New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory The first city to be affected was
Broken Hill, which was 'blacked out' at about 3:30 pm on 22 September 2009. At least one mine was shut down. It was also witnessed in
Cowra. The storm blew across
Canberra and the surrounding region by midday on 23 September 2009, before being washed away by overnight rain, the heaviest rainfall over Canberra in months. with
cricket ball-sized hailstones falling. It caused flight delays at Ballina airport and flight cancellations for most of the day at Lismore airport with visibility at 700 metres. A local school rugby union carnival was also called off.
Sydney covered in dust. The storm caused severe disruption to international flights—several early morning
Air New Zealand flights from
Auckland,
Christchurch and
Wellington had to return to
New Zealand after finding themselves unable to land at
Sydney Airport. These flights were listed as cancelled and many others were rescheduled to a later time. 18 international flights were diverted to
Melbourne Airport or
Brisbane Airport, while six others were cancelled altogether. There were delays of six hours reported for overseas flights, whilst domestic flights experienced disruption of as much as three hours.
Canterbury Park Racecourse's scheduled day of horse racing was abandoned. Schools were disrupted as those children who attended were distracted by the dust storm, while many parents kept their children home. School trips and sports activities were cancelled for the day, and children were directed to stay inside during breaks in some schools.
Face masks experienced surging sales in Sydney as concerned residents rushed to protect themselves against the dust, with at least one retailer indicating she had sold more than during the
swine flu pandemic.
Queensland beach (looking south) Residents of
Windorah in
South West Queensland reported low visibility on the morning of 22 September. By 23 September visibility in
Toowoomba and
Ipswich in
South East Queensland was reduced to .
Brisbane was affected by the dust storm, although low visibility was less of a problem at
Brisbane Airport than it was at Sydney. The
Gold Coast was also severely affected by the dust storm by 11.30 am, reducing visibility to . Work stopped at construction sites due to health concerns, powerlines were down in some areas, the
Q-deck was closed and traffic was slow with motorists using headlights. False fire alarms resulted in the evacuation of the
Southport Magistrates Court. Flights were able to depart but incoming flights were diverted. The beaches remained open with added 'no swimming' flags in unpatrolled areas. Two fishermen off the coast of
South Stradbroke Island were lost and a helicopter was required to locate them. The dust storm reached Central and North Queensland by the evening of 23 September 2009. However the effect was less serious, with visibility between 50 and 7,000 metres. Commercial flights were not disrupted. Affected areas include
Townsville,
Blackwater,
Rockhampton,
Mackay,
Cairns and the
Gulf of Carpentaria (Normanton and Kowanyama).
New Zealand Red dust from the storm reached
New Zealand on the morning of 25 September 2009, behind a weather front that brought cold temperatures to the North Island. It was observed by satellite, atmospheric monitoring equipment (a beta attenuation monitor) at
Auckland International Airport and by dust settling on the ground. Dust settled across
Auckland as well as in the
Northland,
Waikato,
Bay of Plenty and
Taranaki districts of the North Island and it also reached the
South Island's
West Coast. ==In popular culture==