There’s no retaining wall on the market that would stop a land-sliding house. It’s 100% filling in a ravine with dirt and putting houses on top that’s the issue. They used “engineered fill”, but it’s very clearly not the same as native stabilized soil.I’d definitely be looking into how those retaining walls were constructed. Water saturated soil will blow those out pretty easy, even with a concrete footing.
Does anyone know about water drainage from the Oquirrh mountains? Growing up on the west side I never saw running water and while there are a few drainages I know about (one of them running through my parents neighborhood in WJ) I've never seen water flow. What happens to the snow there? Are there creeks or streams or anything like that which drain into anything? Does it just soak into the soil?
I've been thinking about it the last few days while driving home on U111 from picking up my youngest.
but that reservoir will never fill to capacity ever again....the megadrought will never go away. /sarcasm"Lake Powell could rise 50 to 90 feet over the next few months" -
Lake Powell could rise 50 to 90 feet over the next few months
Federal water managers say they believe Lake Powell will rise anywhere between 50 and 90 feet this spring and summer.www.ksl.com
I neither agree nor disagree, but one winter does not a trend make. Especially a winter that is statistically an outlier.but that reservoir will never fill to capacity ever again....the megadrought will never go away. /sarcasm
My guess is not that much more. Some places like lone rock are definitely wider, but there is so much cliff face that the water can only go straight up.I'm sure the data is out there, but I'd like to know how much water this 50 ft will contain, versus the NEXT 50 feet. (but I don't want to know badly enough to actually look) Since the reservoir gets wider as it gets more full, this "first" 50 feet won't take as much water as the "next", and the "next" after that.
Is that near Glenwood Springs?An easy Spring runoff isn't going so well here in Colorado... a train found this one.
Is that near Glenwood Springs?