Flooding is closer to home then we want to admit

A week after I was camping in the Finger Lakes National Forest in 2018, they got nearly a foot of rain in one hour from a freak thunderstorm. Precipitable water in the air is up significantly in recent years, and if the conditions are right – you can dump a lot of rain out of sky – far more than infrastructure is designed to handle. It only takes six inches of quickly moving water to float automobiles down a hill, and if you get a a foot of rain in an hour, it’s easy to get such accumulations on roads.

And let us not forget the Halloween 2019 storm that devastated Piseco-Powley Road and many others in the Southern Adirondacks. It took them almost a year to fully rebuild whole sections of the road after that freak storm that dropped a 8 inches of rain in an hour, taking out a bridge built in 1904. The gentle rains of yesterday are becoming a memory.

Map: Alma Pond
Map: Dobbins Memorial State Forest
Map: Little John Wildlife Management Area
Map: Otter Lake
Map: South Hill State Forest (Oneida 23)
Map: Summer Hill State Forest
Map: West Parishville State Forest
SVGZ Graphic: albany-snow-depth
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SVGZ Graphic: lt2025
SVGZ Graphic: Places Named Bethlehem
SVGZ Graphic: Towns with Most Similiar Land Cover to the Town of Bethlehem
Terrain Map: Happy World Milk Day!
Photo: Catharine Creek Marsh - Wide Screen
Photo: Almost Back
Photo: Trees Along The Lake
Photo: Placid
Photo: Looking Down at Albany from Wolf Hill
Photo: Trail
Photo: Colors
Photo: Long Trail
Photo: Duelly noted
Photo: Albany From Windham High Peak

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