Minor to moderate flooding is predicted on the Belubula and Bell rivers at Orange and Molong, while minor flooding is also set to impact parts of the Upper Macintyre, Gwydir, Peel, Castlereagh and Macquarie rivers. Crawney Mountain, south of Tamworth, received 19mm in an hour, while gusts of 105km/h were recorded at Moree airport on Saturday. Twenty millimetres of rain fell in an hour south of Grafton and at Port Macquarie on Saturday night. On Saturday night those storms reached the coast at Grafton bringing damaging winds and large hailstones. There are heavy rainfall warnings in place for the Central West Slopes and Plains, northern parts of the Hunter region and on the mid-north coast. The bureau has predicted an inland low pressure system from the Northern Territory is on track to deepen on Sunday and spread rain across the mid-north coast, Hunter region and the central north, causing minor flooding across inland rivers. There is a gale warning for the Hunter Coast for Monday and strong wind warnings for the Sydney and Macquarie coasts. Widespread rainfall amounts of over 0.50' are likely, and some will pick up over 1' by Thursday night.
The rain will continue Wednesday night and Thursday, before tapering off to scattered showers Thursday night. There are warnings of more to come from the severe storms that have hit parts of northern NSW, delivering damaging winds and more heavy rain to saturated catchments. Scattered showers will be possible Wednesday morning, with more widespread rain developing later in the day. They were rescued by a police officer who swam out to them with a flotation device. They were swept 60 metres away by the fast-moving current, made worse by the flood level, which the Bureau of Meteorology warns will worsen by next weekend. Emergency services were called to the Lachlan River in Condobolin on Saturday afternoon after two 11-year-old boys jumped in. A NSW police officer who rescued two boys from a flood-affected river will be recommended for a bravery award while wet weather continues to batter much of the state.