OH HAIL NO!

Queensland storm – Mum battered and bruised by hailstones the size of tennis balls while protecting her baby from tornado

Fiona Simpson used her body to shield her infant daughter after the freak hail storm broke the windows in their car

AN Australian mother was battered and bruised after she tried to shield her infant daughter in a freak storm which saw hail the size of tennis balls hit Queensland.

Fiona Simpson urged others to be careful after her face and back and her daughter's head were hit when the hail broke the windows of their car in Kingaroy in the South Burnett region yesterday.

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Fiona Simpson, above with daughter Clara, was left battered and bruised after hail blew out the windows in their carCredit: ABC Brisbane

Violent storms caused widespread chaos as they swept across southern Queensland yesterday, tearing roofs from properties and destroying crops just before the harvest season.

Sharing photos of their injuries on Facebook, Ms Simpson - who was also in the car with her grandmother - said: "I’ve learnt my lesson today, NEVER drive in a hail storm!

"We parked on the side of the road when the storm got to heavy and the hail blew out our windows."

Ms Simpson said she used her body to stop daughter Clara being badly injured.

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, hail the size of tennis balls lashed communities in the storm, leaving 9,000 without power.

In some footage of the storm, violent supersized hail is seen bouncing as it hits the ground in a garden.

Farmers have reportedly said their entire crops, including wheat, barely, melon and stone fruit have been wiped out following the storms, while there are reports that lightening has killed some cattle.

The young mum told ABC that her young daughter was screaming, but she couldn't hear her over the noise of the hailCredit: ABC Brisbane
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Violent hailstorms battered Queensland yesterdayCredit: @mureebmohmand/ twitter

One Tansey resident Greg Hellmuth told 9News: "The nose was unbelievable.

"We ran inside and everything was going sideways, all the trees were going sideways.

"We went under the mattress and that's where we stayed," he said.

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His wife Gail said after the storm passed, "it was just devastation".

One resident said the storms left utter 'devastation' in their wakeCredit: @mureebmohmand/ twitter

 

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The Bureau of Meteorology said the South Burnett region and other parts of the southeast suffered the  worst of three severe storms, two of them super-cell storms, with two tornadoes also sighted.

Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Jonathon Howe said: "October is around the time for supercells in south-east Queensland."

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