Showing posts with label Flood 1997. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flood 1997. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2024

A reminder

 In 1997 we were preparing for the historic 500 year flood. I began writing about it here.

I try not to think about that flood too often, but up here in East Grand Forks when I leave to go anyplace I go by the dikes and the flood walls. 


Recently we saw cans of drinking water donated by Anheuser-Bush.  We wondered how many cans of water were donated.  I googled it and found that Anheuser-Bush is known for donating water when it is needed.

The use by date has long passed. 

Far Guy is still doing okay, he is getting stronger and doing more things everyday.
Far Side


Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Watery Wednesday: May10 1997

One last email, some thoughts and what Jennifer wrote back in 1997 about the flood.

Subject:  After the flood

Hello, We are officially after the flood now!!  We finally got our road back, no more BOAT, we are trying to get back to normal if there is such a thing.

I took some Finals, will have to do some (lots) of extra work in Botony.  I am back to work too, so it is catch up time for us.

We brought over Gene’s tractor from Mom and Dad’s yesterday, quite an adventure, but made it safely.

Savannah cut off her middle finger left hand …it was hanging by a thread, the Dr reattached it, sounds like it was most traumatic for the parents!  Savannah was at the neighbors stuck her finger into a small jagged hole in a stained glass window and then lost her balance and cut off her finger.  Trica was just beside herself.  Savannah is so curious about everything…so accidents happen.

Gene moved some sand bags bags today, we still have about 1,750 of them left.  Slow but sure!!

The water has receded so that the lake is back in it’s banks, the yard is really gooey and really dirty but it will get better.

West of us they are still boating, poor people.

I am back to working my two jobs, no one wanted to fire me so I gues I am giving it my best shot.  I have a really good chance to make the Dean’s List this semester, we will see how Botony goes.  Hope you are all fine!  Gene and Connie

*******

I just missed the Dean’s List.  I got an A in Botony but messed up on the Plant Pathology final…oh well.  I worked at a small greenhouse in West Fargo for the spring and summer.  I also worked on Campus at NDSU taking care of all the plants in the public places and in the Dean’s Office (he was a real grump.)

That summer we knew we had to build up the soil on the lake side next to the house so we got some landscape bricks and made new flower beds.  We also cut apart the deck …it was a mess from the chain saw artist anyway…we made it a two level deck with a removable lower deck to lay sand bags closer to the house should it become necessary again.

After the flood deck

The deck in progress 

New flower beds 1997 summer

New flower beds.

Here is a photo taken in 1996. Lake Shure is in it’s banks.

Yard and garden shed 1996 Harwood


During April of 1997

The Garden shed about April 21 1997


That much water is almost unbelievable…if I didn’t live it I would question it.

We sold the house in June of 1998 to a young couple she said she wanted the house because it had room for a dog…and she loved the Sheltie curtains that I had in the office/dogs room.  She liked it so much that they offered more money that what we listed it for and it was sold with ten days of being on the market.  We showed them photos of the flood…so they were aware.

They say it was a 500 year flood.  That area has flooded since we left…a couple of times.  Some of the neighbors built permanent dikes…others like us moved.

Things I learned:

Never give up.

You can physically and mentally do more than you think especially if you have a good helpmate/teammate/husband/best friend.

Good neighbors are a blessing.

Floods are long drawn out affairs.  If you watch your dikes day and night you can plug the holes and save your home…with a little luck and by the grace of God.

Flood Insurance is a necessity.

Federal Disaster Aid helps some but many expenses were never covered. So floods are expensive.

The Red Cross gave us a bucket, a mop, a squeege and a gallon of water…not exactly my favorite recommended charity.  They dropped said items off across the water on the road where we parked our vehicles.

I would be a good sailor…because I get land sick versus sea sick.

I miss the water.  Far Guy not so much…he says he will never live on a lake again.

***********************************

Since I am a saver of many things I saved what our youngest daughter Jennifer wrote about the flood.

What she wrote was tucked into a copy of her Thesis for her Master Of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. What she wrote became the inspiration for a poem in her April of 2000 Thesis called Water World.

Water

From my apartment in Bemidji I watch the news telling of the possibility of flooding along The Red River Valley.  I wait and listen because my paents live North of Fargo and my sister lives in Grand Forks.  I want to know how I can help.

The phone conversations with my father are short, he tells me not to come because there is nothing I can do.  I am away at college and if I wanted to go home, I couldn’t because the water is rising and the roads are closing.

My parents are making preparations for their basement to fill with water.  Their strategy is to fill the basement with clean water to keep the contaminated river water from completely destroying the basement.  They have brought up the furniture and placed as many belongings as they can in plastic bags and Rubbermaid containers.  The dogs are visiting relatives, and my parents have left one vehicle on the ‘outside’ high ground.  The sandbags will be delivered on Thursday.

Each day the prediction of the crest rises, and people grow angry because there is nothing they can do but wait. We are all waiting for something: for he sand to be delivered, for the water level to fall, or a phone call from someone who tells us it is over and it is safe to return.

As if to test my family’s strength, on the day the sandbags arrived—snow fell and the water froze.  This is a mixed blessing.  It is too cold for the snow to melt and make the water level any higher.. and it is bitterly coldworking outside carrying sandbags against the straight west wind of North Dakota.

I try to imagine what it must look like having a lake off the back porch.  The pellets from the sandbags drip from the corners making a trail from the front of the yard to the back.  I imagine the expression on my father’s face as he fills, hefts, and passes the bags to my mother.  As the neighbors and his fellow guardsman help fight against the water, my father seemed to say something under his breath…something I might have said…something of confession…let it come.

When the weather stations declared the water levels at Harwood had crested, my mother called me to come and visit, to see what happened.

My father  waits for me, with a boat he will use to carry me to our island home.  He uses the same boat to go to work and into town to stand in line for drinking water.  On the way over he gives a commentary about the road beneath us and he hopes the bridge is still there.

I see a current of grass, branches and railroad ties float in my parents front yard around the house, then joining the ocean we now motor over.  He beaches the boat five feet from the house and pulls it up, not wanting me to get my feet wet.

My mother stands on the deck and documents the event of my first arrival since the flood.  She puts down the video camera and wipes her eyes.  Today is day seventeen of the flood and still counting.  I embrace my mother and tell her it is really not that bad, it could be worse.  She laughs.

Later this week, as the water recedes, my father will fertilize the neighbor’s lawn from bags that were once in the shed, now disolving into dirty water that smells of mud and dead Catfish. Underneath the deck, rats, mice and frogs hurry to find shelter from the rising water, still chasing them out of their homes in the yard.  The neighbor’s comment, the neighborhood looks like a war zone with minature fortresses of sandbags around every house.  Some sandbags are leaking and some are still holding the water from peoples homes and lives.  The wind carries sounds of generators.  The hum of gas powered water pumps echo across the water.  No dogs bark, no cars drive, no people leave their homes in fear of rising water levels….Jennifer  

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Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Watery Wednesday : Larson’s Landing and Veen’s Marine

It was a long flood, it went on for weeks and weeks. When I could manage the pumps Far Guy went back to work.  The dogs evenually came home.

Travel was by boat only.  Far Guy would go to work and get groceries before he came home.

The place where we landed the boat and left a vehicle was called Larson’s Landing and Veen’s Marine.

Veens and Larsons 1

Veen’s Marine offered Cold Beverages, Across the Lake, Boat Rental and something else I cannot read possibly gasoline! 

Welcome to Larson’s Landing on Shure Lake.

Larsons house on the right

That is Larson’s house on the right, they built that house and sold their old house to us.  We  sold it to some crazy people who didn’t care if it flooded (we showed them photos) and they sold it back to one of the Larson boys.

Larsons and Veen 3

That would be us “the boat people”  Captain and Mate might have been visiting but they would soon come home.

Larsons and veens 2

My Dad and Gene doing something with the boat motor. I put a star above our house.

Veens and Larsons 5

This road had a bridge that Lake Shure went under. In the photo the entire road is underwater.

During the daytime dike watch I watched people come and go.  A fellow a few circles down from us bought a hover craft to go back and forth to work. Our neighbors were all really good, if someone was going to town they would ask if you needed anything or if you needed a ride across the water.

We wondered when we could quit boating…next week you will find out.

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April 21

April 19

April 18

April 16

April 13

April 10

April 9

April 8

April 6

March 19

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Watery Wednesday : April 21 1997

The emails continue during the flood of 1997

Subject: Day 14 and still holding

Hello everyone, the water has gone down about 3 1/4 inches, still a long way to go.

Still pumping, the sump pump is still keeping up but we have a plan to add another pump soon, it is pumping alot of water every 35 seconds, Gene times it several times a day.

Sounds like the President will tour Grand Forks tomorrow all 50,000 residents have been evacuated.  Dick’s Store ( Radio Shack) has water inside, the hospital where Trica works was totally evacuated.  Trica and Dick let friends stay at their apartment in Buxton ND and they are now safely in Park Rapids with Dick’s parents.  It is total devastation up there in Grand Forks.  (A large area of downtown Grand Forks started on fire.)

At least here near Fargo we only have water to contend with.

We are getting really tired. Dad was here so we could sleep last night, he also brought us a larger boat one we can use in the rough water.

Moses came home also, he seems confused with all the water and little grass.  Captain and Mate went back home with Mom and Dad for a few more days.

We got to see Savannah for a few minutes Sunday afternoon, she has a cold, getting more teeth I think, she has crawling down to a fine FAST art now and is pulling herself up on furniture.  She was nine months old last week, time sure flys.

Jennifer is safe in Bemidji, no flooding there Thank goodness!

Gene is asleep now, I am headed for a long night, thanks for all your messages of encouragement.

Love Gene and Connie

*****

Moses Captain and Mate visiting by boat  1997

Moses in front, Captain on the boat seat and G’Day Mate behind Captain.

The big boat 1997

Boat People! The bigger boat made for safer travel

Bigger boat and sandbags 1997

the view from the deck…sometime along the way the outlet for the sump pump was put into pvc pipe with some supports to keep the pipe in place…when doing rounds you had to step over it.  The boat is docked next to the sand bags.

Dog pen April 1997

The dogs fenced in area is still mostly water

The Garden shed about April 21 1997

The current opened the garden shed door.

********************************************

It was about this time that everyone encouraged me to go into town with my Mom and have lunch.  I had not been out since the day we filed as disaster victims.

I was so used to water everywhere that I got dizzy because nothing was moving in town…I was the opposite of sea sick…I suppose you have to call it land sick.   I was happy to get back to our island home and all the water.

During the flood we received a couple of jugs of water, a bucket, a mop and a squeege to help with clean up from the Red Cross.  The items were dropped of at “The Landing.”   No sandwitches…or coffee… or anyone from the Red Cross asking what we needed.  From that point on I decided that I would never donate to the Red Cross ever again.

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Links to other blog posts about the flood of 1997

April 19

April 18

April 16

April 13

April 10

April 9

April 8

April 6

March 19

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Watery Wednesday : April 19 1997

The emails from 1997 continue.
Subject: Sat…still here

Hello everyone, we are still holding our own, Day 11 of high water.

Grand Forks is in trouble, talked to Gene’s Cousin Bonnie and Wayne, they are getting ready to evacuate.  Fargo is not in wonderful shape either, today is sunny and clear, no rain yet!

It is getting to be a really long time stranded, heard that UND closed for the rest of the semester, so there may be hope for NDSU to do the same, have not been in any shape to study.

It is encouraging to get all your messages, we appreciate the life line out of here! 

The water has receded an inch in the last 24 hours, we have two pumps going full time, two more just part time.  Everything is still pretty soggy, pray for NO rain.

Gene was really discouraged yesterday. WATER, WATER, he has never been real patient.  He got a good nights rest, I let him sleep til he woke up.  I watched TV in between dike watch, some old movies.  We had a muskrat looking for solid ground, I scared him as much as he scared me, I think he was on the dike but swiftly swam away.

Geese and ducks are going north, Gene says they are all laughing at us dumb people as they fly over.  We have many birds on our island, I am feeding them, even the poor sparrows and grackles.  We have a whole group of robins getting worms out of my south flower bed up next to the house.

We will hang in there another day, wish we could have some idea of when this will be over.  Sometimes we think it will never end. 

Hope you are all fine.  Gene and Connie
April 19 water
Our island home
April 19 water 2
Water flowing between us and the neighbors to the north.
Backyard water April 1997
View from the deck…that Mugo Pine caused us so many problems.  When the original sand bags were laid, some were laid on the branches and that cause the dike to leak.
View of house front April 1997
Our Cul de sac
*******
The radio station KFGO was our lifeline, our radio was hardly ever turned off. We used our computer for email and to check river levels.
Other than a neighbor boating over,  or my parents bringing supplies we had no company…it was just us and the water…an enormous amount of water.  Water as far as the eye could see.
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Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Watery Wednesday: April 18,1997

The emails to the outside world continue.

Subject:  Friday Flooding

Hello everyone, still here, still pumping.  At the present time the water is holding steady here.  Fargo the city itself is having  a lot of problems, but they also have a lot of resources to draw from.

Yesterday we had some filled sand bags delivered by boat to the next door neighbors, they have a plastic tube dike and the ground is getting really mushy, all the dikes are meant to be temporary, its been a lot of water for a lot of days. It sounds like we will be isolated for another week or so.

Dad went home yesterday, Mom brought us KF Chicken, candy bars, bananas, chips and vegetables.

Yesterday was a hard day, the wind was blowing about 30 mph causing lots of waves.  We added some sand bags on the leading edge of the wave action.  The guys at the Air Guard hauled filled sand bags from Kindred, then they ferried them over in the windy water.

Mom was here just long enough for coffee and a hug and back out again.

Gene just finished a long water watch, I slept five hours.  We now set the alarm every hour in case some one dozes off.  Sometimes it helps to just lay down for 20 minutes,  This is an emotionaly exhausting situation, but we are trying to keep a sense of humor!

Today Gene will go out for drinking water, when our community well had a burned out motor they opened the old sealed well and started it up but it may be contaminated.

Hope you all have a good day!

Love gene and con

April 18 1997 Water

View from the deck looking North.

April 18 water 2

All the snow melted little by little.

April 18 Water 3

View from the garage

Duck boat  1997

Our transportation a flat bottom duck boat with an electric trolling motor.  It is moored just outside the sand bags that surround the house.

Garden Shed about April 18

Our garden shed

**********

When the guys from the Air Guard brought over the sand bags in a fishing boat, they could only ferry so many  filled sand bags at once.  The boat was really heavy and rode deep in the water, they had to be really careful. It was scary watching them motor over from the landing.

In a day or two or five our Realtor/friend Vern would come by in a boat, as he approched our sand bags he hollered “Is it safe to visit? Does she have a gun?”

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Links to earlier days of the flood.

Watery Wedneday:  April 16

Watery Wednesday: April 13

Watery Wednesday: April 10

Watery Wednesday: April 9

Watery Wednesday : April 8

Watery Wednesday: April 6

Watery Wednesday: March 19

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Watery Wednesday: April16, 1997

The emails from 1997 continue.

Subject: Wednesday Water

Hello, We are still here, the water began to rise, we had fallen 2-3 inches, then it began to come up, we got about 6 more inches, lost 1 inch last night.

Yesterday was pretty discouraging for us, Dad is here to help, Mom went home yesterday morning.

We wish it would go down soon, don’t know what caused it to come up, ice jams, or the Red which is recresting, the release of an enormous amount of water out of Lake Traverse, South of Wheaton Minnesota, Army Corp of Eng…that water should be here soon. We are running out of room.  So far the dikes are stable.

Warm weather is forecast, so we are bound to get snow melt too.  It used to look like a lake here, now it looks like an ocean.  The water is as far as you can see in all directions.

I had unpacked the evacuation bag but packed it up again last night.

We are getting some sleep, it really helps to have Dad here, nearly lost a pump this morning, it was stuck in the on position but we managed to save it.

We are tired, emotionally exhausted.  It has been a really long siege and don’t know when the end is in sight.

We added a layer of sand bags to the front of the deck last night can’t add too much more because it is so tall already.

We have lots of food etc…miss fresh bananas …and dry ground. 

Take care Love gene and c

Stephen and Maes house next door April 1997

View just outside our garage.

April  1997 flood photo

April 16 Flood 1997

View from the deck.  The lake used to be behind that line of trees.

Water everywhere 1997

Water water everywhere.  I am standing on the deck looking South.

***********

At one point we had water coming into the basement through a window well, the end was in sight.  Gene said he was done fighting and going to fill the basement with clean water.  I took off to the neighbors and told them …a bunch of them came over with plywood, plastic and some super sticky sealant.  We made covers for the basement windows on the outside of the house.  One window well was especially troublesome so we dug out some of the rock and put a small pump in the window well…and the water stopped coming into the basement window.   We were lucky that on our dike watch we always checked the windows downstairs so it was caught early.  The window that leaked was luckily in the laundry room that had a floor drain.

My Mother did grocery shopping for us, and most everytime she came to visit she would bring bananas.

People had to boat in and boat out.  Boats went regularly here and there to pick up people and to deliver visitors.  Our boat  place to dock was called “Larson’s Landing on Lake Shure.”

Jennifer came to visit one weekend, we told her where to go to get a boat ride.

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Watery Wednesday: April 13

Watery Wednesday: April 10

Watery Wednesday: April 9

Watery Wednesday: April 8

Watery Wednesday: April 6

Watery Wednesday: March 19

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Watery Wednesday : April 13, 1997

These are emails I sent to family and friends in 1997 during the flood.  Emails went to: Jennifer, Carey, Jan and Ron, Katie, Laura, Ardith, Arlene, Cathie, Lorri and Kelly, Hans and  Debbie.

Subject: Still Pumping

Hello everyone!  Thank you for ALL your encouraging messages and prayers!

Today we are down to three pumps pumping. Finally shut off the big gas pump that hurts your ears.  We are maintaining with two electrics in the water, and of course our faithful sump pump in the basement.

Yesterday the water went down an inch, today an inch and a half.  Water is still on the dikes so we have to be watchful, it is encouraging to see the level go down, but we know we are still not out of the woods, but the situation is improving.  We can have water rising again because of ice jams, back flow from the Red River, dikes breaking etc. and the Sheyenne still has not crested. 

We are weary, its been a long struggle.  Mom and Dad will be back tomorrow maybe with the dogs, we will see.

The weather report is for good weather no rain and a slow decrease of water.

Gene says he hurts everywhere, he just woke up from a nap.  WE are officially disaster victims now, we registered with FEMA and you can call us water rats, mice is more accurate as they run over your boots quite often or boat people.  Even tho I have not been in it yet, tomorrow maybe I will row around!

Today Gene moved the boat up to the deck enough of the ice has melted so we can go across the lake.  You are all invited (Kelly especially) to help dump sand bags!!!! We have approximately 1800 of them to dump, each weighing between 40-60 IBS.

I have decided not to go to summer session at NDSU, I will take 30 days off, then re evaluate the second session.  I will have at least two weeks of classes to catch up with, luckily one of my instructors lives one mile west of us, so he has great sympathy and the others will be okay too.
Connie
April 13 Harwood Flood
The deck and the sand bags
April 13 Harwood Flood two
April 13 1997 Harwood Flood three
April 13 1997 Harwood Flood four
Taken from the garage the cul de sac is filling with water.
April 13 1997 Harwood Flood five
**************
Neither of us can remember who took over for us when we went to register with FEMA.  I believe that Harvey our next door neighbor came over to watch our pumps.  Someone must have picked us up in a big boat to take us across the water to the landing where our vehicle was.  I recall we headed for Downtown Fargo and went into some building with very high ceilings to register and I am quite certain we went together.

The boat I am referring to was a Duck Boat that my parents brought over for us to use.
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Watery Wednesday: April 10 1997
Watery Wednesday : April 9, 1997
Watery Wednesday: April 8, 1997
Watery Wednesday: April 6, 1997
Watery Wednesday: March 19 1997

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Watery Wednesday : April 10 1997

The emails continue:

Subject: Pumping

Hi everyone, pumping about 8500 gallons an hour from the sandbags in front of the deck, we have gas and will continue til the water drops or we do.  We have water all along the east side of the house, most of which is behind the bags, we added a water filled dike to our sand bags this am.

Gene says it is useless, but he keeps trying.  The chain saw artist (Gene) was at work on the deck, it now has holes galore, for the water dike and observation holes.

The water broke over the freeway this am, it should have relieved some pressure, but it is probably just running in here as fast as it is running out. ???  I hear on the radio that this water stretches from Kindred ND to way North of us.  Connie

*********

Harwood about April 10

Deck about April 10

I kept thinking “It’s not so bad, I was watching the bird feeder in the yard…the water/ice was always at the same level”  Well…the bird feeder posts were froze into the ice and as the ice rose so did the feeder.

deck view about April 10 1997

The gas pump out in front needed gas every hour.  The other pump was a small one and it was electric…you just had to make sure it didn’t get clogged.  

The water seeped beyond the first line of sand bags and that is why we put in a plastic water filled dike under the deck.  This is on the east side of the house.

Here is what it looked like in the summer of 1996.

Yard and garden shed 1996 Harwood

Lake Shure is in it’s banks and the garden shed has a very large garden right behind it before reaching the lake.  Seems far enough away.

Sand bags by garage Harwood

This is just outside our garage.  I think that is my Mom’s purse on the sandbags, looks like they brought us another gas can, note the duck boat off to the left.  I still have that trusty old wheelbarrow.  I am not certain when this photo was taken.  It shows the water between Stephen and Mae’s house and ours.

One of us was awake and on dike watch 24 hours a day.  We would make our rounds.  Out the patio door to check under the deck for water, then off around the south side of the house where we had two holes dug, in the holes we placed a five gallon bucket with holes in it and inside the buckets were sump pumps.   The sump pumps were on floats  and if the float didn’t activate we would do it by hand, then you walked along the west side of the house checking for water and into the garage door, where you would wipe off you yucky boots, go inside and head downstairs to the basement to check to see if water was coming in the window wells.  Then you would go back upstairs again, watch TV for a bit, warm up and make your rounds again.  The gas pump would spit and sputter at the end of an hour so you had to fill it with gas.   The person sleeping would be awakened by the absence of the motor noise.

Our basement sump pump ran almost non stop.  Gene used to time it…I don’t recall what it was ten seconds or so between pumpings…something like that.  I think we had a spare pump just in case.

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Watery Wednesday: April 9

Water Wednesday: April 8

Watery Wednesday :April 6

Watery Wednesday: March 19

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Watery Wednesday: April 9 1997

Subject: Flood Stage Three

The emails continue:

Genes report-  Finishing up building sand bags to a level of 894 above sea level, told by the neighbors on this island to build to at least 896.  No way to get sand we are #$%#*#.

Connie's report:  I took the dogs and birds out this afternoon, Mom and Dad met us off the island, yes we are surrounded by water.  I hopped a ride back in on a big truck with a generator, propane heater and nipko heater.  I made it back in by the skin of my teeth,  I think Gene was trying to get me stranded on the other side!

The dogs are on their way to a Vet in Park Rapids til this is over. (My Mother ended up keeping the birds and the three dogs.)

The water really came up overnight, we switched the vehicles early this morning, decided not to leave one in, we can hopefully get to the Bronco on high ground about 3/4 mile from here. (Gene’s pickup was sent home with my parents loaded with dogs and birds.)

The basement has been emptied except for the washer, it is really heavy and we will wait for a neighbor to help.

The water is on the bags, and we will have to start a dike watch later tonite.  They are not giving much hope, some say it is a 500 year flood, we are on the 100 year plain, I heard from an old timer today that in 1897 the water went from here to Hawley. (30 plus miles away)

Gene is doing pretty good, he is calmer today and is just expecting the worst.

I have to pack an evacuation bag, I put my text books in the freezer, we have most everything else pretty ship shape.

Gene is thawing out sand bags in the garage.  We hope the water goes over I-29 soon, it is our overflow!!
Love Gene and Connie
Water everywhere
Water in fields everywhere.  I think my Mom took this photo.
waterways
Travel by boat
Water  our house with a star
I put a little star over where our house was.  Harvey and Joyce’s house was yellow, our next door neighbors.  You can see the sheets of ice/snow in the water.
Back yard of water
The view from our deck.  Good thing we rescued our lawn mower from the garden shed.
**********
Those were tough days.  We are one optimist and one pessimist.  I kept saying maybe the water will go down, Far Guy said it will wipe us out.  We had a really big argument about whether I would stay or go.  (Many wives went to other places not flooding and some just went to motels in Fargo.)  I wanted to stay, being away and wondering all the time what was happening would have driven me nuts.   Far Guy wanted me to take the dogs and birds and go to my parents where we would all be safe. 

It was a very difficult decision for me to make to send the dogs out. I knew it was probably the only way I could make sure they were okay.  I would get evacuated if it came to that…but the dogs would be left behind…and I couldn’t do that to them.  We had just a small area off the front step with any amount of grass,  their fenced in area was a waterway.

We listened almost continually to KFGO on the radio, they gave flood stages and weather reports, and took information from callers. 

Harvey who lived next door to us put up a water filled dike…picture a heavy plastic tube filled with water.

In one corner of the addition lived a neighbor by the name of Ted, he owned a gas station in North Fargo.   He was our source of gasoline.  The first time I went out with the gas cans I wore plastic bags in my boots to stay dry, I had to break the ice as I walked  on the back road.  Ted never charged for gas, he said if you need it just take it night or day.  Much later after the flood we paid for the gas we got from Ted and from then on got all our gas from his gas station.

Our neighbors were helpful, Harvey was a great source of information.  We would wade over to the neighbors or holler back and forth.

Far Guy says “Why are you dredging all this up now?”

Well for one thing it is history, for another perhaps once and for all I can put it behind me.   It might be Post Traumatic Stress…hurricanes, tornadoes, fires are all fast disasters….the Flood of 1997 seemed to drag on forever.
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Watery Wednesday : April 8 1997
Watery Wednesday: April 6 1997
Water Wednesday: March 19 1997