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View Full Version : If anyone thinks we got a lot of flooding


NJSPEEDER
07-02-2006, 02:53 PM
i have a very personal interest in how things are going in upstate, ny. both of my parents are from up there and my mother is actually from the chenango river valley are, guilford to be exact.
with all the rain the are in and around binghampton and norwich got really f'ed up. there are more than 100 bridges washed out, several of them along major highways. one was for Rt88, which would be equal to rt1 shutting down here in central jersey. when the rt88 bridge let go there were two trucks on it, boith drivers lost their lives.
thankfully my family got away lucky. my cousin lost a field of corn and had serious water in his basement. he also had to move a lot of equipment and about 30 calves out of one barn as the creek that is about 130yards behind his house swelled all teh way across the fields.
it is really amazing how destructive water can be. i have been keeping tabs on my famiuly obviously, but i only looked at the stories and pictures online from teh local papers today.
check it out, some of this **** is jsut nuts. http://www.thedailystar.com/news/stories/2006/06/28/flood11.html

if anyone wants a scale of how bad this is, the only flooding in US history that covered more developed land or involved more water was when the mississippi skipped it's banks in the 90's. in total, a few hundred creeks and streams and at least a dozen rivers went over their banks creating billions of dollars in damage.

baddest434
07-02-2006, 03:33 PM
great that your family got out ok tim. those pics really tell the story, raging water is devastating.

NJSPEEDER
07-02-2006, 04:25 PM
my cousin defianately got off better than a lot of the farmers in the area. that area is mostly dairy farms, so feed is very important to getting good milk. there is a farmer a few miles away that apparently lost every feed field he had. all of his corn, alfalfa, and hay was wiped out.
my cousin only lost one fairly small corn field, but he shoudl have enough to get his herd through the winter still.
farmers are a tough bunch, they stick together, so i am sure evveryone who wants to stay a farmer will get enough help to keep going through the winter.

enRo
07-02-2006, 04:46 PM
Yea i got family up there too... and they were flooded massively. Did u see those pics i posted of Rt. 88? :shock:

NJSPEEDER
07-02-2006, 06:22 PM
my mom's home town of guilford lost both of their bridges across the chenagno river. it is now a 40 minute drive for people to visit neighbors that are 1/2 a block away. lol

enRo
07-02-2006, 06:36 PM
Yea, they shut down Sidney going in and out. Lots of bridges down... my grandfather lives on a slight slope, and his buick lesabre got swept down his 50 ft driveway and almost into the creek next to his property :shock: Amazing.

NJSPEEDER
07-02-2006, 06:46 PM
did you see the pics of the east sidney dam?
they never bothered to open the flood gates because the lake overflowed the top of the spillway by 10ft. lol

Tru2Chevy
07-06-2006, 10:27 AM
Bringing this back up just to show some pics of my aunt and uncle's dairy farm in upstate NY. They are about 20 minutes north of Binghamton in Whitney Point.

http://eshare.hpphoto.com/FilmStripHome.aspx?JobID=d37332c2-0179-4f57-97b7-0d4875b12f32&SKU=WalMart&Index=0#

Pretty much all the fields that you can see in the pics are under 3+ feet of water in those pics. Estimated loss is currently somewhere between $25k and $30k. :(

- Justin