catastrophe

June 12th, 2008 at 2:55 am (iowa)

If your job involves some sort of ongoing operational responsibility, and if your brain works anything like mine, you probably worry a bit about any extended absence, such as a long vacation. Something will break, right? And you won’t be there to fix it!

This is how I ended up with 5 weeks of stored-up vacation days, which in turn is how I ended up finally taking a long (2-week) vacation.

Of course, now that I’ve left, a bunch of ridiculous crap is happening at work — I fielded no less that 12 phone calls from work today, mostly about 2 nasty issues, and I know for a fact that 2 more are waiting in the wings.

But that’s not enough, oh no. The universe is playing havoc with my anxiety levels by also providing unprecedented flooding back home during the time we’re out of state.

ark

Yeah, the whole damned town is underwater. If I were at home I would be filling sandbags in between bouts of troubleshooting.

I won’t belabor the point; this is apparently an incredible, once-in-a-lifetime flood situation, much worse than the previous record flood in 1993. Most of the routes I would take to work are closed, actually. My favorite park is entirely underwater, with only tree crowns and the tops of the kiddie rides (e.g. a 15-foot ferris wheel) visible over the churning brown muck.

You can find images on CNN or weather.com or presscitizen.com or kcrg.com (those last two being local news organizations). For context, though, here are some cell-camera snapshots I took before the flood, when there was just an unusually large amount of water, say within the last couple of weeks.

Here Daphne is forlorn as a hiking trail near Coralville Reservoir is partly submerged. We cheated our way around the submerged bit and then continued.

Daphne checks out the churning waters exiting the spillway at the Coralville Dam. The spot in which she stands has become, in the time between the snapshot and this writing, a deadly dangerous place to be as the waves are going right through the fence, and the water is actually up into the parking lot. The water is now well over the top of this particular dam, in case you hadn’t heard.

These next two are both North Dubuque street, my route home from work. Taken while driving through several inches of water, put there entirely by the rain. Again, these are photos from before the flood. This road is now impassable; it’s basically part of the river now.

 

Finally, these guys are fixing something at the water treatment plant just off the Burlington street bridge. I’m almost certain the platform these dudes are standing on is, by now, completely underwater.

I can’t really add anything else as I am many, many miles away. Go to the Press-Citizen site if you want up-to-date info.

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damn it all to hell

March 24th, 2008 at 12:17 pm (iowa)

The University of Iowa (where I work) and area schools were on lockdown this morning due to news of a gunman on the loose. I got a text message from the University’s automated alert system, saying to watch out for an armed man in a tan Toyota Sienna minivan with a specific license plate. As I was reading this, in my car in the parking lot, a tan Toyota Sienna minivan with a male driver cruised by, one aisle over. I had a panicky little moment until I verified the license plate number was different.

The lockdown has been lifted now, and it turns out the University and the public schools weren’t in much danger. The shooter’s family members were not so lucky, according to the most recent reports.

Not too many details are available yet, but it seems a fellow under indictment for embezzling decided to kill his wife and four children, then go crash his car into a bridge at high speed.

I would feel relieved at the cease of danger to myself and my family if I weren’t so disgusted and horrified.

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icy

February 26th, 2007 at 10:58 am (iowa)

Holly already posted the best of our pictures of the iced-up outdoors during this weekend’s storm. If you want to see the rest, feel free to click over to our Flickr stream:

our neighbor's tree

Ice storms are freaky, freaky things. I’d never experienced one before moving to Iowa. They are scary, and I gotta say, having your power go out is much worse when the radio tells you that 200,000 other people are in the same boat. Blackouts are not the kind of misery that loves company.

Our power was out for maybe 18 hours (including overnight), and our house shed about 11 degrees of heat. I feel incredibly lucky to be among those whose power was restored relatively quickly; there are still tens of thousands of Iowans with no power, and those in rural areas especially may not have power back until late this week. Here’s hoping that, unlike us, they have wood-burning stoves or at least space heaters. On the plus side, roads are more or less fine at this point, so at worst people can drive elsewhere.

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the storm

April 17th, 2006 at 1:00 am (iowa)

A video of some of the damage from this week’s tornadoes in Iowa City can be viewed here. Aprille has a map showing the path of the damage through town; it goes right past our old apartment.

Eeek!

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