đŽ65. Cyclones
Leanne on Demand Daily with Leanne Hughes - En podcast av Leanne Hughes
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Today, weâre talking about Cyclone Alfred. Not Cyclone Leanneâthough that has a nice ring to itâbut the system set to hit Southeast Queensland on Friday morning. As Iâm out for a walk, I want to share some thoughts on contingency planning, how people are responding, and whatâs going on here as the winds start picking up.Whatâs Covered in Todayâs Episode:The Warnings and Initial Reactions: The governmentâs been flagging this for a while, and Iâll admit, at first, I was a bit complacent. Living in the Kimberley, Iâve seen my share of cyclones that didnât turn out to be that badâbut this one feels different.The Power of Information (and Misinformation): Iâve been following various weather sources, from official reports to storm-chasing Facebook groups. Some are measured, others are a bit⊠dramatic. But the real chaos? The comments section. Panic levels seem to spike when you see what people are posting.The Great Queensland Panic Buy: Bottled water vanished days ago. Supermarkets are seeing pre-7 a.m. lines. Even the bakery is getting smashed. Itâs giving flashbacks to the COVID-era toilet paper saga. But are we over-preparing or underestimating?What Iâm Actually Worried About: Itâs not the power going outâIâve got my battery packs. Itâs the mobile towers. No internet means no podcasts, no updates, no way to keep connected. That thought freaked me out a bit.The Unpredictability of Cyclones: Iâve learned that where you are relative to the cycloneâs eye makes all the difference. The south side? Thatâs where the strongest winds and damage tend to be.Contingency Plans for Red Carpet Campout: Iâve got a call with Steve later today about our event next week. Looking at the maps, my gut says itâs not happening. If the access roads flood, itâs game over.Hearing the Anxiety Firsthand: Listening to people at the sandbag depots has been heartbreaking. Some are trying to protect their homes from what could be devastating flooding. The uncertainty is tough.Memories of Brisbaneâs Past Floods: Iâve been here for two major floods, and itâs brutal. Friends lost their homes. Businesses wiped out. That smell of flood damage stays with you forever. My heart is going out to those in low-lying areas right now.The Curse of Knowing Too Much: A guy from North Queensland shared what itâs like to be in the eye of a cycloneâhe described it as four hours of hearing a jet engine outside his window. Yikes.Final Thoughts:Best case? The whole thing is a fizzer, we get a bit of rain, and move on. That would be amazing.Worst case? Significant flooding, power outages, and major damage.My plan is to keep this podcast goingâassuming the internet holds up. Right now, the weather is eerily calm. It really is the definition of the âcalm before the storm.Thanks for listening, stay safe, and Iâll catch you tomorrow (hopefully).Sign up for free for my best articles every week: Work Fame.Show notes for every episode at https://podcast.leannehughes.comP.S. Ready to take things up a level? Here are some ways I can help:Watch My 2025 Speaker Reel: Let's energise your next event.Get My Book: Design your workshops fast using The 2-Hour Workshop Blueprint. Let's connect on all the channels:Leanne Hughes on LinkedInLeanne Hughes on InstagramVisit my website: leannehughes.comEmail me: [email protected] you like to deliver your own private podcast feed to your audience? Sign up for a free trial today at Hello Audio.
