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Back to Normal
Life is getting back to normal here in Fargo. The river has been dropping a foot a day now and is no threat. It is expected to rise a bit next week when it warms up and the snow starts to melt, but still should be no problem.
I got so use to watching the river levels and listening to all the press conferences about what’s going on. It almost feels weird getting back to normal. I was so busy with flood stuff, that I never got a chance to see any national news. Was the national news just as impressed with the people in this area? A lot of people worked their asses to save our city, and we did. We won. We beat the flood. I sure hope it doesn’t hurt our chances as getting permanent flood protection though. It’s going to be expensive, but fighting these floods isn’t cheap either. I am curious what the final bill for the flood fight will be. It’s going to cost $400,000 just to clean up the Fargodome.
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Flood Fighting
The last two days have been hard. Fighting floods can be tough. Every muscle in my body aches. Last night was the first night this week that I got more than three hours of sleep. Many people have lost their homes, but for the most part, Fargo is doing pretty good today. The river rising has slowed, and it might have crested, but their not sure yet. It could still go up a bit if the weather warms up. The city is a mess. It’s like a war zone out there. Helicopters are patrolling the dikes, along with national guardsmen. Most of the dikes are built up high enough now. Now we just have to keep an eye on them 24/7. Sandbags are strategically placed throughout town to keep them warm and to have them ready to repair leaks as soon a possible. The river will remain high for a week or so.
Our house is pretty safe. We are five blocks or so away from the second line of dikes. I still moved most of our stuff up from the downstairs, and plugged all of our sewer drains down there, so we should be fine.
The people in this town are amazing though. Countless volunteers worked their ass off. Today they had to turn them away, because we have plenty of sandbags made up already for emergencies. At the beginning they were saying we would need 1.5 million sandbags to protect the city and they weren’t sure if we would be able to fill that many. Well, the last I heard volunteers have filled 3 million sandbags. Just amazing. Most of them were college and high school kids, but many people traveled from surrounding cities to help.
I love this city more than ever now. It truly is the people that make this city great. We are not out of it yet, but we are winning the battle. It would have been easily lost if it weren’t for the people. Everything was super organized. The city officials had great plans, and everybody in the city followed them. The two days that I was working with the volunteers not one of them complained, and some of them were on the third or fourth day of hard labor. Together we all fought to save our city, and for the most part we have. I’m not too sure if many other cities could have done what we have.
**Update**
Here are some great pictures of what we have been going through. -
2009 Flood
So you might have saw on the news that Fargo is flooding. Everybody around here is a little worried. The river is currently at 26.2 ft. Flood stage is 18. They are predicting it could reach 40. The record is 40.1 set back in 1897. Back in 1997 when Grand Forks got it bad, it got up to 39.6 here. I wasn’t living in Fargo at that time, so this is my first real major flood.
Our house is in the 500 year flood plain, but according to the maps, we should be safe at 41 and 42 ft. Our man problem would be if the lift stations can’t keep up and the sewer backs up into our basement. The closest lift station to our house is currently pumping water onto the street. That makes me a little worried. I drove around town trying to find plugs for our drains, and every place was sold out. I ran into a grocery store, and they were out of bottled water. Town is just nuts with everybody buying flood supplies and police cars escorting sand bag trucks. Schools are closed so the kids can go help fill sand bags. I would help, but I have to work tonight. I am hoping I can find some drain plugs at work tonight. I don’t know what the chances of our sewer back up is, but I would rather be safe than sorry.
The river is suppose to crest by Thursday or Friday. I will be glad when it starts going down. Fears of what happened to Grand Forks are not good. Floods are no fun.