Source: Bureau of Meteorology
For people in East Gippsland and parts of Central, North Central,
North East and West and South Gippsland Forecast Districts.
Issued at 9:45 am Friday, 27 March 2026.
Damaging southerly winds, heavy rainfall and blizzard conditions
continuing over parts of the state today.
Weather Situation: A vigorous coastal low has developed offshore
of the southern NSW coast, leading to damaging southerly winds
developing over parts of the state overnight. Heavy rainfall is
also expected to develop over parts of East Gippsland, as these
winds combine with ample moisture to rise over topography. This may
also bring blizzard conditions to alpine areas. The low will move
further offshore later on Friday, leading to an easing of
conditions across the state.
For the CENTRAL RANGES: DAMAGING SOUTHERLY WIND GUSTS with peak
gusts of around 90 km/h are expected to continue for the remainder
of the morning and into the early afternoon.
For EASTERN AREAS: DAMAGING SOUTHERLY WIND GUSTS with peak gusts
of around 90 km/h are expected to continue for the remainder of the
morning and into the early aftrenoon, with gusts increasing to 100
km/h near the coast. For ALPINE areas above 1600m: DAMAGING
SOUTHERLY WINDS averaging 60 to 70 km/h with peak gusts of around
100 km/h are occurring and likely to continue into the afternoon.
BLIZZARD conditions are also forecast for the remainder of the
morning and into the afternoon.
HEAVY RAINFALL which may lead to FLASH FLOODING is developing over
the elevated terrain of East Gippsland this morning and is expected
to continue into the afternoon. Six-hourly rainfall totals between
60 to 80 mm are likely.
Conditions remain gusty across the MELBOURNE area and parts of the
central coastline, but have now eased below warning thresholds.
Conditions should ease about the central ranges by the early
afternoon, and throughout by Friday evening.
Flood warnings are current over the area. See
https://www.bom.gov.au/weather-and-climate/warnings-and-alerts for
details.
Locations which may be affected include Orbost, Falls Creek,
Dargo, Buchan, Kyneton and Mallacoota.
Severe observations to 9:45 am:
61.6 mm was recorded at Buldah in the 3 hours to 9:40 am.
68.8 mm was recorded at Chandlers Creek (Cann River) in the 3
hours to 9:30 am.
102 km/h gust with 81 km/h sustained winds were recorded at Falls
Creek around 7:30 am.
93 km/h gust with 63 km/h sustained winds were recorded at Mt
Buller around 6:05 am.
109 km/h gust was recorded at South Channel Island at 1:41
am.
94 km/h gust was recorded at St Kilda Harbour at 2:10 am.
The State Emergency Service advises that people should:
* If driving conditions are dangerous, safely pull over away from
trees, drains, low-lying areas and floodwater. Avoid travel if
possible.
* Stay safe by avoiding dangerous hazards, such as floodwater,
mud, debris, damaged roads and fallen trees.
* Be aware - heat, fire or recent storms may make trees unstable
and more likely to fall when it's windy or wet.
* Check that loose items, such as outdoor settings, umbrellas and
trampolines are safely secured. Move vehicles under cover or away
from trees.
* Stay indoors and away from windows.
* If outdoors, move to a safe place indoors. Stay away from trees,
drains, gutters, creeks and waterways.
* Stay away from fallen powerlines - always assume they are
live.
* Be aware that in fire affected areas, rainfall run-off into
waterways may contain debris such as ash, soil, trees and rocks.
Heavy rainfall may also increase the potential for landslides and
debris across roads.
* Stay informed: Monitor weather warnings, forecasts and river
levels at the Bureau of Meteorology website, and warnings through
VicEmergency website/app/hotline.
26/Mar/2026 10:51 PM


