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[pct-l] Curiouser
- Subject: [pct-l] Curiouser
- From: StoneDancer1 at aol.com (StoneDancer1@aol.com)
- Date: Tue Feb 22 18:35:43 2005
In the winter of 1861-62 California had RAIN. From November 6th through
January 18th, in Sacramento it rained 32 3/4" and it wasn't done. In the Sierra
foothills, there was substantially more. In Sonora, between November 11th
and January 14th, it rained 72?. The area around Sacramento was a lake about
300 miles long and from 20 miles to 60 miles wide. By January 31st, the
amounts had increased to 37? in Sacramento and 102? in Sonora. The amount of
snow must have been a thing to see. Sacramento was cut off from the world ?
the telegraph poles were underwater. The highest house in the city, that of
one Judge Field, had 2 feet of mud in its rooms after the waters receded.
Of course, the Army Corps of Engineers ? those busy little beavers dedicated
to turning America?s waterways into concrete sloughs - have long since dammed
(or is it damned?) the rivers and made a repeat unlikely. Here in the Sierra
foothills, a bit south of Sonora, it has rained 21? so far this winter. A
mere pittance? all things considered.
"No Way" Ray Echols