As North Queensland farmers count the enormous cost of the recent floods that wiped out crops, stock and livelihoods, help is on the way from the state’s south-east.

The small town of Kenilworth has donated fencing materials to help those in Julia Creek start again.

A donated truck loaded with 33 kilometres of fencing will be transported to farmers in need.

Fencing supplies, ready to be loaded onto the truck. (Nine)

Julia Creek in North Queensland received more than a year's rain in just days. (AAP)

The truck will start in Kenilworth and will make several stops on its journey north, collecting donations from generous Queenslanders.

“A lot of the places had 100 per cent coverage with water across their places, massive seas of water which took nearly all their cattle, if not all their cattle and majority of their fences,” Shane Smith from Kenilworth Rural Supplies said.

“We’ve pulled together lots of fencing gear to the side here and our plan was to send that fencing as far as it could possibly go.”

Shane Smith from Kenilworth Rural Supplies. (Nine)

Locals of the small rural town in the upper Mary Valley know what it’s like to live on the land, but say no one could have prepared for the disaster that has struck the north of the state.

“I can’t imagine what those people are going through, I don’t think anyone can,” said Marilyn Johnston from Craiglea Stud.

“Just devastation on a grand scale, those families are doing it pretty tough.”

Farmer Dave McCotter described it simply as “heartache”.