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More rains comin'.
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Groovy, Broome County only lost 800 homes in the last one...
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http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepu...9Wildfire1.jpg |
easily solved by keeping ridiculous amounts of vegetation away from your property.
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Again, the point is that this flooding should not have been as bad as the news wanted it to be. And where flooding was a problem, those areas better get cracking at opening up the flood plain - moving people like Clinton did for Grafton IL. |
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I'll take my chances with the water. |
but it's a dry heat...
i played 90 minutes of soccer outside tonight. i couldn't do that in illinois humidity when it was 90. |
A "dry heat", a light heat, a dark heat...
I was on the phone with tech support once, the lady was based in Phoenix, and I complained that it was freakin' 90 plus degrees outside (the gates of hell for my Seattle body thermostat). She chuckled and said "Honey, it hasn't been under 100 degrees for 30 DAYS". I quit complaining and crossed Arizona off my lifetime must-see list. No thanks. |
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Water resources
New York State....hover over the dots (all colors) to find out where it is. For the Chenango River at Greene, this station has only stream height (water level) but check the "Available data for this site" menu for historical data and other information. For the Susquehanna River at Conklin, there is stream height and discharge as well as "Available Data" menu. Don't forget the Susquehanna starts in NY state, swings through northeast PA, back into NY, then south the full height of PA into MD. So, you'll have to check the PA map also to see where the bulk of the water entered the Susquehanna before in got to Binghamton. The Chenango dumps into the Susquehanna in Binghamton so the NY map would show some of the large feeder streams of the Chenango. Have fun. :D |
[whine]but I have work to do[/whine]
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That's why I would never give you an order...only opportunity.:lol:
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This mornings paper has the so-called flood plains mapped. People are asking the right questions, a new map is needed. An example is Lourdes Hospital which was supposed to be on the high end of the 500 year flood plain and was inundated. Lots of homes on morgages were above the known flood plain and were not required to have flood insurance. Bottom line, everyone was working with bad information.
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All I can say for sure is that the elevation listed on Google for my house is between 180 and 190 feet above sea level. The bottom of my street is about 160 feet. There is almost 0 percent chance of any amount of standing water flooding my house.
There is, however, an issue with runoff and drainage. When they built my development, they were pretty careful with landscaping design. Unfortunately, they began building above me and I got a lesson in design when they didn't put up a silt fence before they started and a severe rain took off the few inches of the already thin topsoil off of the hill in my backyard. The runoff is designed to run away from my house and in the alley between my house and my neighbors to the street. The winter before last, due to a design flaw, it pooled near my back steps and caused problems. The builder had to excavate and redesign the terrain to build up the embankment between the alley and my house. That being said, everything is good now and I sit well above sea level, away or above any creeks which can flood, tucked in a slight valley to discourage tornadoes and hurricanes, and in one of the more geographically dead states on the east coast. Except for the fact that I am not too far from chemical plants, I have a pretty safe environment. The biggest disaster I have to worry about is my homeowners association. |
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