Sunday, August 16, 2009

What a rainstorm


We had a heavy rain storm the first week of August. Near the end of it, when it was just a drizzle, I took the camera into the woods to try to show where the water goes near the house site and elsewhere.

The this first video shows the large pond on the property just before the rain finally stopped.



(The narrative on this and the next few videos is clipped at the end. I took nine videos on this walk and didn't realize until I played them on the computer that my voice is clipped at the end of almost all of them. Apparently the audio track lags the video by a second or two. I'll stop talking sooner on future productions. Many of you will appreciate that, I'm sure.)

There are at least three places in the low parts of Green View Springs where a series of holes appears on the surface. Each hole can be up to two feet long as the water flows and about a foot across. In some places there are as many as eight of them in the series. All of them appear along the lowest part of a drainage and are from one to three feet deep. Until now I had not had a camera with me while water was running in them. This time I did and here's what they look like with the water flowing.



All of this water, and that from at least two other major drainages on the property, runs into the ditch along the county road. Combining that water with what comes down the roadside from the top of the road above Greene View Springs creates a formidable volume by the time it gets to the culvert under the road. It's going to take regular attention to stay ahead of the erosion.

(WARNING: Turn down your volume first. The water was so loud I thought I needed to talk louder.)



All the water from Greene View Springs flows farther into American Bottoms and finally into Mr Colling's cave.