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Hurricane Florence flooding is still occurring - Here is a view of Conway, SC this morning

Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:22 am
Posted by GetCocky11
Calgary, AB
Member since Oct 2012
53509 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:22 am




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quote:

Ed Piotrowski
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Five days past record crest of the Waccamaw River in Conway and 4 days past record crest on the ICW in Socastee and both are still well above the previous record crest set by Matthew. The Waccamaw may not drop out of major flood stage for another week #scwx


This post was edited on 10/1/18 at 10:24 am
Posted by LSUvegasbombed
Red Stick
Member since Sep 2013
15464 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:23 am to
damn!!!
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
34071 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:23 am to
Jesus, that's giving me flashbacks to the 2016 flood.
Posted by TigersSEC2010
Warren, Michigan
Member since Jan 2010
38154 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:25 am to
What is crazy is Myrtle Beach seems to be doing just fine and it's between Conway and the ocean.
Posted by Funky Tide 8
Bayou Chico
Member since Feb 2009
55881 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:30 am to
I was in Conway/Myrtle Beach last week and the week before for work. Crazy how much Conway started flooding almost two weeks after the hurricane. Saw some sad sights. Myrtle Beach hardly had any damage though, as you said. The Waccamaw river runs right around to the south of Myrtle, and is surrounded by wetlands and marsh when it clears Conway.
This post was edited on 10/1/18 at 10:34 am
Posted by crazyLSUstudent
391 miles away from Tiger Stadium
Member since Mar 2012
6035 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:49 am to
What is constricting the flow of water? Saw a similar situation with Alligator bayou
Posted by Bmath
LA
Member since Aug 2010
18854 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:55 am to
Thanks for posting the update because I had no idea how bad it was
.
Posted by Sao
East Texas Piney Woods
Member since Jun 2009
68469 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 10:55 am to

They need a few rolls of Bounty tossed at them. Would absorb that right up.
Posted by real turf fan
East Tennessee
Member since Dec 2016
11117 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 11:02 am to
quote:

surrounded by wetlands and marsh when it clears Conway.

And those selfsame wetlands and marsh act as a billion mini-dams to stem the flow of water out to the sea.
All the debris that's coming down the rivers adds to the lack of flow.

farmlands and open fields don't slow running water, and the lack of extensive tree rooted soils means that the rivers and their tributaries don't cut newer channels or deepen the channels that they have.

Further, the barrier islands........are barriers and the water has to get out of the sounds through the existing inlets. I don't think this storm cut any new inlets through the sounds, and if the storm didn't do it, the Army Corps of Engineers certainly isn't going to.

All those retirees who moved to that area and who have no previous experience with flooding are going to have a really hard time adjusting. The Natives, too.
Posted by CypressTrout10
Louisiana
Member since Jun 2016
3122 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 11:06 am to
I can smell that water just from the picture
Posted by TigerstuckinMS
Member since Nov 2005
33687 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 11:15 am to
quote:

What is crazy is Myrtle Beach seems to be doing just fine and it's between Conway and the ocean.

This is backwater flooding, not storm surge. The flooding isn't from seawater pushed by the storm. It's a giant high water bulge in rivers as the massive amount of rainfall dropped upstream drains back toward the ocean. Because all the downstream channels are already full, the water coming from upstream can't effectively flow through the normal river channels and creates a bulge in the surface of the river. When the bulge is higher than the elevation of the land around the river, boom, flood. The bulge slowly travels downriver as downstream water starts to move out of the way and as long as the crest is higher than the surrounding land, it progressively floods the land around the river as the crest makes its way toward the ocean. At some point, the water will be able to move effectively again and the crest will drop below local flood stages and it will quit flooding stuff as it moves toward the ocean. This is precisely how the Baton Rouge area and points downstream flooded two years ago and, yeah, it's a fricking slow motion disaster.

By the time the bulge gets to the coast, it may be spread out so much that Myrtle Beach sees only elevated water levels, but no flooding. Anywhere that floods, though, is in for months to years of fricking misery and headache that lasts long after everyone else forgets about the flood.
This post was edited on 10/1/18 at 11:27 am
Posted by shallowminded
Member since Nov 2012
3111 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 11:16 am to
Amusing that the main stream media has not mentioned this of late?
Posted by crazyLSUstudent
391 miles away from Tiger Stadium
Member since Mar 2012
6035 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 12:11 pm to
Gotcha. Thank you for the info
Posted by EST
Investigating
Member since Oct 2003
18214 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 12:48 pm to
My uncle's house in Myrtle Beach is still flooded.
Posted by SCLibertarian
Conway, South Carolina
Member since Aug 2013
40871 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 12:52 pm to
Conway native and resident right here. It is really messed up around here right now.
Posted by real turf fan
East Tennessee
Member since Dec 2016
11117 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 12:56 pm to
quote:

Amusing that the main stream media has not mentioned this of late?


And reflect on the "SuperStorm Sandy" publicity. It wasn't even a Catagory 1, but it was close enough to New Yawk (sic) and if it's near New Yawk (sic) it's more important.

Said bitterly.
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
91300 posts
Posted on 10/1/18 at 1:02 pm to
quote:

And reflect on the "SuperStorm Sandy" publicity. It wasn't even a Catagory 1, but it was close enough to New Yawk (sic) and if it's near New Yawk (sic) it's more important.

Said bitterly.


Sandy impacted more people, ergo, the coverage was greater. Hell, it directly killed 71 people compared to Florence's 29. What's difficult to understand?
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