A gorgeous area of southern New Mexico can't catch a weather break.
A motorist wisely turns around as floodwaters surge across a road in Riuidoso, New Mexico las Saturday. The road was dry and clear three minutes earlier. |
Since then, it's kept getting worse.
Ruidoso, a scenic town of nearly 8,000 in southern New Mexico, is now at the mercy of an enduring, double-barreled disaster. Two massive fires broke out last month along the mountains encircling the town, torching more than 25,000 acres, burning nearly a thousand homes and killing two people.
Then, eight times and counting since June 21, including Saturday, floodwaters have cascaded down those same mountainsides into the village."
The trees and shrubs that held the steep hillsides surrounding Ruidoso used to keep the rocks and soil up there in place. The fires removed all that. So now, as Andrew Mangham, a National Weather Service hydrologist told the Washington Post, it's as if giant plastic sheets have been placed over the mountains.
Those "plastic sheets" are littered with teetering burned tree trunks and piles ash that start sliding downhill at the slightest bit of bad weather. Which means even run of the mill routine summer thunderstorms are setting off the flash floods and big debris flows.
Flooding this past Saturday was probably the worst yet. Rain Friday night and early Saturday soaked what little ground was left, then new downpours struck in the afternoon. Ruidoso officials said prior to Saturday, the highest the water got in one main creek was 12.5 feet. Saturday, it reached 15.5 feet, so that must have damaged homes worse than previous events.
The video in this link shows what it's like, and is really worth watching. Notice how fast the water comes up and crossed the road. Also notice the road above the water is dry. All the rain that caused this latest wave hit in the hills above. (I'm having you click on the link to the video rather than just display it so they videographer can collect the clicks and views).
In the initial part of the video, a couple cars make it through, but afterwards, motorists wisely opted to obey the "Turn Around Don't Drown" rule. The water and debris quickly overruns and cuts around temporary dikes built to protect property.
The video is a cautionary tale for anyone, anywhere demonstrating how suddenly a flash flood goes from not a big deal to big time dangerous.
The videographer of the above, Jesus Figuera, has a whole YouTube channel devoted to what Ruidoso is going through, and it's definitely worth checking out.
It's monsoon season in the Southwest, which means the area is in for more downpours, and more floods. It will take years for the hills around Ruidoso to recover enough to hold water and soil in place.
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