News
Colorado Flooding Update: Rescues Continue as Drier Weather Pattern Sets Up
weather.com and Associated Press
Published: Sep 16, 2013, 6:16 AM EDT
Rescues Across Raging River
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- Rescues Across Raging River
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Throughout the flooded region, isolated storms are possible early this week but it will be nothing like the devastating floods last week. Here are the latest headlines:
- 5 people confirmed dead
- 1,500 homes destroyed and 17,500 damaged, according to Colo. Office of Emergency Management
- 1,200+ people are unaccounted for
- Thunderstorms possible Monday and Tuesday in flooded areas
"After seeing more localized heavy rainfall over the weekend in the areas hit hard by flooding last week, a drier weather pattern is taking shaping for much of the new week ahead," said weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce.
In Estes Park, residents worked feverishly to try to cleanup before rains started again.
"We have limited time to get as much out as possible," Aspen Evergreen owner Tamara Jarolimek said as she and her husband, James, worked furiously Sunday.
Outside, crews plowed up to a foot of mud left standing along Main Street after the river late Thursday and early Friday coursed through the heart of town.
"I hope I have enough flood insurance," said Amy Hamrick, who had friends helping her pull up flooring and clear water and mud from the crawl space at her coffee shop. Her inventory, she said, was safely stashed at her home on higher grounds.
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Too Much Water to Handle
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Across town, comparisons were repeatedly drawn to two historic and disastrous flash floods: the Big Thompson Canyon Flood of 1976 that killed 145 people, and the Lawn Lake flood of 1982 that killed three.
"Take those times 10, that's what it looks like in the canyon," said Deyn Johnson, owner of the Whispering Pines cottages, three of which floated down the river after massive amounts of water were released from the town's dam. Johnson said the only warning she and her husband had to evacuate their home and their guest cabins came from their cat, Jezebel, who jumped on her sleeping husband at 4:30 a.m., batting at him and yowling.
"I always thought we were safe unless the dam went," she said. "I credit the cat with saving my family and the lives of everyone in the cottages."
(MORE: Is Colorado Flood a Billion Dollar Disaster?)
From the mountain communities east to the plains city of Fort Morgan, numerous pockets of individuals remained cut off by the flooding. Sunday's rain hampered the helicopter searches, and rescuers trekked by ground up dangerous canyon roads to reach some of those homes isolated since Wednesday.
The surging waters have been deadly, with four people confirmed dead and two more missing and presumed dead after their homes were swept away.Some 1,500 homes have been destroyed and about 17,500 have been damaged, according to an initial estimate released by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management on its website.
In addition, 11,700 people left their homes, and a total of 1,253 people have not been heard from, state emergency officials said.With phone service being restored to some of the areas over the weekend, officials hoped that number would drop as they contacted more stranded people.
As many as 1,000 people in Larimer County were awaiting rescue Sunday, but airlifts were grounded because of the rain, Type 2 Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team commander Shane Del Grosso said.Hundreds more people are unaccounted for to the south in Boulder County and other flood-affected areas.
The town of Lyons, about 20 miles from Estes Park, was almost completely abandoned. Emergency crews gave the few remaining residents, mostly wandering aimlessly on Main Street, looking for status updates from each other, a final warning to leave Sunday.
One man, a bluegrass musician, has been visiting his home every day and taking photos. The house has a river running through it and he can't get close.
Most of the town's trailer parks were completely destroyed. One angry man was throwing his possessions one-by-one into the river rushing along one side of his trailer on Sunday, watching the brown water carry them away while drinking a beer.
In Estes Park, Lancaster called the flood a 500-year event. He said it was worse than previous flash floods because of the sustained rains and widespread damage to infrastructure across the Rocky Mountain Foothills. Major road were washed away, small towns like Glen Haven reduced to debris and key infrastructure like gas lines and sewers systems destroyed, meaning hundreds of homes in Estes Park alone could be unreachable and uninhabitable for up to a year.
Play Video
Amazing Rescue in Submerged Car
Autoplay
On
Off
- Amazing Rescue in Submerged Car
- More Rain for Flooded Areas
- Towns Cut off by Flooding
- Watching Ingrid in the Gulf
- World's Ugliest Animal
- Brain Eating Amoeba found in Water
- Residents Glad to Say Goodbye
- Forecast for the Coming Week
- Man Breaks Back On Glacier
- Rescues Across Raging River
- Thousands Still Missing
- Final Preps to Float Cruise Ship
- Emotional Reunions After Flood
- Baby on the Way during Flood
- Sandy Victims Must Rebuild Again
- Fat Cat Hits Treadmill
- Towns Cut off by Flooding
- Voyager Leaves the Solar System
- More Rain for Flooded Areas
- Amazing Rescue in Submerged Car
- How Powerful Are Flood Waters?
- Flooding Clean-up Begins
- Another Record-Breaking Gator
- Storm Watch
- Too Much Water to Handle
- Torrential Flooding in New Mexico
- First Sandy, Now Fire
- Sunday's Stormy Outlook
- Signs of Life under Antarctic Lake
- Colorado: People Evacuated
- Kayaker Paddles in Flooded Creek
- Tips for Driving on Wet Roads
- NASA Launches Frog Toward Space
- Rescues in Rushing Water
- Waterspouts Over Lake Michigan
- Witness To Flooding Devastation
- Fight Against Rising Water
- Fire Victim Refused to Evacuate
- Volcano Spews Dangerous Ash
- 92-Year-Old Man Rescued
- Hero Rescues Mom, Daughter
- A Smokenado!!!!
- Flying Object Identified
- A National Look at the Next 3 Days
- Think You've Seen Fog Before?
- A DRONE to Keep Us SAFE?
- Studying a Melting Glacier
- Weather Photo Contest, Part II
- Trapped in a Flash Flood
- Hurricane Energy: WHERE Is It?
- Get Children Ready for a Hurricane
- Secrets of the Magnetic Field
- Reporter vs. Storm Window!
- Lost In Space
- Earth-Bound After Months
- Top 10 Dogs to Warm Your Heart
- You Won't Believe Where This Is
- Residents Flee Their Homes
- NASA's Next Mission: Water
- Do You Speak Whale?
- Is Our Sun Burning Out?
- Plane Lands on Belly
- A Habitable Alien Planet?
- Amazing Deer Rescue
- Motorcyclist Hit By Lightning
- Bringing Turtles Home
- HUGE Gator Caught!
- Your Chance to go to Space
- Earth's Largest Volcano Found
- Baby Boom for Sea Turtles
- No Water Means No Beer
- Staying Alive in an Iceberg
- Talking Robot in Space
- UFO Hunters
- Fish With Shocking Superpowers
- Are We Ready for THE BIG ONE?
- Mamma Elephant CHARGES!
- Waterspout: 'Coming Right Towards Me'
- Sunken Treasure Found!
- See and Hear Volcano Erupting
- Will Climate Change Weaken Hurricanes?
- What's Killing the Penguins?
- Warrior Meteorologists
Still, hundreds remained stranded in remote areas.
"We know there are a lot of people trapped but they are trapped alive," he told people gathered at Red Cross evacuation shelter Sunday afternoon.
And rescues continued throughout the day Sunday any way possible, including zip lines rigged to hoist people and pets across swollen rivers and creeks.
That's how retirees Jerry Grove and Dorothy Scott-Grove -- and their two golden retrievers -- were finally rescued Friday night from their vacation cabin in Glen Haven. Although they may not be able to get back to their new car for six months to a year, and they were still trying to figure out how to get home, Scott-Grove said they were glad to be alive and were now looking at the experience as a "great adventure."
As many as 1,700 homes in the Estes Park area were under evacuation notice, Lancaster said, but the issue was more about lack of access because of washed out roads and destroyed infrastructure.
Even the town's historic Stanley Hotel, a structure that was the inspiration for Stephen King's "The Shining," suffered damaged, despite its perch on a hilltop overlooking the town and the river. Front desk worker Renee Maher said the ground was so saturated that water was seeping in through the foundation, and had caused one suite's bathtub to pop out "like a keg," Maher said.
Ironically, the massive Estes Ark — a former toy store two stories high designed to look like Noah's Ark — was high and dry.\
"I don't know if it's open anymore, but soon it's going to be our only way out," joked Carly Blankfein.
Information from the Associated Press was used in this report
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