This is the river the other day,
untimely empty because the locks are all open or just plain gone.
See the channel marker aground on the side?
See the channel marker aground on the side?
Today it is full again and over flowing.
It just keeps raining and raining and raining. By mid-afternoon Wednesday Alan's friends were texting him from SUNY Cobleskill and putting up videos on Facebook because of the incredible flooding there. Water was racing down the stairways among the dorms, feet deep and chocolate brown. These were the dorms on higher ground too...I hate to think what was going on lower down. At least some dorm rooms were flooded and kids were moved to higher ground. It was pretty scary.
Meanwhile towns that were evacuated during the peak of the Irene flooding were once again emptied because of still more flooding. I don't know how much more people can take...
Here at the farm we still live on the hill and are still glad of it, although the driveways are taking an awful beating and the milk truck didn't get in on Monday. Water filled one shed so we had to turn Rio out with the big cows. She is a pregnant milking shorthorn heifer that we have actually wanted to add to the big herd, but we have been waiting because we have the cows spending their days in a temporary pasture. Temporary electric fence and un-fence-broke heifers are not a good mix.
Sure enough she got out twice (all I can say is ouch because that fence is HOT!) but the first time she put herself back in and the second time Liz was right there to chase her. Hopefully over the next few days she will figure out where she belongs and settle down.
Also had to liberate Wally, the blue heeler guardian of the cow barn gate. The rain washed the ground out from under his dog house so he is now enthroned in Nick's chain link kennel. Hopefully he will stay there because he is essentially a very bad dog. The cats and chickens don't need his help on their way to an untimely grave.
So there you have it. Most of the news that's fit to print. We can't chop. Can't work on the tractor. Can't do much of anything except divert water and hope for the best. Take care.
****Update, reliable source says all roads in county are closed. Good grief! Been reading FB, mud slides all over the place, the water is up in Liz and Jade's back yard. I called her and told her to forget coming to work.
Oh no! Seems like it's been one thing after another with this weather.
ReplyDeletePraying for all who are fighting these things, from here!
ReplyDeleteLet us hope and pray that this will soon come to an end and things can return to semi-normal instead of straight out rediculous.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if Matt will be able to make it home with all the road closures, hopefully things start to recede before he has to come home or he will be staying down in the city. I know that we are not aloud to travel at all if you live in Montgomery county. Yuck!
ReplyDeleteYou've just been hammered lately:( Our thoughts are with you.
ReplyDeleteAnd we haven't had rain since May. Wish it would spread itself around.
ReplyDeleteWe have a show in Middletown this week end, and if we can't get to the thruway, we can't get there. Sorta like Matt not being able to get home because of flooding down south. What a kick in the pants, over and over and over. I feel so sorry for those people in Schoharie and Middleburg, and Cranesville. At least we are high and dry right now. But....Lake Montgomery which shows only in early spring is forming again. Love Mom
ReplyDeleteWe're saying lots of prayers for everyone up your way. Y'all really need a break from this crazy weather!
ReplyDeleteGood luck and take care. All kidding aside.
ReplyDeleteWe're so sorry for all the pain loss and worry in that beautiful part of New York.
ReplyDeleteWe join all the prayers and good wishes for clear skies and dry,lovely fall weather.
Dani, been awful...
ReplyDeleteJB, thanks, we are pretty much okay, but poor souls who were just getting cleaned up ready to rebuild are under water again. One town to the east of us, so far 16 out of 50 houses condemned and they aren't done inspecting them.
Rev. Paul, it is
Joated, hoping and praying ...so sad for our neighbors
Lisa, hope he makes it. Liz and Jade tried to come down for chores last night and simply could not get here
Linda, we have...and thanks
Mom, you guys stay safe! Roads are awful. Everything is awful. Love you
SCMomma, we do! Thanks!
Ten Mile, thanks, sure hoping to see a little normal soon
Cathy, thanks, every soul that sets foot on this place brings us more stories of horror and loss. So sorry for so many folks
It seems that all of North America has had extreme weather this last year. Climate change?!
ReplyDeleteMost people have no clue to just how close we are to the weather. Listen to farmers/ranchers talk, our lives revolve around the weather. Our livelihoods depend upon the weather. Here in landlocked MT, we had an autumn for the first time in ages last year. No snow in October - how did that happen? It was beautiful and much appreciated. Even with the few deciduous trees we have here, it was nearly a colorful Indian summer.
November winter blew in. The snow never stopped - or left. Oh, we'd get a day or two of 50 degree weather that would lower the piles of snow and deadly ice a few feet, but then it would snow again. Until Memorial Day! We actually had 18 inches of snow in town that day. I used cleats on my boots for the first time in my 50+ years. And I still landed on my butt a few times.
Needless to say, we had a wet spring, something we're unaccustomed to in irrigated high altitude desert. Very nice change, except for the - you guessed it - horrendous flooding.
We've enjoyed a mostly green summer, but it browned up quickly and was accompanied by - forest fires!
I remember thinking that talking about the weather was making "small talk". That changed when I married a farmer.
I hope that Mother Nature becomes more agreeable for you soon. I envy your upstate NY autumns. A couple of aspens turning yellow - if they're lucky and not turned black by a freeze, will never mean autumn to me.
Moos, boy, you sure have the right of it about the weather. It is everything to a farmer or rancher. Water, no water, too much water...it is life or death. This mess we are in is going to mean the death of a lot of farms and businesses. Houses are already for sale down in town. Don't know if we will make it, far as that goes. We are too high to actually be under water, but we can't get our crops in and no sign of it drying out. Cows gotta eat or go, all there is to it.
ReplyDelete