Is Choke Canyon filling?
Good question !GottaRide said:
Is Choke Canyon filling?
p_bubel said:
Local news agency posted this today on Facebook.
Just give it a shove and let it fall onto those broken limbs/ trees in the rear. You could put a couple of sheets of 3/4" plywood to spread the impact. (I'm only half joking)Quote:
Anyone have an idea how to get sisters jetski down?
aggiepublius said:
Quote:
With light rain expected Monday and moderate rain forecast for Tuesday and wednesday an additional 2 to 3 inches are possible across much of South Central Texas through the day on Wednesday. Isolated totals up to 4 inches are possible. This rain falling on already saturated ground could lead to renewed river flooding issues and minor flash flooding issues.
Welcome to my world, for the last 18 months.mathguy86 said:
Last saturday when all this started I got 7" in about 4 hours and had recorded almost 12" thought Monday evening. It finally dried out enough that I decided to do some fajitas on my BGE. Opened it up to start a fire and had mold growing inside and had 2" of water in the bottom. Never had that happen ever. It was closed and had the ceramic lid on. Fortunately fire kills everything.
I'm sick and tired of water.
No, it's not to that degree. That is about 2x what would be considered normal and expected.toolshed said:
Is that not to be expected along that area of the coast? Sea breeze pop up showers? I know Galveston and the local area has been inundated lately, but the SE Texas coast is known for sea breeze shower activity, especially in the warmer months.
I think the last decade it has been less frequent, by my recollection, leading to the drought effects and such 6-10 years ago. Massive timber losses and now dead fall piling up creating more fire hazards. It feels like it's shifting back now to the wetter climate with the seasonal showers that I remember before the droughts around 7-10 years ago, but I don't know that we've had enough time to really assess whether it's a shift or just a wetter point in time. I do wish that the jet stream and other weather drivers would shift to allow for the areas out west in extreme droughts to get some needed relief, to refill the drastically drained reservoirs out there in NM, CO, NV and UT.
We seem to be in a feast or famine mode of precipitation the last couple years. I don't know what the main driver is of that, I'm not a proponent of global warming. I know it's attributed to El Nino, or La Nina, climate changes, etc.. Just a few years ago we were worried the aquifers were going dry. Hopefully they are seeing a major recharge with the torrential rains we've experience recently. I guess that depends on the type of recharge zone.