If it was me, I’d regrade that a bit and keep the ditch in place for next time. Maybe run a French Drain along the bottom to divert water away from the property. With grass planted and a more gentle slope it would look fine.
Yea, he may have saved his house this year. Jury is still out on that too. But how about next year and the year after? Where’s the future for the kids? In my book this is no way to live. However, the river people have a completely different attitude about it. Even the ones being flooded by the opening of the Morganza were not mad. I don’t get it, but that’s why I’m here and they are there.
Is that really looters, or is it neighbors helping out by moving his stuff out of harm’s way (in case the levee doesn’t hold)? The article doesn’t seem to mention this with malice at all, and mentions the neighborhood pitching in in at least one other place.
That’s a great lesson in not giving up, but I think any given homeowner is likely to fail in such efforts. His house must have been just high enough or close enough to the edges of the flooding that the effort made a difference.
Why don’t these people build their houses on pilings? like people at the coasts sometimes do.
If you build a house on 20’ pilings, you probabaly escape 99% of the flood events.
plus, you can use the space underneath as a parking garage.
There are homes by the river outside my hometown on stilts. They are about 7 feet off the ground. That area floods every year and most of the time the houses stay dry. They are primarily weekend/vacation homes. No one goes down there during the floods because the roads are unusable. I can’t imagine anyone living in those houses during the flooding. They’d have to use a boat to get in/out.
It would vary by the volume of flow, flood height, and velocity of flow. Some backwater areas have very low velocities and such foundations are satisfactory. In some other areas, they won’t withstand the forces.
Probably don’t have any electricity, water, or sewer service during those times either. The power company typically cuts power to flooded areas, sewer systems are flooded out and water systems shut off to prevent contamination.