easy to clean up too, all hail the bendy shower head hose thing.
"They're happy enough, it'll keep them dry."
- ABC