
Sydney homes flooded and infrastructure damaged as swell combined with king tide to batter the coast
Several homes were evacuated at Botany Bay in Sydney's south around midnight as waves surged across the coast, according to New South Wales State Emergency Service spokesman Andrew Edmunds.
Further north at Sydney's premier Bondi Beach, the coast was lashed by a 5.5-meter (18-foot) swell, officials said.
Windows were shattered at Bondi Icebergs Swimming Club, a waterfront pool, gymnasium and restaurant complex. CCTV footage showed waves bursting through glass doors after 11 p.m. on Wednesday.
'It has just been devastating,' club general manager Bob Tate said. 'I've been a member for 50 years at Bondi. I've never seen this sort of thing before. You know, the sheer magnitude of the level of water and the power of the water coming through must've just been horrendous.'
Tate added that on the pool deck around 15 glass panels were splintered, floors were damaged, and cupboards and firehoses were ripped off the walls. It was 'quite extraordinary,' he said.
South of Botany Bay at Cronulla Beach, lifeguard Steve Winner said the beach, along with parts of the pavement behind it and electrical infrastructure, had been damaged by 4-meter (13-foot) waves.
Authorities warned on Thursday of further hazardous surf with the potential to cause coastal erosion and damage from the Illawarra region south of Sydney to the Hunter region north of Sydney.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Spectator
07-08-2025
- Spectator
Melbourne's mad plan to adopt an Aboriginal six-season calendar
Victoria's capital, Melbourne, has a dubious meteorological reputation. Our weather is so predictably unpredictable that Melbourne can easily have four seasons in one day. At any time of year, a typical Melbourne day can start off beautifully until the clouds gather, the winds freshen and turn bitingly chill, and it's time to haul in the washing as the rain starts to fall. Never mind that Sydney has a higher average rainfall. The reputation of Melbourne's rapidly changeable weather is so entrenched it's become a national joke. But that could all soon change. Melbourne's Lord Mayor, Nicholas 'call me Nick' Reece, has declared that four seasons simply is not enough for his fair city (and mine). It must have six. Why? Because we're told the local Wurundjeri tribesmen, who inhabited the Melbourne district before British settlement in the 1830s, reckoned their years by six seasons, not four. Those seasons were identified by the fauna and flora abundant in the region at various times of year, including eels, wattle, wombats, black swans and tadpoles. Reece has told Melbourne radio that if it was good enough for local Aboriginal tribes, it is good enough for him, because a six-season calendar more accurately reflects the spectrum of Melbourne's weather. 'In the Wurundjeri calendar, there were six seasons. It was a wet summer and a dry summer. A wet winter and a dry winter. And when you think about it, it makes sense,' Reece said, forgetting that to make six, autumn and winter need to be squeezed in as well – and ignoring that some Aboriginal lore says it's actually more like seven seasons. The four seasons of the traditional calendar are, by contrast, apparently un-Australian. 'We have gone and superimposed four seasons, essentially from northern Europe,' Reece told a gobsmacked Melbourne radio presenter. 'This is one of those things where a bit of (Aboriginal) knowledge appears to make a bit more sense … Literally, wattle season starts, and that week you look around Melbourne and all of the wattle trees have turned fluorescent yellow and it's beautiful.' Which just happens to be now. Here in Melbourne, the wattle is out in all its golden glory, and it truly is beautiful. Melbourne's much-lampooned climate could well accommodate six seasons in one day, but there's just one small problem with Reece's 'decolonising' Melbourne's calendar. Absolutely no one, not even local Aboriginals, measure their years using pre-colonial definitions of the seasons. It's definitely an annual cycle of spring, summer, autumn and winter, everybody accepts it, and nobody's even thought anything different. That Melbourne's Lord Mayor seriously suggests tampering with the traditional calendar to prove how woke and switched-on he is reflects not just on him. It is the sort of twaddle that is eagerly grasped and propagated by the progressive political, institutional and media left-wing establishment that currently dominates all levels of Australian society. This progressive establishment believes that ostentatiously rendering homage to romantic notions of pre-colonial Australia beats worrying about boring and mundane things like reducing the cost of living, better managing Australia's sluggish economy, and being able to feed and house the torrent of international migration Australia has welcomed since the blighted Covid years. And, at a local council level, concentrating on roads, rates and rubbish. It certainly would be more useful if Reece could stop worrying about reordering the seasons and concentrate on his core mayoral challenge: reversing the rapid decline of what was once Marvellous Melbourne. Covid and the world's harshest lockdowns, followed by the rise of home working, have turned the city's central business district into a shadow of its former self. As for the rest of us, we stand bemused and bewildered as the self-appointed great and good talk about reordering the seasons and giving our cities Aboriginal names. Our political class are happy to spend hundreds of millions on expiating the perceived sins of our colonial past, treating the Aboriginal cultures that existed before Captain Cook landed in Botany Bay as man living in a perfect state of nature that evil Europeans destroyed. Lord Mayor Reece is welcome to indulge in his seasonal fantasy. For the rest of us in this most European of Australian cities, our seasons actually do align with northern Europe's, but in reverse. September marks the start of spring; December summer; March autumn; and June winter. And just now, in the gradually lengthening winter days of early August, we're freezing down here. At least the wattle's in full bloom though.


Glasgow Times
03-08-2025
- Glasgow Times
Mimi Rhodes makes unusual hole-in-one at Women's Open
High winds made for difficult conditions at Royal Porthcawl on Sunday but, with a fortuitous ricochet off her playing partner's ball, Rhodes aced the par-three fifth. Rhodes, who began six shots off the overnight lead of nine under held by Miyu Yamashita, had the benefit of following Stephanie Kyriacou off the tee. The Australian went close to a hole-in-one herself with a shot that hit the green and came to rest inches from the cup. Rhodes then played a very similar shot and, luckily for her, Kyriacou's ball was handily placed for it to deflect in off. Kyriacou was still able to hole her short putt for a deserved birdie. Meanwhile, Yamashita birdied the fourth to open up a three-shot lead as nearest challenger Kim A-lim dropped back to seven under following back-to-back bogeys. Rhodes' compatriot Charley Hull then cut the gap to two with consecutive birdies at the fifth and sixth.


Daily Mail
02-08-2025
- Daily Mail
The Lions will have beers flowing but champagne on hold after failing to whitewash Australia in the third Test with a 22-12 defeat - it is a mini sweetener for the Wallabies but neither team will feel satisfied with the series outcome, writes NIK SIMON
By the time the sun returns and the players are relaxing on Bondi Beach on Monday afternoon, the Lions will look back on this tour with a feeling of pride. By then, the lightning storms will have passed. History will remember the class of 2025 as series winners but there will forever be a nagging feeling that they did not finish the job. It was a good outcome, two Tests to one, but not one that will propel them into the pantheon of greatness.