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Where did all the water that caused the Mystic River flooding come from?

Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:14 pm
Posted by Neutral Underground
Member since Mar 2024
2623 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:14 pm
Can someone please help me understand where the 20 feet of water that caused the catastrophic flooding on the Mystic River came from. Doltards claiming "Climate Change/Global Warming" isn't a realistic answer.
Posted by Mushroom1968
Member since Jun 2023
5083 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:15 pm to
Trump turned on the spigot in California and it just now made its way to Texas. So, Trump did it.
Posted by Privateer 2007
Member since Jan 2020
7629 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:15 pm to
It rained.

That area has had flooding for thousands of years.
Posted by wareagle7298
Birmingham
Member since Dec 2013
3527 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:16 pm to
The Soros Aquifor
Posted by jimmy the leg
Member since Aug 2007
41631 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:17 pm to
The sky.
Posted by The Baker
This is fine.
Member since Dec 2011
18588 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:18 pm to
large amount of water converging to one river in a short amount of time. i.e. Flash Flood.
Posted by Neutral Underground
Member since Mar 2024
2623 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:19 pm to
quote:

Flooding for thousands of years


To this magnitude? I just got done watching a video and the river rose by 16 ft in 8 minutes. That's a normal occurrence?
Posted by Tigerfan1274
Member since May 2019
4412 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:20 pm to
A rain event brought about by the remnants of a tropical system. The area was in a drought. The topography is hilly. All of the water from rain events funnels into the Guadalupe. One inch of rain drops over 27,000 gallons on one acre. Now think about 11 inches over thousands of acres, all funneling into one water body.
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:21 pm
Posted by wfallstiger
Wichita Falls, Texas
Member since Jun 2006
14514 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:21 pm to
My sense is it was too much at one time over a mass of land that doesn't absorb moisture as a matter of routine [limestone base]. There was a low level pocket out of old Mexico that intersected with a westerly wave. The low simply sat there - depositing some 10 plus inches of rain.

Have seen similar in North Texas - our lake levels were critically low - using recycled waste water. Had a similar set up and within 3 days our watershed was full. A system simply sat on top of us. Had limited flooding as the topography is different.
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:23 pm
Posted by gungho
Member since Jun 2016
209 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:22 pm to
Not sure which flood you're talking about, but one in central Texas was from the Guadalupe River and affected the Mystic Camp for girls.
Posted by jimmy the leg
Member since Aug 2007
41631 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:22 pm to
It’s “hill country.”

The rain water is channeled to low lying areas (rivers).

LOTS (near historic levels) of rain in a short period of time, in this type of topography, means Flash Floods.

Posted by Neutral Underground
Member since Mar 2024
2623 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:22 pm to
Thank you. That helped me understand better.
Posted by purple18
Lafayette
Member since Aug 2009
1578 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:24 pm to
The remnants of Tropical Barry moved slowly moved over the area. It became stationary and dropped over 20 inches of rain. That’s equivalent to 4-5 inches per hour. To make matters worst that area has deep valleys so all the rain funneled to that area.
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:48 pm
Posted by LSUnation78
Northshore
Member since Aug 2012
13928 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:25 pm to
Im seeing a lot of posters failing to accurately identify the body of water as Gulf of America.

Thank you for your attention on this matter.
Posted by TrueTiger
Chicken's most valuable
Member since Sep 2004
79574 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:26 pm to
Clouds.
Posted by udtiger
Over your left shoulder
Member since Nov 2006
111833 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:26 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:28 pm
Posted by Chicken
Jackassistan
Member since Aug 2003
26234 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:26 pm to
quote:

That's a normal occurrence?
according to wikipedia: "Tropical Storm Barry's remnant mid-level circulation became embedded within a broader mid-level trough containing tropical east Pacific remnant moisture. Thunderstorms and heavy rains from this system caused deadly flooding in Central Texas on July 4–5, 2025"

The thing just sat on top of the area dumping water over a long period of time...the area is very hilly so lots of square footage of land was funneling water down to the river...
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:27 pm
Posted by Neutral Underground
Member since Mar 2024
2623 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:27 pm to
I didn't know a Tropical system passed over the area. That explains a lot.
Posted by aTmTexas Dillo
East Texas Lake
Member since Sep 2018
22087 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:27 pm to
So those river valleys are normally shallow small rivers that cut shallow channels. Essentially it is a stream on limestone rocks in a flood plain. On either side are limestone bluffs or high ground which will never flood. When it rains torrentially the only thing that will fill up is that shallow, limited river valley. So whereas the Brazos River near Houston and upstream will just fill the entrenched deeper river and perhaps flood overbook to an extent, when the valleys in the Hill Country flood that little lazy stream deepens to twenty feet across the "shallow" river valley bounded by the high ground.

There have been significant floods of the various rivers out there in my lifetime. And there has been loss of life most every time. People love to camp alongside those rivers.
Posted by Diego Ricardo
Alabama
Member since Dec 2020
10842 posts
Posted on 7/6/25 at 6:31 pm to
Big rain over the river’s watershed. Kerrville was along the river that is the confluence of the system.

You can’t really blame macro climate change on specific climate events. The climate change angle would be if this happened yearly for enough time to be a trend rather than a once a generation flood.
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 6:32 pm
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