Colliemom wrote:And to think, 4 years ago, the dam was in a critical Stste from too much water and you were worried about possible evacuations. Unbelievable.
Thanks for the comment, Sue. Yes, I was most certainly "worried about possible evacuations" for several days leading up to the worst of it, winter of 2017.
That is, until I was then evacuated out of my home for six days. Then I was no longer worried about it, I was doing it. Me along with about one-hundred-eighty-eight thousand (188,000) of my immediate neighbors, who also were evacuated.
Here is a day-by-day unfolding of the disaster, with a very nice photo of the damaged main spillway at Oroville Dam to start things off with a bang:
https://projects.sfchronicle.com/2017/oroville-explainer/More of my post below is below the following photo. Scroll down.
Center top, slightly to the left of the concrete structure, water flowing over lip of "emergency spillway" (white water, below it is brown water as the hillside is being eroded); Center, main (damaged) spillway; to the right of the main spillway is the "canyon" being carved into rock by the water escaping from the damaged spillway.The Butte County Sheriff at the time, Korey Honea, later said this when he decided to call for the evacuation of the major towns in the area: (the towns of Oroville, Gridley, Live Oak, Marysville, Yuba City, and other, smaller communities that would all have been in the path of the water).
“It was not a question that people would die. It was a question of how many.”
Yes. The lake overflowed down an "emergency spillway" that was nothing more than your basic, un-reinforced, no-concrete, dirt hillside (it did have a concrete “lip” at the top, but that was all). As the lake began to overflow onto the hillside (by this time the damaged main spillway was also put back into operation, but it could not keep up with the water already in the lake, and the continuing inflow still coming in) of course it began to severly erode the ground.
What happened with me in the days previous to the crisis is that I watched the water in the lake rapidly rising, because the primary spillway had failed, and, for a time, had thus been shut down.
I looked at this dirt-hillside “emergency spillway” (that had never before been used since the dam was first constructed) and I thought about how, if a person turns their backyard hose on full force and aims it at the ground, pretty quick the force of the water coming out of the hose begins to dig a hole at the place where the water is being aimed.
Here is a bit of fun math (please stay with me, I am getting to my point - eventually
)
The flow out of your average garden hose is about 15 gallons per minute (tops, many garden hoses don't come near this rate). The water from a hose will dig a hole deeper and deeper, the longer a person aims the flow from the hose at a particular spot in the dirt. Erosion.
Looking at it another way, large volumes of water are generally measured in cubic feet, rather than in gallons. A cubic foot of water is about 7.5 gallons (so, at 15 gallons per minute, think 15 plastic milk jugs =/- worth of water squirting out the end of the average hose into the dirt every minute, or cubic feet
per minute). Large volumes of flowing water are generally measured in cubic feet
per second (cfs).
Doing the math (never fun), converting the hose flow from cubic feet per
minute, to cubic feet per
second (cfs) the water shoots out of your average garden hose at about .125 cfs. Not very much, really, in the great scheme of things.
As I was pondering this back-yard hose thing, I was also thinking about how the water that had been coming down the main spillway at about
150,000 cfs before it was shut down for a time, and assumed that about the same volume of cubic-feet-per-second was now getting ready to flow down the dirt hillside of the "emergency spillway", eroding the ground as it went – just like my garden hose eroded the dirt in my backyard, but at at an intensity of hundreds of thousands of times greater.
It didn’t take a lot of imagination on my part to see that this could be a bad kinda thing, 150,000 cfs of water gouging it’s way down a dirt hillside unimpeded, so I packed up my van and left my house, driving about two hours to stay with friends in the San Francisco bay area.
I stayed with them about three days, watching the news all the while, those in charge were very assuring that the water would
not come over the the lip of the emergency spillway. Whew!! Fantastic!! All is well!!
So, after three days, I got in my van and drove the two hours back home.
When I arrived home, the first thing I did, after walking through my front door, was to turn on my tv - even before unpacking my van. On the tv was a emergency message filling and repeatedly scrolling across my tv screen: “Evacuate NOW. Oroville dam is projected to fail within the next hour. This is NOT a drill.”
Er. . . um.
The water was now flowing over the concrete “lip” of the emergency spillway (even though those-in-charge had repeatedly assured everyone that it would not do this), rapidly eroding the hillside below the emergency spillway as it flowed (no surprise to me there), and also eroding and
undercutting back under the unsupported concrete lip of the emergency spillway (as of course it would). A bit more undercutting, and this concrete lip would have toppled (authorities believed this would happen, which was the reason for the evacuation order), releasing a projected 30-foot-tall wall of water down the Feather River and on into the river communities below.
I called my friends, they said "ya'all come", got back in my van, and drove the two hours back to their house. I think I went a tiny bit over the speed limit as I drove back.
I stayed with them another three days, until the worst of the crisis had passed.
Ultimately, the emergency spillway did not fail. But it was a
VERY near thing.
The minute the evacuation was announced, all of the roads in the evacuation area were almost immediately either near or at total gridlock (I left for the second time the instant I saw the warning on my tv, and so avoided most of the traffic. As I drove, I could see that people all over town were still lingering to slowly pack up their cars - as I drove by, I wondered what they could possibly be
thinking).
All of these 188,000 +/- people gridlocked in their cars on the local roads would have been at the mercy of the projected 30-foot wall of water, had the thing let go.
Again, it was a very near thing. Today, there are still many problems remaining at Oroville dam, which I won't get into at the moment. Suffice to say that the dam, when it was constructed, was designed and projected to last 50 years. The dam was officially "opened" on May 4, 1968. That makes it about 53 years old. And counting. . .
Thanks for your post, Sue.
It really brought the individual memories back into sharper focus.
It is an experience I will never forget.
Anne