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"They're tryn' to wash us away..."


Mallette

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Seriously, I know California is in a terrible drought, but what does this do for Texas?  Were you in drought conditions, and does this rain help any? (I know there is a lot of run off).

it does help because a lot of lakes were very low.  I'm not sure about west of the metroplex, but all the lakes from dfw and east are now full and getting too full.

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Seriously, I know California is in a terrible drought, but what does this do for Texas? Were you in drought conditions, and does this rain help any? (I know there is a lot of run off).

 

In Houston we've been out of the drought for over a year and in that time the state went from 90% in drought to 16%.  I suspect it's probably 8% or less after the past few days as a lot of this rain is falling in the west central areas that were still in drought.

 

All in all, in good shape or oversupplied.  Going to take a while, but your beef prices will start to fall eventually.

 

Dave

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Great Song, as noted written by Randy Newman. Since we are talking about Texas here, I like Marcia Ball's version best. Jimmy Buffett does a credible version as well. Hope the bad weather passes for the Republic.

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They installed barricades today.  A section of a bridge on that same road broke away earlier today.  Strange thing is the road wasn't flooded.  I guess ground saturation caused it to give way.  Will post a pic of the bridge in a minute.

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Someone told me long ago,
There's a calm before the storm,
I know, and it's been comin' for some time.

When it's over so they say,
It'll rain a sunny day,
I know, shinin' down like water.

I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
Comin' down on a sunny day?

Yesterday and days before,
Sun is cold and rain is hot,
I know, been that way for all my time.

'Til forever on it goes,
Through the circle fast and slow,
I know, and it can't stop I wonder.

I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
Comin' down on a sunny day?

Yeah!

I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
I wanna know, have you ever seen the rain
Comin' down on a sunny day?

Yeah!

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During the Great Flood of 1927, the cotton farmers scooped up their black employees (sic) and dropped them onto levees with flood waters all around so they couldn't leave and head up north to the factory jobs.

 

Great song, John Lee Hooker, Tupelo Blues:

 

 

Did you read about the flood?
It happened long time ago, in a little country town, way back in Mississippi

[spoken:]
Did you read about the flood?
It happened long time ago, in a little country town, way back in Mississippi
It rained and it rained, it rained both night and day
The people got worried, they began to cry,
"lord have mercy, where can we go now?"
There were women and there was children, screaming and crying,
"lord have mercy and a great disaster, who can we turn to now, but you?"
The great flood of Tupelo, Mississippi
It happened one evenin', one Friday evenin', a long time ago,
It rained and it started rainin'
The people of Tupelo, out on the farm gathering their harvest,
A dark cloud rolled, way back in Tupelo, Mississippi, hmm, hmm

Wasn't that a mighty time,
Wasn't that a mighty time?
Wasn't that a mighty time,
A mighty time, that evenin'?
It rained, both night and day
The poor people that had no place to go, hmm,hmm
A little town, called Tupelo, Mississippi
I never forget it and I know you won't either
Edited by thebes
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Interesting.  John Lee must have been smoking something.  Tupelo was no where near the flood nor is it near a river of any size except the Tombigbee, which is 10 miles away to the east.  Get's a lot of tornadoes, and births an occasional King, but no flooding I've ever heard of.

 

Dave

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Looks like he was actually referring to the great tornado at Tupelo in 1936.  Storms and flooding in areas around that region apparently caused millions in damage.  The tornado itself took over 200 lives in Tupelo, actually many more. According to this article, they didn't count the black deaths, I guess because they didn't count.  Wonder if the same was true for the 1927 Mississippi Great Flood, which had over 500 killed.

 

http://northflsouthgawx.blogspot.com/2011/05/forgotten-tornado-disaster-tupelo-ms.html

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Looking wet for Houston again over the weekend, with flash flooding expected.  Don't think they are predicting a deluge but the ground is soaked.  Heck, it's a swamp already so it doesn't take much.

 

Dave

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