That video! The water was clearly over the bridge. WOW!
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https://www.facebook.com/TexasHillCountry/photos/a.307413635190.336102.226813135190/10155604914860191/?type=1
quote:I don't think that's all of it...
Found the red car that floated past our ranch hung up in the 165 bridge.
quote:It's Corpus, what the hell did you expect out of the inhabitants?
Hundreds of cars were flooded and stalled in corpus in the big flood we had Thursday afternoon. They showed multiple people in compact cars driving straight into 4-5' of water while larger vehicles had the sense to wait, then they interviewed the drivers. The reasoning from every single one...."I wanted to get home".
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It's extremely unfortunate that there were people that were tragically affected by this that had no real warning. I don't doubt that the WPD/WFD did everything in their emergency management plan to alert everyone, but how out of date is that plan?
It's very unfortunate that holes in an EMP are only discovered when the plan fails.
On the topic of flood maps, those are pretty much drawn based on satellite elevations and topographic pictures. They're not very accurate as far as knowing the limits of a flood, just a suggestion as to what can be extrapolated ahead of time. NWI maps are notoriously awful and describing wetlands.
quote:It's very unfortunate that there were several people that were caught in this flood. I can offer nothing but prayers that anyone involved is found safe.
There was warning that the flood was coming. The NWS issued flash flood emergencies saying this is a life threatening event. Weather radios were going off. Flash flood watches were issued a day or more ahead of the heavy rain. The media played up the threat. The biggest problem was the time of night it hit. I would bet many were caught sleeping as the river rose. No weather radios, a cell phone that doesn't EAS alert, no reverse 911 call, no sirens; they didn't receive the warning at night for some reason but the warnings were there. Same thing happened at an Arkansas campground in 2010. I've always wondered why the emergency services/counties don't have outdoor sirens along popular rivers in the hill country because this type of event happens too frequently to not have an outdoor siren system dedicated for flash flooding. Make it a different sound/tone than the tornado sirens and make sure campgrounds and neighborhoods along the river have the sirens.
With regards to flood mapping, GIS and lidar data has significantly improved the understanding of where floods go in recent years. NWS river flood warnings are now drawn to specifically cover the basins.
quote:No flooding was reported at those businesses
Did all those offices/businesses get flooded on the sw side of RR12 bridge in Wimberley?
That flat is up very high but you know it has to be part of the floodplain.