That has a whole new meaning around here. I have a year 'round creek I have to cross to get off the property and 3 times now, in less than 2 years, we've had 25 year, 50, and 100 year flooding and we have been stranded. The last time for 4 days and neighboring farms had barns and buildings washed completely away.
Ankle deep tranquil babbling creek went to a raging river at 12' deep. My bridge, driveway, and surrounding acres were deep under water. So now, when I hear that phrase, I cringe.
...nothing against you for saying it, the opposite actually...now I truly get it.
I feel for both y'all! Truly. My nurtured knowledge of geology, meteorology, topography, physics, etal have grown into a very humble wisdom of the crust we live on.
Watching the last 25 years of North Texas weather and the surfaces changes to the WX changes have really, taught me to heed the wisdom of "turn around don't drown."
We have a place on Galveston island, we stayed in that 100+ yr old house during Harvey. Thanks to learning how to read radar maps and interpreting the patterns over the decades I could show my Better-half what was happening and then point to the clock and say "that" will be *here* in "x minutes/hrs" and we need to do "y" during that time..... On the preparation to go south to prepare the house for the storm. On the drive down she watched the radar and as those 5hrs past she saw it do what I said. That was just the lessons learned to pay close attention to mother nature. We got to the house after midnight, I hung several 4x8 sheets on the upstairs windows before we both were exhausted ~5:30AM ..... Had some folks show up about 9:30 and helped us finish the rest of the windows "just in time."
The rest of the week we would only go out between the spirals - Thanks entirely to our ability to see the radar data the entire time.
The creeks up here have changed as well.
The snow schedule up here has shifted as well.
The tornado alley has been slowly shifting NNE as well over the last 25yrs too.
The yard has been getting more super saturation rains over the last 10 years too.
The silica sand & minerals in our water well have been more disturbed over the last 4-5 yrs too. Going through filters more often is just a price for living here. My fingers are always crossed for hoping the fracking nearby doesn't contaminate all our water Wells around here. A replacement well is currently a $35-50K investment for the water table we are currently pulling from is the 500'er. If we have to redo then the 1000' tap is our next option- the Ozarks aquafer......
Stranded due to a new "temporary" river. Is never reassuring. Nor is the climate change reality we all are feeling more and more every year.