New Jersey Flood

xoxoxoBruce • Jul 16, 2004 12:12 am
My buddies son and daughter-in-law live in Medford Lakes, NJ. As I understand it, 12" of rain caused the dams to go down like dominos. Very bad mojo. :(
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 16, 2004 12:15 am
A lot of damage but nobody killed, I think.
Undertoad • Jul 16, 2004 12:17 am
Hmmm.
wolf • Jul 16, 2004 12:58 am
One of my sister's best friends from college lives in Medford Lakes, as do several relatives of one of my best friends. No sitreps as of yet.
Elspode • Jul 16, 2004 1:23 pm
Great pics, bad scene. Hope everyone is alright and that they all had flood insurance.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 16, 2004 3:28 pm
I just posted the most dramatic pics. There's a ton showing where the water went, but you have to know the area to appreciate them. Lots of houses and commercial buildings full of mud and dumpsters full of PCs and heirlooms.
On the news they said most people don'thave flood insurance because it's not a major river and nothing like this ever happened before. I have FI because I live on a creek that HAS done that before but FI doesn't cover anything in the cellar except washer/dryer, water heater and boiler. :(
Undertoad • Jul 16, 2004 3:49 pm
Damn, B, if the levee breaks you better put all the non-floatable dodads in the dryer.
Slothboy • Jul 16, 2004 6:11 pm
Looks like a bad day to be a canoe.

I live in the Willamette Valley in Oregon. We are within spitting distance of a couple nice active volcanoes that nobody worries about. I wonder if I should get lava insurance.
tw • Jul 16, 2004 7:22 pm
The real tradegy here is that most of that damage was created by man. Dams were built with insufficient run off capability. Any dam that cannot withstand a 10 inch rain is, by design, defective. For water to hit that deep with that much force - it was because man built (or did not maintain) defective dams.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 16, 2004 9:49 pm
Slothboy wrote:
Looks like a bad day to be a canoe.

I live in the Willamette Valley in Oregon. We are within spitting distance of a couple nice active volcanoes that nobody worries about. I wonder if I should get lava insurance.

Ask Helen. ;)
elSicomoro • Jul 16, 2004 9:57 pm
This reminds me of the floods of 1993 back in the Midwest. What a mess...thank God no one was killed or seriously injured.
wolf • Jul 17, 2004 2:28 am
My sister has heard from her friend in Medford. They are all fine, and their house survived, although their neighbors are not so lucky. Apparently everyone around them got flooded out. They have the only house on the street that's set a bit higher, and they don't have a basement.
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 17, 2004 6:50 am
Was it a log cabin, Wolf? :confused:
Griff • Jul 17, 2004 9:06 am
Wow, that's brutal. Makes me glad to be at elevation here.
wolf • Jul 17, 2004 10:50 am
xoxoxoBruce wrote:
Was it a log cabin, Wolf? :confused:


I believe so. They seem to be popular there.
jinx • Jul 17, 2004 1:15 pm
sycamore wrote:
This reminds me of the floods of 1993 back in the Midwest.

Jim and I flew over some the flood area on our way into O'Hare on a bright sunny afternoon. I wish I had had my camera, it was amazing from that vantage point. We'd been watching the news, but I hadn't been able to grasp the scale of it all prior to seeing it from above.