Fierce, polar winds have again swept through the South East, sparking one of Brisbane's coldest July days in years. Forecasters say there's still a chance of snow in some parts of southern Queensland.
For more, Garth Burley reports.
Jumpers out scarves on the southeast, rugging up for another chilly affair.
How are you guys keeping warm this morning or layers, layers and layers and lays.
Yeah, great cool. I see sixty kilometers an hour gusts fueling Brisbane's coldest July day in two years.
It's certainly cold. When I wake up and I see that the temperature is a capital degree is less than the Melbourne.
The wind chill factor plunging the fuels like temperature six degrees cooler.
That's true to the fact that the wind is blowing across lands or very very dry.
The Granite belt also shivering through drizzly, foggy conditions, freezing.
My fire was out this morning, so I was frozen. It just brings that extra blast of.
Cold snow flurries in higher Queensland peaks still the possibility like across the border, where sleet and snow brought joy for a third straight day. The icy blast sweeping through here in the Granite Belt all the way to the southeast is set to linger over the coming days before conditions become more comfortable heading into the weekend.
As the winds start to slowly ease, we will see there are recovery in the daytime temperatures.
The end of the cold snap finally in sight. Garth Burley, seven News