PDA

View Full Version : flooding; what would you do?



wareagle69
08-23-2007, 07:02 PM
we have all watched the news lately in the north(owl girl turf) minnesota and my old stompin grounds of ohio plus the south texas and oklahoma(the ok state)ppl are getting flooded out of their homes very fast, that ruins the bug in concept but then where do you bug out to becuase you have no idea what is and what isn't flooded now fvr doesn't have to worry and when i lived in the arizona mts i never thought about it either but to all my freinds in the flood plains what is your contingency plan(s)


remember
always be prepared...

FVR
08-23-2007, 07:21 PM
I had a good friend in New Orleans, he kept a homemade flat bottow bayou boat in his downstairs.

When Katrina hit, the boat just floated up to their second floor, he loaded his wife and the imp. stuff and paddled out of his house.

If I was in the flood plain, def. would have a boat, a med. johnboat would do just fine.

Chris
08-23-2007, 07:48 PM
Step 1, don't live in a flood zone.

Throughout history highground has always been the best places for human settlements, why has this changed?

It is also worth it to stay away from active volcanos and fault lines.

So ya, buy or build a house on a hill. But atleast owning a boat like FVR said would be practical.

wareagle69
08-23-2007, 07:48 PM
where would you go? if your talking a small boat you couldn't live on it and if everything is flooded it's hard to b/o somewhere

Sarge47
08-23-2007, 08:42 PM
we have all watched the news lately in the north(owl girl turf) minnesota and my old stompin grounds of ohio plus the south texas and oklahoma(the ok state)ppl are getting flooded out of their homes very fast, that ruins the bug in concept but then where do you bug out to becuase you have no idea what is and what isn't flooded now fvr doesn't have to worry and when i lived in the arizona mts i never thought about it either but to all my freinds in the flood plains what is your contingency plan(s)


remember
always be prepared...
I was raised in Burlington Iowa, right on the Mississippi. When that river floods, well, look at 1993 and you'll get the picture. Lots of livestock killed with some human fatalities as well every time the water rises. And it don't even have to rise to kill you, that under current is deadly. I prefer to avoid living in the low lands, but flash flooding can happen just about anywhere, and look what they're going through over by Owl girl's 'hood!:eek:

FVR
08-23-2007, 08:46 PM
I'm not going to live on the boat, just going to pack up the wife and kids, dogs, hamster, and dump the fish into the water and start rowing. I'll find land, but if it takes too long, we gonna be cooking the hamster.

Poor, poor Angel.

FVR
08-23-2007, 08:51 PM
Back when I was a kid, my mom was going to move us to this nice house right on the Rancocas river. We were already to close, and my mom asked the little boy, "do you like living here" the boy responded "yeh, it's real fun when it rains and we get water in our living roome".

Needles to say, we did not move to the house on the Rancocas river. Three years later, house washed away.


Honestly, if I lived in an area designated as a 10yr or less flood plain, I would own one of the large V hulled john boats. Equipped with a dependable motor of the appropriate size, storage space under the seats, and ready to go.

But then, I'm a little paranoid.

Oh yeh, reason number one not to in a flood plain. It floods.

wareagle69
08-23-2007, 09:04 PM
new home update,

well we lost the 100 acre place we were looking some city boy with more money thought that lifestyle would be fun. fun you say what about a way of life you numpty oh well, so i looked at another way out also straw bale constructio drilled well solar and wind power w/ generater b/u been on sale for a yr i think ppl get scared of straw bale construction but they are superior in my mind.

nell67
08-23-2007, 09:07 PM
I'm not going to live on the boat, just going to pack up the wife and kids, dogs, hamster, and dump the fish into the water and start rowing. I'll find land, but if it takes too long, we gonna be cooking the hamster.

Poor, poor Angel.

FVR, skip the hamster,more meat on the dogs LOL...unless they are chihuahuas, then maybe the hamster.

FVR
08-23-2007, 09:26 PM
Rotty and a boxer/weiner dog.

They eat us first. The weiner dog will kill us while we are sleeping, the rotty will just sit back and get fed.

Just don't trust that weiner dog.

wareagle69
08-23-2007, 09:30 PM
i've got a brittney spaniel ,whippet and pit(big suck) usta have a rotti but my ex got him poor bastard.

owl_girl
08-23-2007, 11:09 PM
I agree a boat would be good to have. Also make sure you remember which direction the closest high ground is in case it floods at night.

trax
08-24-2007, 11:42 AM
Rotty and a boxer/weiner dog.Just don't trust that weiner dog.

yeah, I know what you mean, they just look "shifty" to me, but about flooding, when the Red River flooded in Winnipeg in '97, all these people that lost their homes were whining about the government ponying up money for them and the feds did! I was thinking...what did you think was going to happen when you bought river side property??? duh...and they paid extra for it too.

Have a boat, know where high ground is, and make sure you have a reliable motor and oars, because there's going to be a lot of crap floating in that flood water that can screw over your motor pretty badly. A smaller outboard is your best bet, you need reliability not super speed.

nell67
03-19-2008, 06:32 AM
I know this is an old thread,bringing it back because we are under flooding in our area right now,schools are either closed or on a 2 hour delay to see if the water will subside (it's still raining and will be quite heavy the rest of the day!).
We were having issues with the drains at work yesterday,bet they are having fun today,and the ceiling in the dining area was leaking as well.

I live at a much higher elevation than in the city I work,so far the rain is creating a muddy mess for me.

Rick
03-19-2008, 07:00 AM
Very timely, Nell.

The FIRST thing you do is put a plan together BEFORE you need it. What you need to take with you, where you will go, how you will get there and how you will communicate. Then PRACTICE it to ensure you didn't overlook something. Don't forget your pets or any members of your family with special needs. All their requirements need to be included in the plan.

Check to ensure you have Federal Flood Insurance. Most private insurance companies (State Farm, Allstate, etc.) do NOT cover floods. You must be enrolled in the Federal Flood Insurance program to be covered. They even have a link to determine what the risk is where you live and what the expected costs would be to ensure your home.

http://www.floodsmart.gov/floodsmart/

nell67
03-19-2008, 07:03 AM
Are you getting the rain as well Rick?? Not sure how far North this is going,but the Ohio River is flooding,they are putting up the flood barriers,and the crest isn't expect until tomorrow,one of the floating casinos has closed at least until tomorrow.

Rick
03-19-2008, 07:06 AM
Yes. They are predicting 3 inches but not a worry for me. I'm about 30 feet above the lake and everything from here is down hill.

nell67
03-19-2008, 07:10 AM
We got 3-4"inches yesterday,and expecting another 3-4 today.

The mobile home sits up on a hill,on one side of me,I have a 6' deep creek,that dried up last summer due to the drought,and on the other side a little "valley" between where the home sits and another hill,would take alot more than predicted to actually get up to the mobile home,so I am not worried.

crashdive123
03-19-2008, 07:23 AM
Hope you guys are doing OK. Looks like we're in for that rain today, along with Georgia and Tennessee.

Something to note on the federal flood insurance is that it must be in place for 30 days before coverage begins. That prevents people from getting it "just before" the big storm hits.

Again, hope you guys are doing OK.

Beo
03-19-2008, 08:29 AM
Okay its March 19th and we have had nonstop rain, I got 4 inches of water in the basement and its climbing, sump pump is running full tilt as is the drain, Chris said the first rule is to not live in a Flood Zone, well I don't live in a flood and I live on top of a hill, problem is after geting 14 inches of snow and now three days of rain the ground is saturated with nowhere for the rain to go, has to go somewhere so it eventually soaks through the concrete foundation. I have even used drylock on the inside of the basement wall, not worried cause it'll receed, used the wet/dry shop vac. to suck alot out but now I'm at work and the day will tell. Sure feel sorry for the Water Rescue guys today they been out since 230am and looks like they're working all day, the Miami river flood stage is 17feet, it is now at 26 and rising, the Ohio here is growing too.

Assassin Pilot
03-19-2008, 03:25 PM
MY area hasn't gotten heavy rain, just a bit of a drizzle. We never get any flooding here, and even if we would it would head downhill to the nearby river. I'm over 150 feet away from the river, and the whole area basically slanted towards the river so I'm pretty darn safe.

bulrush
04-10-2008, 12:50 PM
Regarding Katrina and New Orleans...

The thing is:
1. Don't live in a flood zone
2. below sea level
3. at the edge of a large lake above sea level
4. in hurricane country.

If I've told ya once, I've told ya a thousand times.

spud
04-11-2008, 10:54 AM
Rocket science... live on high ground, lock the gates below and let the world float by way down below. Or live in the low lands, drown or get over whelmed by the masses fleeing the rising waters...again.

Bigdog57
04-25-2008, 06:16 PM
The thing is:
1. Don't live in a flood zone
2. below sea level
3. at the edge of a large lake above sea level
4. in hurricane country.

If I've told ya once, I've told ya a thousand times.

Well, I'm good for three outta four! I live in north Florida - but Tallahassee hasn't been smacked in a long time - a particular quirk of topography diverts storms either west (sorry P-cola!) or east (sorry J-ville!), so we are blessed.
However, the '93-'94 flooding did cause us problems due to rivers bringing it down. Again around 2001 it hit us again. My sister had her property in what was basically a dry riverbed - WRONG!! She got flooded five times in ten years and finally moved.
When I bought my property in 2001, I was smarter. Looked at the heights and slopes - bought on a high spot. Close to the National Forest, so can BO by MC into the boonies, bypassing the bumper-to-bumper Storm-Evac traffic.
I've plotted many routes northward, bypassing paved roads. I've ridden them, and know the low spots that could (and would!) flood.
My neighborhood won't flood - the wind is our bigger enemy!
I'm about fifteen miles from the coast too, so no storm surge for us!

Ridge Wolf
04-25-2008, 07:23 PM
Step 1, don't live in a flood zone.

Throughout history highground has always been the best places for human settlements, why has this changed?

It is also worth it to stay away from active volcanos and fault lines.

So ya, buy or build a house on a hill. But atleast owning a boat like FVR said would be practical.

Urban sprawl.... as to the reason for change.. and then, dikes all around to channel the potential flood water... or a lot of fill dirt piled up and then build on top of that... Just look at Chehalis/Centralia WA. last year.. nothing but a flood plain and it does that every year .. mostly to a lessor extent.

dilligaf2u2
04-28-2008, 03:52 PM
If I get flood waters. Well the river is a mile away. From the top of the clif it is only 125 foot down. So if water from a flood comes in my back door, it is too late to run.

I live on top of a mesa. It might be weeks geting out of here if the damn damn goes. But water washing over me would not happen.

Don