Update, 3pm: A PORT Fairy state emergency leader says Saturday's flooding is the worst he's seen in the area in 27 years.
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Port Fairy SES unit controller Steve McDowell said the impact of the flood water was expected to continue for another 24 hours in the Port Fairy region.
"The evidence is that at the Toolong gauge it has reached its peak. They are predicting the peak in Port Fairy will be sometime this afternoon. And we should see the waters recede hopefully reasonably quickly," Mr McDowell said.
"The tide drops tonight and we are hoping that will allow some of the water to get out into the sea.
"They are predicting it will go for at least another 24 hours."
He said water had overflowed into three houses and "many others" had external outbuildings flooded.
Mr McDowell said areas around Koroit, Kirkstall, Toolong and Port Fairy had been affected.
Port Fairy Gardens Holiday Park evacuated on Friday evening, with flood water impacting a reserve area on Saturday.
But Mr McDowell said the buildings and park had "not been affected at all".
"It's been fairly widespread our response across the last three or four days," he said.
"I've been in the unit 27 years, and this is the worst flood we have experienced in this area around Port Fairy."
Mr McDowell said the flood was another event in a challenging year.
"It's something we didn't see coming. This year has been a bit of a tough year with the fires, then COVID and now this," he said.
"The way the community has come together through this event is really amazing."
Flooded homeowners say 'it's a waiting game' for waters to subside
Update, 1.30pm: A PORT Fairy couple with flood water lapping into their home say without emergency services working through the night their situation could be far worse.
Pam and Trevor Hockley said the SES crews sandbagged their Griffiths Street house on Friday afternoon, but water seeped into the house around 8am Saturday morning.
Water from the overflowing Moyne River flooded the backyard and entered through a backdoor and laundry door, but living areas in the two-storey home were unaffected.
"We live upstairs and downstairs is a self contained until. It's all tiled floor," Ms Hockley said.
"We are just mopping the floor and mopping the floor."
She said emergency services had been at the house since Friday evening until midday Saturday.
"They just did a marvelous job, they're just great," Ms Hockley said.
The couple moved to the house in 2009 and Ms Hockley said floods in 2010 were "nothing compared to this".
"The one in 2010 only just got through the back fence," she said, adding water was about three-feet deep at the same fence on Saturday.
"We have been told it's a flood zone, but didn't ever think it would be anything like this."
The couple did not sleep Friday night and their daughter and son-in-law arrived from Brucknell to lend a hand on Saturday morning.
"I am not going to do any clean up until it's gone out the back fence," Ms Hockley said.
"You just have to take it in your stride, you can't fight it. It's a waiting game."
Floodwater enters three Port Fairy houses
EARLIER: THREE houses in the Port Fairy area have been inundated with water and emergency services say moderate floods are still rising.
But Warrnambool-based incident controller Alfred Mason said emergency services were "cautiously optimistic" with the Moyne River's Toolong gauge "dropping".
Mr Mason said the control centre believed flood levels in Port Fairy could reach a 10-to-20-year level, with the Toolong gauge reaching a "peak" 4.47 metres at 9.45pm Friday.
"The water coming into Port Fairy is still increasing because it's coming from the floodplain and through other tributaries," he said.
"That's why it is increasing in the town. But the gauge is dropping. It's moving very slowly."
He said three homes in the Port Fairy area were inundated with water, with Griffiths Street, Lydiard Street and Rosebrook worst affected.
"Over the next 10 hours it should get back to a comfortable level," Mr Mason said.
"We believe everything should be OK, we have people now providing hourly reports back because we don't have gauges in town."
He said closer to Warrnambool the Hopkins River was also still "rising slightly" and crews were monitoring for any further flooding in Allansford.
Mr Mason said water levels in the Merri River were continuing to drop.
Emergency services cautioned drivers against disobeying road closure signs.
"We still have trouble with people driving past barriers, which is disappointing," Mr Mason said.
"Some of the roads they are driving through, the properties or the homes are being protected with sandbag levels, and if cars go through the weight will cause the water to go across."