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Water Feature

03-31-05

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Soon after we moved into this house, we were having an after dinner conversation with friends about landscaping our yard. It was all I wanted to talk about at that time. I was listing the things that I wanted or needed in the yard: a sandbox, a clothesline, a chicken coop, a vegetable garden. Our friend David said we should have a water feature. David has a British accent and I thought I was misunderstanding him at first.

What he meant was a pond or fountain or something, but there are so many practical needs that are going unfulfilled due to money and time constraints. A water feature? Hilarious.

This happened in the winter. When spring came, we discovered that a quarter mile of road runoff drains directly into our yard and sits there until the ground soaks it up. It's never been a huge problem for us, we just see it as our occasional, hassle free water feature.

On Monday night, after eight inches of rain and snow melt, Steve noticed a trickle of water in the basement. We know that the basement gets some moisture, so he wasn't too concerned. Tuesday we awoke in the horror movie, Invasion of the Water Feature.

Our boiler is up on two sets of cinder blocks. The washer and dryer is up on one. The water was up to the top of the first level of cinder blocks when we awoke. Steve rushed out to the hardware store at 7:30AM and got a pump. We plugged it in and the watched the water continue to rise.

David (who named the water feature) brought another stronger pump. We are blessed to have wonderful friends, David had his own things to do that day, being a farmer who also happens to be moving this week. He ended up spending the whole day here because the water continued to rise.

David had a gas powered irrigation pump at the farm he rents half an hour away. He and Steve went and fetched it and some items to repair the built in sump pump. By the end of the day they had four pumps going.

The gas one made the difference - it was the most powerful, but noisy and required refueling every two hours. Steve stayed up til 2AM and then fell asleep. When we woke at 7AM, the water was higher than ever and one of our shelving units had collapsed. Everything on it was floating around in the water. The water had reached the bottom of the boiler and the dryer.

We started the gas pump up again and Steve called the fire department. A fireman came in a pickup truck and pretty much said he couldn't do anything we weren't already doing.

We've been identifying birds visiting a new bird feeder and Aidan asked us about one he had never seen before. I went to the window to find a dove there. We had a good laugh and explained its significance to Aidan.

Steve had to go to work, he had missed two days already this week, so I manned the pump all day, gassing it up every two hours. Until about 3:00, the water level in the yard continued to rise. After that, I was excited to see water marks on the trees that indicated that the water was receeding. We took turns filling the gas pump every two hours through the night.

Yesterday, I was able to turn the gas pump off by the end of the day. In the middle of the night I unplugged the two electric pumps. Today we just had the sump pump going. That one is now turning on and off on its own as the water rises slowly. The water is gone from our yard, but it's clear that the water table is still very high. Weather.com has the following warning:

RAIN WILL DEVELOP A LITTLE BEFORE SUNRISE SATURDAY MORNING. THE RAIN WILL BE HEAVY THROUGH SATURDAY EVENING... WITH LIGHTER AMOUNTS ON SUNDAY. CURRENT INDICATIONS ARE THAT 2 TO 4 INCHES OF RAIN MAY FALL WITH OVER 5 INCHES POSSIBLE IN TERRAIN FAVORED AREAS.

RIVER AND STREAM LEVELS REMAIN HIGH FROM THE VERY HEAVY RAIN EARLIER THIS WEEK WITH THE HOUSATONIC STILL ABOVE FLOOD STAGE IN CONNECTICUT. IN ADDITION... THERE IS STILL SOME SNOW OVER HIGHER ELEVATIONS. IF THE FORECAST RAIN FALLS... SIGNIFICANT FLOODING WILL OCCUR. IN PORTIONS OF WESTERN NEW ENGLAND THE FLOODING MAY BE THE WORST IN OVER 20 YEARS. IN NEW YORK THE FLOODING MAY BE THE WORST SINCE JANUARY OF 1996. FLOOD WARNINGS HAVE ALREADY BEEN ISSUED FOR SOME LARGER RIVERS. WHEN THE HEAVY RAIN OCCURS MANY SMALL STREAMS AND CREEKS MAY ALSO FLOOD. DEBRIS FLOW AND MUDSLIDES ARE POSSIBLE IN AREAS OF STEEP TERRAIN....

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Comments

Oh my. THis happened to us this winter - though not nearly to the extent it has happened to you! In the four years we have lived here, we've never needed a sump pump. This year we certainly did. Good luck with the rain this weekend! Our nearby river is expected to flood!

xoxo M

Maia
Sat 04/02/2005 10:27AM e-mail home page

I had to laugh about the dove - oh my! So sorry for your flooding mess!!!! We have several "waterfeatures" courtesy of living in a very wet area of the county - the "ponds" - permanent bogs behind the house, and the river that shows up along the side and has been there for a month now since it rains EVERY DAY! The sump pump in the basement is a monster, and I'm glad for it! It's been working overtime, along with the french drains, since snow melt. Hugs!

shannon
Sat 04/02/2005 10:55AM e-mail home page