The Creek Will Rise


I had this horrid nightmare just before waking that my roof was leaking and the icy water was ruining everything in my house. I hate those sort of dreams. They seem so very real at the same time you know they are totally impossible. When that is the case for me I generally look for something happening in the world that my subconscious is tied into. I did not have to look far: Fargo, North Dakota.

The people along the banks of the Red River and the Missouri have been working day and night to fill sandbags to raise the dikes as both rivers reached 115 year record highs. To put this is perspective when the residents of New Orleans were treading the flood waters after Katrina it was warm. The above picture is of a barely thawed Missouri River dammed up with broken ice floes.

I am sitting here looking out at the six inches of spring snow and 6 F temperature and knowing that would be warm in relation to what they are experiencing in North Dakota. I went to Minot, ND one spring and saw the Missouri there as the ice broke up. I lived in Kansas City at the time. And worked on an automobile plant being built on a former floodplain of the Missouri. It is a river that goes where it wants and when it wants. And if it is at 115 year high in North Dakota it will be even higher when other rivers in its drainage system join it.

At St. Louis it meets the Mississippi. The Corps of Engineers have built levees and dikes all along both rivers to avoid flooding homes and businesses and cities that built too close. The trouble is all those flood plains (seen as cheap land to develop) are surrounded by levees that won't let the waters in. At the GM plant we had four huge pumps that constantly dewatered the land and spewed the water back over the levees into the Missouri to head downstream. Those now forbidden flood plains are how Mother Nature used to lessen the flooding downstream.

The ice in this picture will melt and flow downstream. And the creek will rise.

Comments

  1. This is horrendous. Your right - your subconscious didn't have to go far. What a disaster.
    Let us see how the government deals with this one.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The last time the Mississippi flooded the people that lost their homes were told they could not get low cost loans to rebuild in the same place that got flooded out 3 times in 5 years unless they placed them on stilts. The locals were irate. And well they might be because coastal houses get rebuilt after a hurricane. I say move to high ground - all of you. Or rebuild on your own money.

    It is one thing to be caught by the 100 year flood another to rebuild 3 times in 5 years.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I enjoyed looking thru this blog and also found myself agreeing totally with your very insightful political blog! And will bookmark. That said... thanks for visiting my nature-story-attempted humor blog, Troutbirder. And I might note I recently started a political,travel, book review blog titled Troutbirder II. Stop by again if you have a chance.
    Troutbirder

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I write for me but I care what my readers think. Please be polite and no scamming.

Popular posts from this blog

Swimming

The Pruning the Crown of Thorns

Polyethylene Packaging - a Dark Times Journal entry