I always enjoy with hydrologists do the math and figure out how many gallons and what not fell over the area after stuff like that. Just an insane amount of water.
The outflow boundary is set up just west of CR...should make things interesting this afternoon.
Peoples eyes roll back into their head when hydrologists and hydraulic engineers start talking runoff coefficients, storm intensity, reoccurrence probabilities, river flow in CFS and reservoir storage in acre feet of water.* Best visual I saw from one of our guys was at a public meeting a bunch of years go post-flood out in the Minnesota River valley. Of course everyone was saying the small reservoir (mostly a refuge impoundment) should have held back more water so their fields and towns won't have flooded. To his credit our guy talked tech numbers some but then did some visuals on the stage. He pulled out like three or four five gallon buckets and asked people to visualize that as the amount of water that flowed through during the time period we were talking about and then placed a stadium cup next to them and said for comparison this cup represented the storage capacity in the reversion. Then a smaller cup showing how much storage was really available above the normal pool level. Elderly farmer couple in attendance told me it was the first time they were able to grasp the flood situation and first time they believed the Corps and weather services tech talk.
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