GARDENER1850 I haven't posted much on this thread....it is too close to home, both geographically and emotionally. You have taken extraordinary efforts to provide us with updates and photos of the missing. It personalizes the uniqueness of each precious life.....and we get to see them as individuals and
not as news blurbs simply stating, "death toll increases." Every time I see pictures of the huge boulders in the middle of the roads, I realize the difficulty first responders are experiencing. Any one of those boulders (weighing thousands of pounds and traveling downhill) is dangerous and unstable.....and still capable of causing severe injury, even if dislodged a few inches.
I have decided two words should
NEVER be used in the same sentence:
VOLUNTARY and
EVACUATION. (Add it to the list of oxymoronic phrases....."slight danger"....) No matter the topography of an area, fires wiping out the vegetation and the onset of rains....who can possible pinpoint exactly what area will get the most concentrated rains in a 25 mile stretch of coastal low lands?? But as I type this, I realize
it is done all the time in South Eastern coastal areas when hundreds of thousands of residents are warned to move out of the path of a hurricane. I guess all the years of living in beautiful California has insulated many of us from climate extremes and the unpredictable ravages of Mother Nature: Snow storms, hurricanes, flooding, tornadoes etc. that we see in other areas of the country. I am used to the earth quakes (we even have weekly seismic reports in our newspapers!) Even up to the hour reports, go figure.
http://scedc.caltech.edu/recent/)
But now, things have changed....a 10 year drought, wildfires fueled by dry vegetation and land that has become hydrophobic (repelling normal absorption) causing rain water to be filled with debris, ash and mud moving downhill at an increased velocity. (ie it is not "clear water" anymore....it is thick and at least 1/3 if it is ash, debris and mud.) Please note,
I am far from an expert on this subject, but I took a lot of notes when the experts spoke at our city meeting. So just sharing what the hired consultants shared with us.
But, heard enough to make me very frightened by the impending rainfall. We (DH and I) made sure we were staying in an area that had "natural waterways" to handle flooding on either side of our
current location.
I am thinking the area of Montecito that experienced the mudslide and flooding.....had never experienced such severe flooding in
recorded history. Good night to all, just trying to make sense of so much sadness. Humbly, IQ.