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Author Topic: Major damage from rain in Duluth  (Read 4024 times)

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Offline Bobby Bass

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From Duluth News Tribune.

Hour upon hour of torrential rainfall has caused major flooding in the city of Duluth and up the North Shore this morning. Evacuations are under way in the Fond du Lac neighborhood of Duluth and in Thomson Township.


With more rain on the way, the situation could get worse.


Duluth fire and police crews assisted Lake Superior Zoo staff in tracking down animals after major flooding.


The Polar Shores exhibit, which housed the seals and a polar bear, has been completely flooded out, according to zoo spokeswoman Keely Johnson. Though all of the animals in the exhibits are now accounted for, at one point the seal swam out of its exhibit and was found on Grand Avenue.


Johnson said many of the zoo’s animals have drowned, including all but one of the zoo’s barnyard animals. She said the zoo’s donkey, goats and sheep have died. She said it’s possible others have drowned, as flooding on the grounds have consumed some of the exhibits, such as the raven and vulture cages.


She said a culvert for Kingsbury creek was backed up and caused the flooding, but that culvert is now completely washed out.


“The water is starting to recede a little bit,” Johnson said.



Duluth's Fond du Lac neighborhood is being evacuated — though it’s not mandatory — as the St. Louis River rises from above-normal dam discharges upstream. The dams are reported to not be in danger of failure, but Minnesota Power is releasing more water that may flood homes downstream. First United Methodist Church in Duluth — the “coppertop church” — is being used as an evacuation center.


The Carlton County Sheriff's Office is recommending no travel in the county except in emergencies because of flooded roadways. The most-affected areas are across northern parts of the county; Highway 210 through Jay Cooke State Park is closed.


The Sheriff's Office is recommending that some residents of Thomson Township evacuate because of high water. Carlton High School has been opened up as an emergency shelter.


The National Weather Service in Duluth reported just before 3 a.m. that “the flooding situation in Duluth continues to deteriorate.” A flash flood warning remains in effect until 4:30 p.m. today for the Twin Ports up the North Shore


“This appears to be a flood reminiscent of the flood of 1972,” which devastated parts of the Duluth Hillside, the Weather Service reported. And with more storms lined up to the west, the situation may get worse yet this morning.


Among key developments:



•Interstate 35 is shut down in both directions at 40th Avenue West and in the downtown tunnels in Duluth.



•Highway 23 is closed in Fond du Lac.



•Highway 61 is closed between Duluth and Two Harbors, at the Silver Creek Tunnel and other points along the North Shore.



•Duluth police are reporting are asking residents to stay home, traveling only in case of emergency. Calls to 911 should be for emergency purposes only, police stressed.

Heavy rainfall and flash floods have left some roads under water and have caused flooding, sinkholes, open manholes and mudslides, including along parts of Skyline Parkway. Parts of Interstate 35 in Duluth are closed. Many homes are reporting flooded basements.

There have been reports of homes evacuated because of flooding in other parts of the city of Duluth - including in the Mount Royal area.

The Duluth Police Department, Duluth Fire Department and city of Duluth staff are coordinating with local emergency crews.



•The University of Minnesota Duluth and the University of Wisconsin Superior will be closed today because of flooding.



•Duluth City Hall is closed today. Nonessential city employees should not report to work today.



•The Superior Police Department reports many streets in Superior have water flowing over them or have washed out because of the extreme amount of rain that fell on Tuesday night and continues to fall.

The Blatnik Bridge detour route on Belknap Street, U.S. Highway 2, is affected near Poplar Avenue. Other main arteries, including Tower Ave near 46th Street, 28th Street near Superior High School and Hill Avenue between North 21st Street and Belknap Street are affected by the huge amount of runoff.

The Superior Public Works Department is working to put barricades in place to direct traffic away from or around affected areas.



•Serious flooding also was reported up the North Shore, in Two Harbors and north toward Silver Bay.



•The Weather Service said the Flood River in Floodwood is over its banks and past flood stage and is starting to flood some homes there.



•Keene Creek has overflowed Morris Thomas Road west of Johnson Street in Hermantown.



•Woodland Avenue is flooded at St. Marie Street.



•Both the Western Lake Superior Sanitary District and city of Duluth have experienced sewage overflows due to the massive amount of rainwater infiltrating the sanitary sewage system. While the systems’ new overflow tanks held during heavy rain in April and May, this record rainfall was simply too much, said Karen Anderson, WLSSD spokeswoman.

“We don’t even know the extent of it yet because it’s too dangerous to be out checking in some spots,’’ Anderson said.



•An employee of the Miller Hill Mall reported that there is no electricity at the mall.



•Morgan Park is blocked off as of 8 a.m. Wednesday.



•Highway 23 is closed in Fond du Lac.



•Mission Creek is out of its banks. There are stranded cars where the highway becomes a boulevard in that neighborhood.



•Water has covered the road, there are stranded vehicles. The last evacuees were taken about 7:30 a.m. to the Copper Top Church.



•Running waters over parts of Grand and Commonwealth avenues, but traffic is moving.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Our latest reports have a spotter reporting eight inches of rain falling over night in the West Duluth/zoo area. Some of you may know that Duluth is built on a hillside so when you get this much rain it all goes downhill. A large portion of the zoo is built in a depression so extensive flooding occurs with this kind of a downfall. The Saint Louis river has passed flood stage and is expected to rise a few more feet during the day. Several local highways and bridges are closed due to roadway collapses, washouts and mud slides. In the Woodland area there are reports of summered cars. ( this is on the other side of town from the Zoo ) My alley has a washout two feet deep through the center, will be awhile before I can pull a trailer through it. Will try and post some video later today.

All schools are closed, power outages and flooded basements. Storm is being compared to the storm of 1972 where the Central Hillside washed into the lake.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Well it stopped raining for an hour or so and we have another batch of heavy rain on it's way here. Can't get out of the "Hood" much more then a mile before hitting major washouts and down trees. Nobody that I talked to has a dry basement and a few the sump pump failed and they are looking at inches of water and damage to their basements. One neighbors even said it was my fault because I was talking about the fishing challenge. Even if I had gotten out that would have come to an end today that is for sure.  More rain on the way!
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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The Big Boys are coming to town.

The Minnesota Department of Public Safety Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management (HSEM) state emergency operations center (SEOC) activated today at 7:30 a.m. in response to flood and storm-related conditions in the following counties: Aitkin, Carlton, Cook, Lake and St. Louis including the Duluth area.


"The SEOC is activated to coordinate planning, operations and public information. The SEOC is in contact with local authorities and stands ready to provide state resources as necessary to keep Minnesotans and our infrastructure safe," said Kris Eide, HSEM director.

Updated public information

• Duluth police are reporting half the Fond du Lac area of Duluth is under evacuation. The town of Thomson is also partially evacuated at this time.

• Air operations are suspended in the Northeast area of Minnesota.

• The state Emergency Operations Center secured two pumps for St. Luke's hospital in Duluth.

• Two evacuation sites have been opened: Copper Top Church in Duluth and the Carlton High School where residents can receive food and shelter. The Red Cross is staffing the sites.

• Three Red Cross Emergency Response Vehicles are en-route to Duluth to prepare for mass feeding if necessary.

• The city of Duluth is advising the public to limit travel to emergency situations.

• Residents in Lake County can again dial 911 for emergency services. Lake County 911 calls are being answered by Itasca County.

• The office of Minnesota Management and Budget is reporting all state offices in the executive branch in the city of Duluth will be closed until noon today. Employees and the public are asked to monitor www.bereadymn.com

MnDOT
• Several roads are closed or detoured in northeastern Minnesota due to flooding, erosion and mudslides. Current road closures include:
- Interstate 35 south of Carlton
- Highway 53 near Miller Hill Mall
- Highway 33 in Cloquet
- Interstate 35 in Duluth, various areas
- Highway 2 in Proctor
- Highway 23 south of Duluth
- Highway 23 in Fond du Lac
- Highway 210 completely closed through Jay Cooke State Park
- Highway 61 near Silver Cliff Tunnel
- Highway 61 at Knife River

Numerous road shoulders are also washed out due to flooding.

Travel is not advised due to flooding until conditions improve and MnDOT crews can make progress to recover roadways.

Motorists should plan accordingly. When a road is closed it is illegal to travel in that area. Motorists can be fined up to $1,000 and/or 90 days in jail. In addition, if travelers need to be rescued from a closed road, other expenses and penalties will apply.

Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Another update from the Duluth News Tribune.   O by the way, it's raining ...

Flash-flood warnings in the Duluth and North Shore areas have been extended until 10:30 p.m., the National Weather Service in Duluth said.


Another inch or more of rain is possible today.


Flooding already has caused massive damage in Duluth and surrounding areas, with roads crumbling, homes and businesses flooded, and zoo animals drowned.


Mayor Don Ness declared a state of emergency in the city of Duluth, citing “significant damage, debris and popped manholes.”


Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton said he will visit Duluth on Thursday to assess the flood damage.


“This morning my thoughts are with our friends and neighbors in Duluth and the surrounding region, as they respond to major flooding,” Dayton said in a statement. “I have spoken to Duluth Mayor Don Ness and have offered all possible state assistance now and during the recovery.”


On his Facebook page, Ness advised residents who live in a low area near the river to seek higher ground. He noted that crews are out in force and will be aided by people staying off the roads.


“We have a coordinated response with city, county, State Patrol, Coast Guard, Red Cross, and the feds ready to help,” Ness wrote. “I've been very impressed with the coordinated effort to this point. Thank you to the leaders from across the state offering their help and support. There is another band of rain on our way, so it is likely to get worse before it gets better.”


Evacuations are under way in the Fond du Lac neighborhood of Duluth and Thomson Township in Carlton County, and officials at the Lake Superior Zoo are assessing damage and counting their losses after animals drowned and some escaped in the flooding. Duluth fire and police crews helped zoo staff track down animals.


All animals are now accounted for.


At one point, the zoo’s polar bear, Berlin, was able to escape its exhibit. The female bear was darted by the zoo’s veterinarian and is safe in quarantine, said zoo spokeswoman Keely Johnson. None of the zoo’s dangerous animals got outside the perimeter fence, she said.


The Polar Shores exhibit, which housed the seals and Berlin, has been completely flooded out, according to zoo spokeswoman Keely Johnson. At one point the seal swam out of its exhibit and was found on Grand Avenue.


Johnson said many of the zoo’s animals have drowned, including all but one of the zoo’s barnyard animals. She said the zoo’s donkey, goats and sheep have died. She said it’s possible others have drowned, as flooding on the grounds have consumed some of the exhibits, such as the raven and vulture cages.


“Obviously, our entire staff is devastated,” said Peter Pruett, the zoo’s director of animal management.


Johnson said a culvert for Kingsbury Creek was backed up and caused the flooding, but that culvert is now completely washed out.


“The water is starting to recede a little bit,” Johnson said.


“It’s not going to get any better any time soon,” Dean Melde, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service, said shortly after 10 a.m. “In Duluth, we could easily see another 2 inches, and there’s a line of strong to severe storms forming to our west that could bring more.”


Melde said the recent downpour resulted from high levels of moisture in the atmosphere combined with strong lift from a low pressure system that has slowed the system to a crawl.


Although moisture levels are typically much drier during the winter, Melde said an inch of rain usually equates to between 10 and 12 inches of snow. So the current system could have dropped 60 and 70 inches of snow on Duluth.


Half of Duluth's Fond du Lac neighborhood is being evacuated — though it’s not mandatory — as the St. Louis River rises from above-normal dam discharges upstream. The dams are reported to not be in danger of failure, but Minnesota Power is releasing more water that may flood homes downstream. First United Methodist Church in Duluth — the “coppertop church” — is being used as an evacuation center.


Three Red Cross Emergency Response Vehicles are en route to Duluth to prepare for mass feeding if necessary.


The Carlton County Sheriff's Office is recommending no travel in the county except in emergencies because of flooded roadways. The most-affected areas are across northern parts of the county; Highway 210 through Jay Cooke State Park is closed.


The Sheriff's Office is recommending that some residents of Thomson Township evacuate because of high water. Carlton High School has been opened up as an emergency shelter.


Internet and cell-phone service is out in Two Harbors and elsewhere in Lake County. Minnesota Highway 61 north of Duluth is detoured at Homestead Road into Two Harbors. The detour road is deteriorating, however, with continuing rain.


Lake Country Power said 300 of its members are without power, most of those in the Kettle River area.


The National Weather Service in Duluth reported just before 3 a.m. that “the flooding situation in Duluth continues to deteriorate.” A flash flood warning remains in effect until 4:30 p.m. today for the Twin Ports up the North Shore.


“This appears to be a flood reminiscent of the flood of 1972,” which devastated parts of the Duluth Hillside, the Weather Service reported. And with more storms lined up to the west, the situation may get worse yet this morning.


Among other key developments:



•East Ninth Street, where it crosses Chester Creek and turns into East Eight Street, was closed while the bridge there was inspected for damage, police said. Eighth Street was a river with water rushing down from the Chester Creek Café at 19th Avenue toward the bridge. Chester Parkway was closed as sides of the road gave way. In Chester Bowl, the picnic areas were flooded over picnic tables and trees were uprooted by landslides.



•Duluth International Airport canceled four inbound flights last night because of the severe weather, which means four outbound flights didn’t go out this morning, said Brian Ryks director of the airport.

The airport is expecting an 11 a.m. flight to arrive, and hopes to maintain its schedule throughout the day.

“As far as water issues, we haven’t had anything at the airport that’s been concerning,” Ryks said, of potential damage. “We’re in pretty good shape.”



•Duluth police are asking residents to stay home, traveling only in case of emergency. Calls to 911 should be for emergency purposes only, police stressed.

Heavy rainfall and flash floods have left some roads under water and have caused flooding, sinkholes, open manholes and mudslides, including along parts of Skyline Parkway. Parts of Interstate 35 in Duluth are closed. Many homes are reporting flooded basements.

There have been reports of homes evacuated because of flooding in other parts of the city of Duluth - including in the Mount Royal area.

The Duluth Police Department, Duluth Fire Department and city of Duluth staff are coordinating with local emergency crews.



•The state Emergency Operations Center has secured two pumps for St. Luke’s hospital in Duluth.



•The Superior Police Department reports many streets in Superior have water flowing over them or have washed out because of the extreme amount of rain that fell on Tuesday night and continues to fall.

The Blatnik Bridge detour route on Belknap Street, U.S. Highway 2, is affected near Poplar Avenue. Other main arteries, including Tower Ave near 46th Street, 28th Street near Superior High School and Hill Avenue between North 21st Street and Belknap Street are affected by the huge amount of runoff.

The Superior Public Works Department is working to put barricades in place to direct traffic away from or around affected areas.



•Serious flooding also was reported up the North Shore, in Two Harbors and north toward Silver Bay.



•The National Weather Service said the Flood River in Floodwood is over its banks and past flood stage and is starting to flood some homes there. The Weather Service also reports flooding in Grand Rapids, Nashwauk and Eveleth with many urban roads covered in water.



•The Weather Service reports that the White Pine River has overflowed its banks and flooded Minnesota Highway 33 north of Cloquet, forcing the road to be closed. There were reports of 2 to 3 feet of water over the roadway.

Authorities in Cloquet are evacuating campers in Spafford Park along the banks of the rapidly rising St. Louis River, according to the Pine Journal.



•Both the Western Lake Superior Sanitary District and city of Duluth have experienced sewage overflows due to the massive amount of rainwater infiltrating the sanitary sewage system. While the systems’ new overflow tanks held during heavy rain in April and May, this record rainfall was simply too much, said Karen Anderson, WLSSD spokeswoman.

“We don’t even know the extent of it yet because it’s too dangerous to be out checking in some spots,’’ Anderson said.

The city cautions residents against playing in standing water, which might be contaminated by sewage.



•The Miller Hill Mall has no electricity and is closed.



•The office of Minnesota Management and Budget is reporting all state offices in the executive branch in the city of Duluth will be closed until noon today. Employees and the public are asked to monitor www.bereadymn.com.



•The University of Minnesota Duluth and the University of Wisconsin Superior, Duluth City Hall and the St. Louis County Courthouse are closed today. See a fuller list of closings at duluthnewstribune.com



•Keene Creek has overflowed Morris Thomas Road west of Johnson Street in Hermantown.



•Woodland Avenue is flooded at St. Marie Street.


li>Morgan Park is blocked off as of 8 a.m. Wednesday.



•Water is running over parts of Grand and Commonwealth avenues, but traffic is moving.


The Minnesota Department of Transportation and the St. Louis County Public Works Department report these closings:


Midway Road has been closed between Trunk Highway 2 and Interstate 35. The Midway River is overtopping the road.

London Road at 43rd Avenue East

Highway 53 near Miller Hill Mall

Highway 33 in Cloquet

Highway 33 at milepost 9 near Independence

Interstate 35 in Duluth, from Central Avenue to 26th Avenue East / London Road and between Carlton and Mahtowa

Highway 2 from I-35 to Boundary Avenue (downbound only) in Proctor

Highway 2 from the Iron Horse Bar and Grill to the golf course

Highway 23 south of Duluth

Highway 23 in Fond du Lac

Highway 210 completely closed through Jay Cooke State Park

Highway 61 near Silver Cliff Tunnel

Highway 61 at Knife River

Highway 200 between Hwy 2 and Hwy 65

Highway 73 closed at four locations --- reference posts 31.5, 46.3, and 47.4

Highway 65 from reference posts 107 to 112.6, closed under two feet of water

Highway 2 between reference posts 220.7 through 232.0 completely closed


The Blatnik and Bong bridges remain open.

Numerous road shoulders are also washed out due to flooding. Travel is not advised due to flooding until conditions improve and MnDOT crews can make progress to recover roadways.

Motorists should plan accordingly. When a road is closed, it is illegal to travel in that area. Motorists can be fined up to $1,000 and/or 90 days in jail. In addition, if travelers need to be rescued from a closed road, other expenses and penalties will apply. For updated information, call 511 or visit www.511mn.org.


News Tribune staff writers Brandon Stahl, Peter Passi and Jana Hollingsworth contributed to this report.

Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Online glenn57

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hey bobby...........when ya gonna return the polar bear?????????????????? :whistling: :whistling: :whistling: ;D ;D ;D
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline Bobby Bass

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We got the seal as far as the parking lot across from the zoo   :whistling: but they got him while we were inside getting him a frosty one  :toast:
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Online glenn57

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We got the seal as far as the parking lot across from the zoo   :whistling: but they got him while we were inside getting him a frosty one  :toast:
:rotflmao: :rotflmao: :rotflmao:

i talked to one of our shop guys in duluth, 0nly 8 of 24 employees where able to make it in to work today!!1 he said he's only seen it this bad once before and heard reports its the 3rd worst since the 1800's.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Pioneer staff reports, Bemidji Pioneer



DULUTH – Those planning travel to Duluth and the North Shore areas in the coming days and weekend should check before traveling.

A state of emergency has been declared in Duluth and Carlton County after more than 9 inches of rain Tuesday night and Wednesday morning washed out roads, interrupted 911 service, flooded homes and businesses, and forced the evacuation of more than parts of Thomson and the Fond du Lac neighborhood of Duluth.

“With today’s heavy rainfall the situation in Northeastern Minnesota continues to develop,” Kris Eide, director for Minnesota Department of Public Safety Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, said Wednesday.

Gov. Mark Dayton plans Thursday to travel to Duluth.

According to a Homeland Security and Emergency Management report, air travel was restricted in and around Duluth.

The state Department of Natural Resources has closed Jay Cooke, Savanna Portage and Moose Lake state parks.

The Willard Munger State Trail from Carlton to Duluth is closed until further notice due to washouts.

Numerous roads also have been closed, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

Travel is not advised due to flooding until conditions improve and MnDOT crews can make progress to recover roadways.

Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Short sample
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEOfaMn6CPg&feature=plcp [/youtube]
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Update:

Water is receding from neighborhoods but creeks are still flowing strongly. Ground is saturated to the point of standing water in your foot print. As the water goes down and creeks return to their banks a lot of damage is appearing. To many road washouts to count, sidewalks cave in and sink holes big enough to engulf cars, which they have. Rail road beds have been washed away as have sections of roadways. Not only in town but also in the county. Millions and Millions of dollars in damage. Sump pumps saved a lot of basements but others were not so lucky. In my neighborhood it was reported we received 10.1 inches of rain, when you live on a hill that is a lot of water coming downhill.

Kris and I went out again late yesterday afternoon and we took several pictures and video of damage done 12 hrs after the storm. Hope to get a slide show up later today. Highway 23 is still closed at this time so no word of flooding at the Saint Louis River, no one is allowed access. Word is that the swinging bridge in Jay Cooke Park is history, it was a local landmark. Flood stage for the river is 10.5 feet and last I heard the river was expected to top out at 16.0 highest ever.

Several roads in the surrounding counties are closed and will remain so till repairs are made and water recedes. Cabin owners are having a hard time getting to cabins to check on property and reports of summered docks and sunken boats. A lot of water fell across several counties.. In Duluth rainfall is 12 inches above normal for the year. I have a two foot rut down my alley and I expect it will be a while before I get graded. Nothing like needing a 4x4 in the summer to get to your house.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline DDSBYDAY

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     Thanks for the updates Bobby.  I had a patient yesterday that was leaving for a Duluth vacation on Friday.  Thanks to your updates I was able to give here some useful info as to road closures and severity of the damage.  She was unaware what had happened.
Pai Mei tells the Godfather when it's time to tell Wayne  to pimp slap Eastwood.

Offline Bobby Bass

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     Thanks for the updates Bobby.  I had a patient yesterday that was leaving for a Duluth vacation on Friday.  Thanks to your updates I was able to give here some useful info as to road closures and severity of the damage.  She was unaware what had happened.
A lot of bad news coming out of Carlton county which is just 20 miles west of me. Lots of flooding and road damage and the water is still rising, that is where the Saint Louis river flows through on it's way to Duluth and the big lake. Lots of road wash outs and they are not recommending travel in the county. This ain't over for those folks yet.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline JohnWester

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I am glad they are going to have grief councilors on hand at the zoo though to to deal with all the distraught workers who have to deal with the loss of the dozen barnyard animals that died though...

If a gun kills people then I can blame a pen for my misspells?

IBOT# 286 big_fish_guy

Offline Bobby Bass

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Must be humor, we don't have much of that up here. first estimate of damage is 60-80 mil
Who has flood insurance when you live a mile from the lake  :scratch:
« Last Edit: June 06/21/12, 07:15:59 PM by Bobby Bass »
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Randy Kaar

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Moose lake hospital is flooded, Willow river and sturgeon lake streets are closed. Dont know if my property is flooded, Cant get near it.

randy
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Offline Bobby Bass

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Open for business, that is what the local government is shouting out today, don't want to lose any of that tourist dollar. Latest estimate of damage is over 100 million dollars but you can drive around orange cones, sink holes and walk on the good sidewalks to get to your hotel. 

The good news is no more rain and the waters of the Saint Louis are falling, The town of Moose Lake is shaking off the water and coming back. Travel around town and into the county will be interesting for the rest of the summer and road repairs might take a year or more to complete. If you live on one of the damage roads it is going to suck for awhile.

But no one was killed, not even any injuries reported relate to the storm but of course PETA is here trying to gain some attention over the loss of animals at the Zoo

Never got a second video put together, got sidetracked cleaning up at the daughters house. May or may not do it. There is so much good video and pictures out there for people to see if they want to.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline Bobby Bass

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Has some footage so since it is raining again today I put together another video of damage close to me. Here ya go.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOwhbRHej-A&list=UUGMkagh2p3vHqy4n_fFWkAg&index=1&feature=plcp [/youtube]
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!