Wow, Sundial. I am grateful that your home is OK...and also, my heart goes out to those who have not been so fortunate.
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Since Friday, our town has experienced flooding. The Black River crested to 26.4 feet with flood stage being 17 ft. I took some shots of the flooded river which hasn't crested this high since 1926. Our home wasn't affected by the flood, but the river has caused 2 major highways to be shut down.
This is the Black River.
This park is located just below the bridge. As you can see, everything is under water.
Crossing the bridge and approaching Don's Steakhouse and Wal-Mart. They sandbagged the parking lots and so far the water has not entered the buildings.
This street is located just past Wal-Mart. By Saturday, the water had risen even further inland causing flooding at the intersection.
This street is located 1 1/2 miles from the bridge. The Police Training Academy is seen in the background. Water completely covered the fields and the only thing visible was the road in some sections.
Wow, Sundial. I am grateful that your home is OK...and also, my heart goes out to those who have not been so fortunate.
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury
Glad you're okay, Sundial!
Karen
been thinking about all you mid-westerners...my parents live outside St Louisno danger in their neck of the woods but it is apparent to my Mom who can not go anywhere cause everything is a mess!!!
Glad you are ok SD...and hope all the others are doing ok too!!! My heart goes out to all those flooded...water can be both evil and great! Here we are in a drought and talks of water restrictions...no planting beautiful flowers because we can't waterThankfully I have taken the drought resistant route in what I have planted...
crazy weather....![]()
I am a nobody; nobody is perfect, and therefore I am perfect.
And its all coming to New Orleans! We're watching the river rise and wondering what level of safety "valves" will be opened. There's the bypass to Lake Pontchartrain, the Bonnet Carre ("Bonny Carry") that opens first, and the ultimate - the Morganza Spillway which will divert additional flows down the Atchafalaya (A chaf a lie a, all short "a"). Old Man River keeps wanting to go down the Atchafalaya, and he might get his chance.
Hope your levees hold. Those of us down river are holding our breaths.
Beth
Wow, Sundial, those photos are dramatic! Glad you haven't been affected directly, but I'm sure many, many people have. You don't say exactly where you are located. My in-laws are in Ohio and have mentioned scenes like your photos show. They are getting a little seepage in their basement but have everything up on blocks so are okay so far. Like bb says, we are in drought here in NC (tho' it's eased a bit recently thanks to some rains the past month). It seems that everyone either has too much or too little water.Hope it will all equalize soon. We'd be happy to take some of it off your hands (but not ALL of it!)
Emily
Emily
2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
2007 Trek Pilot 5.0 WSD "Gloria" - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
2004 Bike Friday Petite Pocket Crusoe - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
My house is safe too, but my drive to work was shut down at the Interstate, and the easy access road to my house was closed due to flooding. I work within the levee zone in Valley Park, so we were hoping and praying the levee held. Nothing like wondering if you should or shouldn't pack up an entire office building and send everything to high ground.
If we had received another half day of rain, the river would have backtracked via the creeks all the way to my house, as it was it only made it half way. But everything is going down quickly. Word on weather.com though is that we have more rain the rest of the week.
now that I've actually seen the photos, Wow!(for some reason, sometimes photos won't load on my work computer, which has high speed, but will load at home on dial-up, go figure)
Since I'm working on a "Flood Damage Reduction" project - don't you just LOVE government speak? Anyway, an urban flooding project... one thing that we have to look at is whether or not structures flood, if it's just streets and parks, it's considered a local problem and not a federal interest - think about whether or not claims will be made on Flood Insurance. My project is in a community where they were stupid enough to allow excavation in the subdivision roads, to build up the land where the homes were built - and now the home owners complain that they're stuck either at home or on the highway after a heavy rain. Home owners yell at local politicians, who beg for help... But since no homes are flooded, not a federal problem - although we can lower water levels because of flooding in adjacent neighborhoods (homes and businesses). The things I've learned in the past few years....
Anyway, I hope the water has crested, and y'all don't have to discover the joys of dealing with Flood claims and FEMA.
And if you're looking at more rain - get things up off the floor, to a second story if at all possible. The ground is saturated, so flooding could be worse. I'll send you some of our sun if it'll help.
Beth
I heard about this on the news and wondered about you. I am glad to hear that you aren't flooded at your house. When you say that the river crested, you mean that it is now receding, right?
Keep us posted.
The river is receding and it's left quite a mess for some people. Valley Park's levee did well. Castlewood park still has a lot of water and has been closed for several days. Here's to the predicted rain for this week causing no extra problems and best wishes to New Orleans and company!
Looks like we'll have a bunch of new trash for this year's Operation Clean Stream.![]()
I used to have an open mind but my brains kept falling out.
We had the flooding in Central Missouri. Lots of students couldn't make it to school because of covered roads, and our neighboring school was closed. I went to KC on Good Friday and by the Gasconade river, there was only one lane open, and then it was completely shut down within a few hours. Kind of weird trying to find a way back home since so many of our roads were closed!
Glad the levee held! I used to live by Valley Mount Ranch when I was growing up, and it's been a while since Valley Park has seen this much water! I think we have pictures somewhere...was it 1982? Just glad your office didn't have to pack up. What a major hassle that would be!
Claudia
2009 Trek 7.6fx
2013 Jamis Satellite
2014 Terry Burlington
It broke yesterday.Hope your levees hold. Those of us down river are holding our breaths.Hwy 67 N and S to Pocahontas were closed to local traffic only. The water had moved north and was spilling over a bridge not too far from Williams Baptist College in Walnut Ridge. The road crew reported 4 feet of water was over the bridge.
I'm in Pocahontas, Emily. And congrats on your new little one. She is absolutely adorable.You don't say exactly where you are located.
Liberty, just when we think we're in the clear, they close down another highway. What's bad is we only have 4 ways to come into Pocahontas, and 3 were closed at one time. My friends who work in Walnut Ridge had to drive an hour out of the way to get to their job when it normally takes 20 minutes max.My house is safe too, but my drive to work was shut down at the Interstate, and the easy access road to my house was closed due to flooding.
Me too! I dealt with FEMA once before and it was a PITA. I volunteered to work with the displaced Katrina survivors from NOLA who were brought to a Baptist encampment not far from here. It was an eye opening experience working with the fed/state government.Anyway, I hope the water has crested, and y'all don't have to discover the joys of dealing with Flood claims and FEMA.
I've wondered about the displaced wildlife. I have heard that a dozen deer were seen on the square of our downtown. 2 had tried to get in our church! One man drowned trying to save his dog.
Rain is in the forecast and please continue to keep the flood victims in your prayers. Some of the communities are completely shut off from receiving any assistance due to the flooding. The Salvation Army mobile disaster trailers are coming in now.
This neighborhood was just starting to flood on Friday. By Sunday water was in many of the homes.
I really hope people in the affected areas have flood insurance. Home owners WILL NOT cover the claim. They'll cover water damage in a home if it's from a roof leak or a broken pipe, but something like 2-3 houses adjacent to each other, have rising water, that constitutes a flood, and therefore claims would be under flood insurance. For many parts of the country, flood insurance isn't very much.
Please people, if you live in a river/stream valley, and are at ANY risk of flooding, fork out the few bucks and get flood insurance. If you happen to live in the "blow zone" for hurricanes, insurance can equal homeowner's premiums, but then there's no choice in the matter. For what it's worth, NYC and much of the northern Atlantic coast is at risk for hurricanes. Welcome to the blow zone.
Beth
Beth, I hope you guys don't get major flooding from our rivers. Keeping my fingers crossed for you.