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Does Anybody Remember The 1973 Flood?
Posted on 5/13/11 at 10:36 pm
Posted on 5/13/11 at 10:36 pm
Was it in the Spring? Pretty bad?
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:18 pm to ntztgr
Yes, I remember it, I've never seen a river so big moving so fast. The levees barely held.
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:20 pm to DeeTeeS
quote:
Was it in the Spring?
That year it was in the fall. It took a long time for the melting snow to get down to LA.
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:57 pm to DeeTeeS
I talked to some of the guys at work, they told me they had trouble closing the Morganza...that one of the levees had a breech.
I am kind of worry about that now.
I am kind of worry about that now.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 1:48 am to StrangeBrew
quote:
quote:
Was it in the Spring?
That year it was in the fall. It took a long time for the melting snow to get down to LA.
i would double ck that we viewed the area a few weeks after the morganza was opened and we were wearing shorts - it was in the spring
Posted on 5/14/11 at 6:42 am to Gorilla Ball
73 flood was during the spring of 73.
I was only a teenager at the time but I remember it will as my family is from Morganza and I have relatives who work for the corps @ Morganza.
I saw the opening a few days after the first gates were opened.
In addition we had a camp @ Old river at the time where the water got into the second story.
Water stayed in our camp for almost a month. It was a mess after.
I was only a teenager at the time but I remember it will as my family is from Morganza and I have relatives who work for the corps @ Morganza.
I saw the opening a few days after the first gates were opened.
In addition we had a camp @ Old river at the time where the water got into the second story.
Water stayed in our camp for almost a month. It was a mess after.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:30 am to DeeTeeS
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:38 am to DeeTeeS
It was made worse by 20" of rain in one day. The river was too high drain the local water. This increased the backwater flood by an enormous amount. Crawfish were everywhere. I got to be at major sandboils while dad was meeting with the crews working to stop them. They built chimneys out of sandbags until the pressure equalized and the water stopped running out. It was fun for a kid.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:52 am to DeeTeeS
People took vacation from their regular jobs and caught thousands of pounds of crawfish a day. Wholesale prices dropped to under 20 cents per pound.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:54 am to hawkster
I was ten. We walked out onto the levee next to the Morganza. The force of the water was so great that you could actually see the ground physically vibrating. I also remember it being very cool near the Spillway as the water came through. I noticed the same thing as I surveyed the area last week.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 9:22 am to DeeTeeS
I was twelve. I recall that on one side of the levee road to the SF ferry, another levee road branched off toward the mat field. On the river side of this branch levee, houses were flooding. On the other side, relatively dry.
I also recall (a few days after seeing this with my parents) that the cops were looking for the not-so-smart culprit who cut that branch levee road under cover of night.
I also recall (a few days after seeing this with my parents) that the cops were looking for the not-so-smart culprit who cut that branch levee road under cover of night.

Posted on 5/14/11 at 9:25 am to DeeTeeS
I was 12, saw morganza after open, the power was immense. Most vivid memory was Hwy 15 between Clayton and Sicily Island. Water over the road and they staked the edges of the hwy so you could see where to drive. They later closed the hwy.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 9:28 am to geauxskeet
quote:
Hwy 15
I think it is closed now between Blackhawk and Vidalia to the south.
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:22 am to JudgeHolden
I remember riding the levee in deer park, the ground was shaking so bad at the orcs I was ten the time river on one side backwater on the other deer everywhere, hwy 28 covered marked with stakes, went to the cotton gin and got a cotton trailer and parked it in the yard in case of levee break,
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:22 am to Bullfrog
quote:
It was made worse by 20" of rain in one day.
Are you exaggerating for effect? That would be a 500+ year storm event for the local drainage systems. Was there a large rain event that caused flooding in the local drainage systems as well though?
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:24 am to glb
I wouldnt say a 500 year event there was a tropical storm, Iwant to say mid to late nineties come thru here from the houston area and dumped about twenty inches
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:27 am to StrangeBrew
Yes it was spring because the deer kept eating the soybeans and kept having to be replanted, You could throw a dirt clod at them and they would just run off about 50 ft and go back to eating
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:33 am to bencoleman
Crawfish were everywhere in 73. Migrations from the receding waters closed down roads(crushed crawdads are there own oil slicks).
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:53 am to bencoleman
quote:
I wouldnt say a 500 year event there was a tropical storm, Iwant to say mid to late nineties come thru here from the houston area and dumped about twenty inches
Based on the Rainfall Frequency/Magnitude maps about 12 inches in 24hrs is a 100-year event in Baton Rougr and about 14 or 15 inches in 24-hrs is a 100-event in Houston. If the 20 inches is spread out over say 48-hrs then it would be a little bit smaller event.
This post was edited on 5/14/11 at 11:54 am
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