Just checked my E-mail, and found the enclosed link in an e-mail from my neighbor up at Sebago Lake Maine.
HOLY ****!!!
http://www.wmtw.com/video/29008342/detail.html
The water's are still risingThe damage reports are not good....... Killington base lodge collapsed....... roads closed due to severe problems.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/irenes-flooding-takes-out-covered-bridge/2011/08/29/gIQAtNQsnJ_video.html
Our city of 30,000 had very little damage from the tropical storm, a few trees down and very few lost power. Our lights never flickered, a tree across the street fell, no damage. Wife wanted to go along the ocean roads to see the roar of the ocean, waves only maxed out to 17 feet crashing along the rocks. Many of the locals came out too as cars were bumper to bumper going along the shore, people pulling over to the side of the road to take pictures.
Just checked the weather bouy and the highest winds were 31.7 gusting to 45 mph., most damage was inland and those living along fresh water rivers had extreme flooding. Here on Cape Ann we do not flood. I can not understand how people can buy houses in a flood plain today, only asking for trouble.
A 500 year flood is a magnitude that is likely to occur only once every 500 years. A 100 year flood is likely to occur once every 100 years. A 200 year flood could come next yearNow did we get a 500 year flood 15 years after the 100 year flood? Or was the whole flood plain designation wrong to begin with? Still working on that.