by Diflower » 11 Feb 2014, 21:48
That's completely true Kaz.
The flood I experienced was the road we lived in (1968/9? ). It reached to literally our back door step (the garden was 200+ ft long), but all the houses further down the road were flooded, the gardens were gradually shorter than ours and the stream at the bottom burst its banks. Normally quite a small stream but high steep banks, so when it burst it was one hell of a lot of water.
Us kids were swimming along the road, to get to the end where the army came with canoes and sandbags, and there were dustbins hurtling out from each house. The ones at the end were bungalows, for old people. Opposite was a pair of small blocks of flats, just two storeys high but all of them decamped over there and just stood at the windows, watching their homes go under.
At the bottom of the road, where it was worst, the water was more than 3 ft deep in the houses/bungalows.
Across the main road from there, it was exactly the same, in the road that the stream then followed. Ours was a road of council houses, that road a very swish, expensive one with great big houses and bungalows.
Everyone was affected the same, and everyone behaved just the same. There were those from each road not affected, cooking food and making hot drinks and soup, for the residents and the army. And those flooded all trying to console each other and help with moving anything they could to keep it safe.
For months and months after, the two roads were joined, every household that had been flooded was helped equally by those from both roads, people cooking extra meals, looking after children, helping with insurance claims, eventually decorating, etc.
It's an absolutely dreadful thing to happen, it takes months for houses to recover, they absolutely stink and without a really good spell of dry weather they carry on stinking.
No amount of 'government help' can actually do all that much in the short term, it's long-term that matters, not building on flood plains, properly dredging, maintaining and improving flood defences.
We're a very small island, floods are part of our history, we can't stop them but we can try to stop them affecting houses so much.