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May was tornadoes. June is for flooding

Honky Lips

Welcome to the shit show.
Joined
May 21, 2020
Member Number
876
Messages
371
Loc
Omaha, Ne “ish”
Lake okoboji area in northwest Iowa is getting wrecked by rain the last week. Something like 13” of rain and everything is underwater. And the water level is still rising



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Our lakes area is getting wrecked due to flooding right now.
 
I was looking at some flooding pictures last night and reading about some of the rescues being done.
Now we wait and see how bad it gets for everyone downstream as the water moves out of that area.

We are getting hammered with rain on this side of the state also but the flooding is not near as bad. The Mississippi is expected to crest next weekend between 17-18’ at Guttenberg, that is the highest it’s been since 2010.
 
Lake okoboji area in northwest Iowa is getting wrecked by rain the last week. Something like 13” of rain and everything is underwater. And the water level is still rising



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Our lakes area is getting wrecked due to flooding right now.

Why doesn't anybody in the Midwest build floating docks? They do the same shit here too. The dock is either 8' above the waterline or underwater depending on the time of year. Dumbest shit I've ever seen.......
 
Hate for those folks… Bit damn send some moisture our way! It’s hotter than a 3 balled Tom cat here and we haven’t had a drop in over a month.
 
Why doesn't anybody in the Midwest build floating docks? They do the same shit here too. The dock is either 8' above the waterline or underwater depending on the time of year. Dumbest shit I've ever seen.......
Because we have to pull the docks out every fall before the freeze. Floating ones are heavy and awkward to move in and out. Most of the docks up here are rolling or sectional.
 
I know a few people in NW Iowa, haven't heard from them yet on how they're doing.
 
Because we have to pull the docks out every fall before the freeze. Floating ones are heavy and awkward to move in and out. Most of the docks up here are rolling or sectional.


I've never seen a fixed dock before. And it freezes in Canada every now and again. The idea that a dock would be anything but floating is stupid.:flipoff2:
 
Because we have to pull the docks out every fall before the freeze. Floating ones are heavy and awkward to move in and out. Most of the docks up here are rolling or sectional.
You must live on a really high dollar lake if all the docks are professionally made shit. :laughing:

People either toss them on a spare boat trailer or bold on some sort of homemade wheel kit (assuming you have a shoreline that's not a fucking cliff). I think fixed wood docks are the best of both worlds since the dock can float to location and then you can put it on its legs but maybe that's just because it's what I'm used to.
 

Midwestern flooding collapses a bridge, forces evacuations and kills at least 2​


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BY HANNAH FINGERHUT, MARGERY A. BECK AND JOHN HANNA
Updated 5:33 PM MDT, June 24, 2024
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NORTH SIOUX CITY, S.D. (AP) — Flooding in the Midwestern U.S. killed at least two, collapsed a railroad bridge and sent water surging around a dam Monday after days of heavy rains that have forced hundreds of people to evacuate or be rescued from rising waters.
An Illinois man died Saturday while trying to go around a barricade in Spencer, Iowa, Sioux City’s KTIV-TV reported Monday.
The Little Sioux River swept his truck away, according to a news release from the Clay County Sheriff’s Office provided to the station. Officials found the vehicle in the treeline but weren’t able to recover his body until Monday because of dangerous conditions.

At least one person died in South Dakota, Gov. Kristi Noem has said without providing details.

The flooding brought added misery to parts of Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota and Minnesota during a vast and stubborn heat wave. In some communities hit by flooding, the temperature Monday afternoon approached 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.7 Celsius).

More than 3 million people live in areas touched by flooding, from Omaha, Nebraska, to St. Paul, Minnesota. Storms dumped huge amounts of rain from Thursday through Saturday, with as much as 18 inches (46 centimeters) falling south of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, according to the National Weather Service.

Places that didn’t get as much rain had to contend with the extra water moving downstream. More rain is forecast, and many streams may not crest until later this week as the floodwaters slowly drain down a web of rivers to the Missouri and Mississippi. The Missouri will crest at Omaha on Thursday, said Kevin Low, a weather service hydrologist.



Flooding in the Omaha area Monday was causing Amtrak to use buses to transport passengers temporarily, according to an Amtrak spokesperson.

“I’ve never had to evacuate my house,” Hank Howley, a 71-year-old North Sioux City, South Dakota, resident said as she joined others on a levee of the swollen Big Sioux River, where the railroad bridge collapsed a day earlier. She did not have to evacuate in recent days either, but said: “We’re on the highest spot in town. But what good is that when the rest of the town is flooded? It makes me nervous.”

The bridge connected North Sioux City, South Dakota, with Sioux City, Iowa, and fell into the Big Sioux River around 11 p.m. Sunday, officials said. Images on local media showed a large span of the steel bridge partially underwater as floodwaters rushed over it.

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Many families embark on Falls Park in Sioux Falls, S.D., as water rose quickly Saturday, June 22, 2024, after days of heavy rain led to flooding in the area. (AP Photo/Josh Jurgens)
There were no reports of injuries from the collapse. The bridge’s owner, BNSF Railway, had stopped operating it as a precaution during the flooding, spokesperson Kendall Sloan said. The railroad said the bridge was used by only a few trains per day and did not expect rerouting to have a significant impact.

The Big Sioux River stabilized Monday morning at around 45 feet (13.7 meters), over 7 feet (2.1 meters) higher than the previous record, Sioux City Fire Marshal Mark Aesoph said.

In North Sioux City, the South Dakota Department of Transportation built a berm Sunday night across Interstate 29 to stem flooding, temporarily blocking the major route. In other areas where the interstate remained open, water crept toward the road. Howley, who has lived there for 33 years, said she has a growing concern over more frequent severe flooding around I-29.

The flooding has, over the course of days, damaged roads and bridges, shuttered or destroyed businesses, required hospitals and nursing homes to evacuate, and left cities without power or safe drinking water, the governors of Iowa and South Dakota said.
 
I've never seen a fixed dock before. And it freezes in Canada every now and again. The idea that a dock would be anything but floating is stupid.:flipoff2:
lol the roll ins are sweet about 10 mins you can have it in and out. Our lake there are 2 maybe 3 floating docks. The other 40-50 are sectional or roll ins.

The closest thing to a home built dock is my neighbor with his wooden stick built dock that uses the Tommy dock hardware.
 
All you guys pulling your docks need to research deicers. I started doing this 15-20 years ago. Now there are a dozen or more around the lake.

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I’m on the wrong side of the lake. When the ice goes out it can blow against my side of the lake and wipe out anything left in the water. If we were on the west or south end it would probably be just fine.
 
I guess you don't have much in the way of ice sports, or a very big lake with thick ice blowing around in the spring as it breaks up.

It was still cold in MN when I grew up, docks are fine froze in over the winter, it's the spring thaw that destroys them. Now? fuck it, lucky if the damn lake freezes over thick enough to even walk on for more than a couple weeks.
 
Docks in N. Indiana and SW Michigan are mostly the same as Panzer indicated. Removable sections or roll-in. Though on some of the some of the high dollar lakes I've seen where people had permanent docks put in with driven piers. The only floating docks I've seen in the area have been in private ponds.
 
I guess you don't have much in the way of ice sports, or a very big lake with thick ice blowing around in the spring as it breaks up.

It was still cold in MN when I grew up, docks are fine froze in over the winter, it's the spring thaw that destroys them. Now? fuck it, lucky if the damn lake freezes over thick enough to even walk on for more than a couple weeks.
Yeah typically our lake gets 2’ thick of ice. The lake is small but it’s one of the most popular areas for the snowmobiles. They pack the snow over the entire lake so it makes thick ice. It’s the perfect distance from town and has 2 bars on the lake so it’s the place to go on the weekends.
 
I’m on the wrong side of the lake. When the ice goes out it can blow against my side of the lake and wipe out anything left in the water. If we were on the west or south end it would probably be just fine.
I’m in a bit of a bay but on the SE side so we get the prevailing winds. Thing is that we have enough contour and the ice melts pretty consistent and there is rarely a big ice flow and it’s soft enough that it breaks up easy.

The thing about the deicer is that the ice expansion and shifting all winter long never moves the dock around.

I see people near me that leave their docks in with no deicer and they get all contorted. Mine never does.
 
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