Friday, July 5, 2013

Post flooding Calgary 2013

But with devastation there's a will to get back to normal. Although stampede had the best resources available to get ready, they still made it in time.
Source: www.flickr.com/the_kav

Calgary post flood pics 2013

Memorial drive underwater. Flooded every house to the ridge.
The train tracks from the C Train bent out of shape. The tracks were back up in running in under 2 week.s

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Calgary Flooding pics 2013

10 st bridge on the Friday near the height of the flood. The river flow as a mere couple hundred cubic meters/second less than Niagara Falls..... The water is usually 20+ feet lower than what you see.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Alberta Floods Devastate Calgary and high River

It's the week of June 17th. The rains have been relentless. The snowmelt in the mountains above in the Rockies is starting to seep and flow into the rivers. This coupled with unprecedented rainfall combined for a perfect storm for a flooding disaster. The rivers swelled, and the cities built on floodplains (Calgary being the largest, High River taking the greatest devastation) were hit hard. 100000 people displaced in Calgary. Shockingly most of the displaced were housed both in High River and Calgary by friends, family, and strangers. The community combined for unprecedented response. Flooded areas, rich (it's hard to help someone who's cleaning off 10,000 bottles of wine to keep from their basement when there's a poor family next door, but people did it!) and poor were hit the same. Bowness, Sunnyside, Elbow Park, all underwater (high river too). A week after the rains subsided all but high river were saved. In fact, under two weeks later the Calgary Stampede, that was entirely underwater, opened for guests. The city has prevailed, but the question looms, how will we approach the prospect (certainty) of future flooding? No more building? Flood mitigation plans? And how much will that cost? And what is the cost of our current environmental impact on future flooding?