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'Very scared': floods trigger rescues, evacuation plans

Laine ClarkAAP
The inundated Einasleigh Hotel is giving the term watering hole a new dimension. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)
Camera IconThe inundated Einasleigh Hotel is giving the term watering hole a new dimension. (PR IMAGE PHOTO) Credit: AAP

For almost 30 years, floodwaters never threatened north Queensland's Einasleigh Hotel.

Days after taking over, new publicans Tayla and Braydon Wellby watched helplessly as their pub redefined the term "watering hole".

The hotel quickly went under as flooding swept through the region, triggering helicopter rescues and evacuation plans.

The Wellbys and their three young kids were forced to jump in the car and seek higher ground.

"We waited it out in the car. I was definitely very scared," Tayla Wellby told AAP.

"It was such a large body of water and so unpredictable."

At one stage Einasleigh residents looked set to be flown out after heavy rain caused the nearby Copperfield Dam to spill, cutting off roads and threatening homes.

Ms Wellby said they didn't get time to sandbag, the water rose so quickly.

"The previous publican who had been here for 26 years had never seen water in the pub," she said of the late Tuesday deluge.

"There was no way anyone thought it was going to get this high."

Heavy rain also triggered flooding further south at Greenvale, west of Townsville, where three people were rescued from a rooftop by helicopter early on Wednesday morning.

Others were evacuated from inundated properties along the Gilbert River by chopper in the nearby Etheridge Shire Council.

Residents at the 100-strong town of Einasleigh also looked set to be flown out but plans were ditched when water levels receded.

Tayla Wellby on Wednesday was still cleaning up with her kids in tow at the heritage-listed, two-storey pub built in 1909.

She agreed it was a heck of an introduction to a job they had begun on January 23.

"It is certainly a story for the books," she said.

Yet the Wellbys are not thinking of giving up their new gig any time soon.

Indeed the still sodden hotel was open for business on Wednesday.

"We are still pretty determined. Our doors are open today. If anyone is keen for a cold drink feel free to drop by," Ms Wellby said.

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