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Do
you know how to stay safe? Check out the flood
safety page!
As
you read the story below, think about how you would answer these questions.
- How
would you feel if you were in this weather event?
- Would
you do anything differently to make sure you stay safe?
Wild Ride During
a Flash Flood
Story by
Susan, Ben, Catie, and Lizzie Foster
We saw a flash flood
one July when we were on a river trip with our kids, Catie (age 12)
and Lizzie (age 8), in Westwater Canyon on the Colorado River. The day
started out sunny and warm. We adjusted our life jackets and, with two
other families, launched two rafts and a pretty green wooden boat called
a dory. The morning hours were filled with swimming, water fights, and
lazy floating on the brown, silty river.
Around
noon, we stopped for a picnic lunch. As usual, the kids gathered to
make mud-castles on the shore. Clouds gathered as well in the sky overhead
and thunder rumbled along the beautiful red canyon walls. Such storms
are common in Western Colorado on summer afternoons, but this one became
something to remember!
First, we felt the sting
of marble-sized hailstones on our skin – especially the tops of
our bare feet. We huddled together beneath the few shrubs growing on
the riverbank. Next, the rain came down heavily for about a half hour.
We looked up in wonder as the dry canyon walls all around us began to
stream with long silver waterfalls! In time, the rain tapered off a
little and we got back in the boats. We needed to float downstream and
ride the rapids to reach our campsite.
And what a site we saw! The
red sandstone cliffs gave way to black basalt rocks. These cliffs seemed
to have tomato sauce pouring over them, reaching all the way down to
the river. Little side canyons, almost always bone dry, were flash flooding,
releasing jets of red water into the river as we floated by. The clear
rainwater was turning bright red as it picked up mud washed from sandstone
layers high above the black cliffs. These “tomato sauce”
streams began to turn the river red, too. We watched in wonder, knowing
we would be sharing memories of these sights forever.
The
rapid turned out to be a wild ride as usual, but it was all the more
exciting because of its color. But quickly, the rapids were behind us.
The sun appeared and a rainbow bridged from canyon rim to rim. How good
the sunshine felt on our skin as we removed our rain jackets, with the
campsite just around the next river bend.
Over supper, people of all
ages recalled details of what we had seen. More stories followed of
other river trips full of surprises. As we laid out our sleeping bags
and snuggled up under the stars, we saw a great blue heron roosting
on a cliff above us. We wondered if it, too, was thinking about the
storm and flashflood it saw that day.
FLASH FLOOD SAFETY:
(From NOAA)
- Go to higher ground!
Climb to safety!
- Avoid areas that are
already flooded. Do not try to cross streams, even if they look small
and shallow.
- Tell your family members
not to drive through flooded roadways!
- Playing around high water,
storm drains, viaducts, or arroyos can be very dangerous.
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