“I covered my infant with my body to stop her from getting badly injured. “My entire back, arms and head are badly bruised. "I’m just so relieved that my daughter and grandmother are alright. Ms Simpson posted her injuries to social media, warning others not to drive in storms. Credit:Facebook “Please, please be careful in this storm season. I know I’ll be sore tomorrow, does anyone know of a cream or ointment that will help with the bruising?”

Destructive winds and large hailstones smashed parts of south-east Queensland as tornadoes formed near Kingaroy. Early in the afternoon, seven-centimetre hail pelted tiny Kumbia, north-west of Dalby, while three-to-five-centimetre stones fell from Gympie east to Proston. More than 4000 homes were still without power, mostly in the Gympie region, at 7.30pm on Thursday. The State Emergency Service was called out to 280 jobs, mostly for hail damage, leaking roofs and fallen trees in the Kingaroy, Gympie, Fraser Coast and Maryborough areas. The aftermath of the tornado made Gympie look like ski fields. Credit:Melinda Ellison Gympie residents saw hail the size of golf balls, trees falling, debris and items as big as a trampoline get thrashed against a gate in the strong winds.

Melinda Ellison said "cyclonic winds and hail" was coming in horizontally. "I have never seen hail like that before, it was really loud and extremely scary as I was home alone," she said. "It was so loud, like a freight train going through the house. Strong winds swept through Gympie, throwing clotheslines and a trampoline, with hail the size of golf balls raining down. Credit:Jok Bub. "The hills around us looked like ski fields ... we are still without power, as is most of Gympie."

The worst of the storms appeared to have passed north and inland of the Sunshine Coast. Gympie copped a 98km/h wind gust and 42 millimetres of rain, while 76 millimetres of rain fell at Noosa and 80 millimetres fell at Mingo Creek in the Wide Bay. Blackwater, much further north and west of Rockhampton, recorded a wind gust of 144 km/h. Coolabunia farmer Damien Tessman spotted this poor cockatoo as he assessed the damage to his property. Credit:Damien Tessmann Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Jonty Hall said two tornadoes appeared to have formed throughout the afternoon, one in Tansey, about 60 kilometres north of Kingaroy, and another in Coolabunia, on the town's outskirts.

The Coolabunia cell continued east for some distance but was downgraded to a storm by the time it hit Gympie. Coolabunia dairy farmer Damien Tessmann said his family had never experienced anything like the storms. Loading "My family have been in dairy for 120 years and I'm a fifth-generation farmer but we've never seen anything like it," he said. "We've had partial damage to the dairy's roof, which has exposed of all our equipment and computers.

"We've lost a silo and crop of feed that was knee high but now it looks like someone has hit it with a whipper snipper. It's down to nothing." Mr Tessmann said he was in a mad rush to keep his cattle safe and to secure farming equipment. "I was taking cows to get them in there and I was watching the black clouds moving fast and an afternoon fog coming in, then next thing you know all hell breaks loose," he said. Coolabunia farmer Damien Tessmann is trying to repair the damage after thunderstorms and hail hit the area. Credit:Damien Tessmann "My uncle's house is on the property and his windows were smashed and he lost a roof so the kitchen is all exposed, it looks like a swimming pool.

"We're all a bit shocked." In Kingaroy, Denise Keelan said she would not test fate again after being caught in the thunderstorm on her way home from work. "I was in Nanango working and thought I’d make it home and I chose the road that didn't have a lot of trees in case," she said. Loading Replay Replay video Play video Play video "If I had five more minutes, I would have made it home but I pulled over on the side of Peterson Drive and I wasn't the only one.

"You couldn't see anything ahead so you didn't have the hope of driving through the hail and rain." The Kingaroy resident was glad her car only received a few dents after staying put on the side of the road for at least 10 minutes until the worst passed through. "It came very fast. You could see the clouds forming but I thought I would make it because every other storm this week so far had missed Kingaroy," she said. "It was very noisy and I was more worried about the windows smashing because it was quite big hail, it would have been two to three inches." Kingaroy resident Denise Keelan was caught in a storm on the way home from work. She was surprised at how large the hail was. Credit:Denise Keelan

The worst of the weather had cleared across the south-east by 6.30pm, when the bureau cancelled a severe storm warning that had stretched from Rainbow Beach to Stanthorpe. The tornado threat had eased an hour earlier as areas including Wide Bay, Darling Downs and Granite Belt, southern Capricornia and the southern Central Highlands and Coalfield braced for large hail and winds. Nanango MP Deb Frecklington, Queensland's state opposition leader, said the storms had hit hard. “People are shaken up - it was a huge storm system and there may be more storms tonight and over the weekend," she said.