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#305001 - 10/17/08 02:58 PM san ignacio weather
Marty Offline
from a friend...

reporting in from western Belize...

we were at the San Ignacio Vegetable Market this morning at 7 am, just in time to hear about the closure of schools, and watched in awe as the Macal rose, and rose, and rose, forcing the closure of the market, and the removal of all the produce.

the lower wooden bridge is *beyond* invisible, so far under water that you'd never know it was even there.

as we left town, water had covered the cement market area, and was inching across the street, which has a couple inches of water on it.

the old Gordo's Meat Market is under a foot or two of water, and if you stand at the intersection above the wooden bridge facing east, all you can see is water, stretching to Santa Elena.

the Macal River is amazingly wide!

on the way back home, observed that the cement stairs headed down to the Mopan River in Succotz are under water, and the little islands have submerged.

and it's *still* raining !!

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#305004 - 10/17/08 03:21 PM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
shuffles Offline
hmmm I thought Chalillo was supposed to fix all that!
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#305021 - 10/17/08 04:00 PM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: shuffles]
Moby Offline
It works up to a point. If it rains long enough the dam can no longer buffer what's coming in and it comes to a point where it has to keep letting out as much as is coming in.

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#305293 - 10/19/08 08:56 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Moby]
Billizer Offline
The Macal River rises fast under heavy rain..but will drop quickly when the rain stops. Hope the rain soon stops.

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#305375 - 10/19/08 03:44 PM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Billizer]
Marty Offline

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#305693 - 10/21/08 11:25 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
Marty Offline
http://westernbelizehappenings.blogspot.com/

CAYO DISTRICT FLOOD REPORT - BELIZE
CAYO DISTRICT FLOOD REPORT SUNDAY NIGHT Oct.19,2008

by Ray Auxillou

There has been a video showing on Bayman Cable in the Cayo District, this evening, taken by compliments of a plane ride from Central Farm. We had actually seen them flying overhead this morning when the sun was out. The video was over an hour and covered from Belmopan westward, to the Guatemalan border and over much of the agriculture areas bordering the rivers feeding into the Belize river. It will be edited into a shorter version for the Love FM, News Program on Monday. International readers can watch the video by streaming internet news service out of Belize. The rivers are deep brown with silt, flowing rapidly in the main channels, but sort of still and quiet like a lagoon, where they have flooded over the banks for a mile or more in places.

What we saw and the reports coming in on television, in the Western Cayo District, are that there has been extensive flooding. Bullet Tree village is underwater. Calla Creek, Santa Familla and many small village and rural communities are flooded. From the plane flight video, we could estimate roughly 200 buildings, homes and businesses, mostly in remote farms, are either completely submerged, or partially submerged. Crop losses look to be roughly $35 million dollars. Fruit orchids and corn and RK beans and some vegetables.

The hydro electric dams have been topped and water is pouring over the top of the dams, to conflicting reports of up to 14 feet higher. The dams are on the Macal River. The Macal River itself is being backed up at the junction, where it joins the Mopan River coming in from Guatemala forming the head of the Belize River. The Mopan is heavily flooding, more so than the Macal River. The two rivers join in San Ignacio Town, to make the Belize River, that runs across the width of the country, to the Caribbean Sea. In San Ignacio town; of the two bridges crossing the Macal River between the two cities of San Ignacio and Santa Elena, the low bridge is completely submerged and has been for several days, and previously it was covered for about ten days. Traffic is being routed in spurts across the Hawksworth Bridge, first one way, then the other. These bridges are only one lane bridges and we probably need a new, very high, six lane bridge in the near future and a by-pass highway around the twin towns. Traffic jams are very bad in the one way narrow mule train streets of San Ignacio..

The water has risen to cover Constitution Park, which is the little park and band stand, near the bus and Savanah taxi stand, centrally located in San Ignacio. Most of those ground floor stores in that central area of San Ignacio Town have at least a foot of water in them. Before the hydro dams on the Macal River, San Ignacio regularly got TOP GALLON floods that did that, but we haven’t seen this for about 15 years, now the dams had been built.

The Mopan River starts in Belize, way down south, a hundred miles away in the southern Belize Alps, separating the Toledo District from the interior highland jungles and flows into the Peten District of Guatemala. This Guatemalan Peten used to be wild jungle, home of the ancient Mayan Feudal Kingdoms, sparsely populated by remote Mayan communities in the jungles. No longer, as abut 30 years ago, population was being moved from the Western Guatemalan highlands into the lower Peten and some 5000 square miles of Peten jungles of my youth, have been cleared and made into ranch pastures. The Mopan River winds through this area and there are many branch rivers feeding into the Mopan River in the Guatemalan Peten area. The Mopan River comes back into Belize at the Melchor de Menchos and Benque Viejo border and flows to our twin towns and joins with the Macal River, draining the more Northern and Eastern Belize Alps. These two rivers then cross the width of our country as one new river called the Belize River, winding to the East, exiting by the port of Belize City on the coast. The deforestation of the Peten in Guatemala has contributed to faster moving water drainoff, along with massive erosion of limited top soil. This draining of the Guatemalan Peten basin into and through Belize is now changing past flood patterns and causing whole new areas that were once unknown to flood, to be in flood zones. These new flood zones in Belize, have not yet been mounted on the internet, by GIS mapping data in Belmopan our capital. The flood crest takes about three days to reach the coastal towns, villages and the port of Belize City. Population explosion needs this flood zone data via internet and GIS.

People who are old, remember back as far as Hurricane Hattie in 1961 and say the floods have never been as bad as this one. The major cause is deforestation of the Peten jungles.

The subject of loss of top soil in Belize along the river banks has been discussed, debated and written about for some 30 years, but no five year, port town controlled national government has ever passed any preventative progressive legislation. The major idea is to create a 500 yard wide, barrier of woods along river banks and prohibit cutting down of river bank forests. Tax relief could be given to property owners to encourage them to do this. Thus making wildlife preservation corridors as well as holding back scarce soil erosion. Perhaps this political term under the UDP, the political party in power will revisit this subject of loss of soil, by erosion and flooding and make some much needed legislation? The Western Highway has cut off Cayo District from the rest of the country. Reports late Sunday night indicate the Roaring Creek bridge is flooded over, by twelve feet of water, at the Belmopan junction, and San Jose Succotz western highway and Benque Viejo Town going to the Western border has also been flooded in two places, cutting off transportation into Guatemala. The bridge at the Guatemala border is also reported to be under high flood water. Spanish Lookout and the farms throughout the HEARTLAND OF BELIZE, the biggest mixed farming,agricultural area in the country, heading north through Orange Walk and Corozal Districts is also reported isolated. Schools throughout the Cayo District have been shut for Monday and probably through Wednesday, announced by the Ministry of Education over the radio and television, as the Metrological Office is reporting two more days of rain, for Monday and Tuesday.

NEMO, the government Emergency Committee are working and have been evacuating people from flooded houses and small farms and communities. These people are being installed for the time being, at the ITVET Community College system in San Ignacio. Mr. Chan of DFC bureaucratic fame, has been giving a telephone report from his position on the NEMO committee Sunday night, over the local Bayman Cable television station. He lives in San Jose Succotz. NEMO was active on Sunday, mostly with immediate areas that could be reached and are not totally cut off by the floods, accessible to evacuate anybody that wanted to. There is considerable assistance being given by many local volunteers to submerged house people along riverbank flooding. Reporters have been doing fly overs with assistance from tourist ultra light TRIKE aircraft and a Cessna from Central Farm, municipal airstrip for the twin towns. There has been no report from Chaa Creek Jungle Lodge and the grass airstrip there, with many planes, we presume, had already flown out to Central Farm municipal strip on Friday past? One doesn’t want your plane bogged down in wet grass and mud. There was a helicopter overflight we saw from our house in Hillview on the slope of Green Parrot Valley going along the Belize River valley water course on Saturday, we presume that was ASTRID helicopter charter?

We phoned Phylis over at EK TUN Jungle Lodge, high on the jungle clad wall of the Macal River Gorge Sunday night. She reported she was fine, but out of food supplies for her and her watch dogs. Her swimming pool had 10 feet of Macal River flood over it, she had reported earlier, by e-mail to the Belize Culture List Serve on Saturday and she cannot get in and out of her Lodge. The dirt track along the river to her place would be deep under water right now and she is on the opposite slope of the Gorge. I wonder if her landrover was parked there. If so it is under water AGAIN! Let us hope the famous troop of Howler Monkeys in the Macal River Gorge jungles are doing alright. The river is up about 70 feet high in the Macal River Gorge at her place. Phylis’s jungle lodge is still higher than her swimming pool about another 20 feet. Her jungle tourist lodge and Jane Beard’s home about a mile and a half from Santa Elena Town, on the Cristo Rey road are reported otherwise okay, but running periodically on portable small diesel generators right now, as they do not have BEL national electric grid connections, due to the high charges for running electrical lines into those properties. BEL wants something like $50,000 to run several poles and an electrical power line to Jane’s home on the Cristo Rey road, about a 1000 feet, so she has to do without the BEL electrical grid. This despite the many new subdivisions being cleared and plotted all through those hills and valleys. The solar battery banks at both places are otherwise dead, as there has been no sun for two weeks, with low cloud cover, due to the local convection, during the rainy month of September and October. Mostly October this year, which is better than in September, which normally accompanies passing hurricanes off shore. Jane Beard is in London, on a training course for the British High Commission trade office, while my brother-in-law Gustavo Pinzon is feeding the watch dogs and playing night watchman sleeping over there. Jane has her Permanent Residency, as she is retired in Belize and Gustavo awaits his Permanent Residency. A check last week at Belmopan immigration, showed his file was stuck in the police department someplace, for the last five weeks. Our Belize bureaucracy rivals that of India, another Commonwealth country, for obstacles and slowness. Good job he checked last week before the flood cut us off from Belmopan. Word is that; Immigration will charge him a $100 a month while he waits for the bureaucracy to process his application. That could take years one would think?

Gale and her husband, USA expatriates in their mid 70’s from Oregon in the USA, were due to arrive by plane Monday, for installing a wooden cabin, prefabricated by Reimer at Spanish Lookout. That will have to be postponed for two weeks I’m sure, as their property is somewhere around Bullet Tree Falls village, which is temporarily flooded. Spanish Lookout Mennonite community shopping is inaccessible right now. With the housing crisis in the USA, Gale and husband, were never able to get their capital out of their home by sale in the USA, as the housing mortgage market had collapsed. So, retirement funds are tight. They are stuck, holding a home in the USA they no longer want, preventing them from moving full time to Belize and starting a farming business. Janet a Mennonite widow, famous for her yogurt at the Macal river, Saturday market and her many daughters are still milking their 32 holstein cows, early morning and evening. They live lower on the Cristo Rey road below Jane, alongside the road, which is dry.

The water in central San Ignacio Town was lapping below Maya Walk place and the German restaurant. The shopping mall with the French Bakery is flooded to one or two feet. All of these places are downtown, central San Ignacio Town.

As I edit this piece this Monday morning, waves of rain pass over every 30 minutes, making a loud drumming noise on our tropical, corrugated galvanized zinc roof, for our Falconview Backpackers Adventure Hostel hammock room verandah. We rent dormitory bunk beds and furnished apartments, with bathrooms and kitchens. Our place is a FOUR STAR HOSTEL otherwise. We have no University and College age guests, this being the dead FALL three month OFF season. Our construction finishing work on two new furnished apartments for winter rentals is held up also by the rains. Our lettuce crop in our organic hydroponic nursery is growing great though. We were hoping to shop in Flores in the central Peten, Guatemala, this coming week, but doubt the condition of the Peten road will be any better than our dirt roads in Belize. Though still better than my memories of pushing my old VW camper bus across flooded rivers in the Peten of my younger years. At least there is a dirt two lane road of sorts now. I can remember when the Guatemalans built that road and big D9 caterpillar bulldozers could get half buried in mud. We can’t find flat clip on lamp shades for overhead protruding 75 watt ceiling bulbs, or 200 thread bed sheets here in the twin towns stores, for our two new rental tourist apartments, being prepared for winter visitors. We were also planning a vacation trip to El Salvador in November, by the mini-bus through the mountains. Lets hope the rainy season abates in a few weeks and things dry up. The trip is through back country mountain roads in Guatemala and Salvador, to save time. Undoubtedly going to be a hair raising trip.

It is 6:30 a.m. and the nighting gale birds are chirping and singing their beautiful songs, on the branches of the orange tree outside our hammock room window, while the flowers are blooming like crazy in the window shutters, with all this rain. The birds wake us with song and close the evening with very loud songs. Everything is okay with the world here. Even though there are rain showers, lowering cloud cover, it is a fine day for the rainy season. With a pot of water on the butane burner, to make some nice hot morning tea, with a tot of local rum, some local raw flavorful and healthy brown sugar, a bit of imported condensed milk and a dollop of fresh local raw bees honey in the tea; my hammock, a book, the cable tv and warm weather, all is right in the world. I would rather be here than anywhere else I can think of, reclining in my living room hammock. It is warm and peaceful, relaxed and comfortable. Certainly I do not envy people living in anxiety and fear, in places like Iceland, the USA and European countries. Those foreigners seem to always be living from one crisis to another. Nope, things are great here in Western Belize, despite the temporary floods.

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#305712 - 10/21/08 01:22 PM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
Peter Jones Offline
Sean Bachet, our "French baker" in San Pedro, still owns his original bakery in San Ignacio. He has had to rush there to try to safeguard his equipment as his bakery is under water.

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#306316 - 10/24/08 11:10 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Peter Jones]
Marty Offline
The Mopan is rising rapidly again. The road into Benque will likely be closed sometime today

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#306341 - 10/24/08 02:03 PM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
Marty Offline
from Hillview:
It rained all night here. Bit better this morning with only a few scattered drizzly type showers.

Got a report from Gustavo Pinzon ( brother-in-law ) on cell phone, as he journeyed to Belmopan from Hillview. He reported at the Spanish Lookout road, he could see the flood waters from the bus.



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#307205 - 10/28/08 10:13 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
LaurieMar Offline
Can anybody report on current weather conditions? Has the rain finally stopped? I hope so!

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#307208 - 10/28/08 10:24 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: LaurieMar]
Moby Offline
No rain since yesterday's drizzle. Low bridge still under water.

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#307515 - 10/29/08 11:42 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Moby]
Marty Offline
NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION UPDATE ON FLOODING CONDITIONS

October 28, 2008

The National Emergency Management Organization has made an update on the situation across the country as it relates to flooded conditions and the recovery effort. In its latest release NEMO says in the Belize Rural area the Burrell Boom Road to Hattieville near the block factory remains under 11 inches of water. Between Mosul Creek and Burrell Boom flood waters are said to be between eight to 10 inches while 18 to 20 inches of water is on sections of the road between Mosul Creek and Bermudian landing. Other areas of the Boom Road is said to be between 30 to 35 inches of water. In Belize City medical teams are conducting clinics in the Belama Phase three and four areas. This is being coordinated by the City Emergency Committee. On Thursday similar health clinics will be conducted at the Mile 8 community on the Western Highway. In the Corozal District relief supplies are being distributed. More than 135 families are receiving assistance in addition health clinics are being conducted in villages and areas affected by flooding. These include White Cocal, Chula Vista and Port Zal. In the Cayo District medical teams are working in the affected villages. Members of the Emergency Committee, volunteers and other residents are cleaning up while the distribution of supplies continues.

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#307516 - 10/29/08 11:44 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
Marty Offline
Outbreak in Maypen
But the problems in the river valley are decidedly more profound than a well meant barbecue on Saturday can solve. The flood has not only been affecting property and livestock but throughout the Belize River Valley the water which is now contaminated has been causing health problems especially to those who remain on the river bank. Today Jacqueline Godwin and cameraman Alex Ellis joined the Belize National Coast Guard, the Belize Defence Force, the Belize Disaster Rescue Team and the Ministry of Health as they ventured out into the flooded communities to provide medical care to those in need.

Jacqueline Godwin Reporting,
One thing we do know for sure and that is that it will take a long time before the flood waters to go down. But for the villagers who have decided to stay on the banks of the Belize River they still do not believe it is time for them to leave, even though they tell us the water continues to rise.

As our boat passed through Davis Bank Village we came upon this sixty two year old resident. The man told the nurse Yvonne Haylock that he refused to move to higher ground because he stayed behind to protect the property. According to the man for fifteen days he has been wading through the high water.

Yvonne Haylock, Nurse - Central Health Region
“The main thing is fungus between his toes and I advised him to try and see how he can stay out of the water. Apparently he is working there for somebody and he didn’t have on any boots, actually the boots would be covered by now, but we left with him a tube of anti-fungal cream that will heal the condition, especially if he stays out of the water. The only thing we can do is encourage him, once he is out of the water, to take a clean bath because the house where he stays is dry but he is moving around and he has his dogs with him and he is barefoot. We encouraged him to stay out of the water as much as possible. He admits the water isn’t clean because they are dead animals and that he is going to use the cream on his toes once he keeps himself clean.”

As we travelled further north and into Maypen Village we noticed that the flood waters have now surrounded every home in the community. In this house alone we found fourteen people who have decided to remain in their village.

Zane Bradley, Inspector - Public Health
“Well my concern is more for the kids, we just can’t seem to get them out of the water and they attain a lot of fungi and that is a major concern at this point.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
We’re at this house where there are 14 people inside, there seems to be a concern with the water as water now surrounds the vat. That is the only water supply I would imagine these people have at this time.

Zane Bradley,
“Along with my team I brought some tablets used to disinfect the water to make it safe for drinking,”

Jacqueline Godwin,
This water will not go down anytime soon. Do you believe these people should be out here?

Zane Bradley,
“I believe they should be evacuated as soon as possible.”

Rhoda Gill, Logistic Administrator – BDART
“A lot of them don’t have drinking water. If they’ve been standing in water or they’ve been getting in water, they could get fungus. If they don’t know how to swim, small children jumping in and not knowing that it is a deep area they could start drowning or whatever. So aside from the health issues it will be more of a safety issue in terms of getting them out of the water and keeping them away from the strong currents and stuff like that.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
Do you believe that they should still be out here or they should be seeking higher ground?

Lisa Bevans, Nurse Volunteer – BDART
“Two of the children have upper respiratory tract infection. They only have a little stuffiness but they do not have any cough. Otherwise they are not having ant fever or anything but it is just the fungus infection. All three have it.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
What do they say about the adults who are now rounding their cattle?

Lisa Bevans,
“In terms of their health, they are quire healthy except for the fungal infection again of the feet and according to the adult that is there she is saying it is worse than the children, far worse than the children’s feet. Otherwise they are okay.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
How many people are left here in Maypen?

Olivia Moody, Chairlady – Maypen
“We only have two families that went out so probably we have about 30.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
This is very worrisome, no one else wants to leave?

Olivia Moody,
“No because in Keith the water was just like this.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
Yeah bur the thing is the water is contaminated, you guys are going to run into problems with food supply, water supply.

Olivia Moody,
“Well I try my best because Mr. Edmund told me to try my best to try and get them out. You noticed me and you were on the river already. They don’t want to leave.”

According to Maypen Village Chairlady Olivia Moody since Monday night the water level has risen at least two more inches.

Olivia Moody,
“But I have my drum right there, that’s my marker. I mark it everyday, every day a little little and so I know it is rising.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
And if it continues you plan to move?

Olivia Moody,
“Well my kids them, only me because as the Chairlady I will try and fight along and see what I could get done or what I could advise them to do. So I make up my mind to fight along with them.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
We noticed a lot of cattle in the water, are they just going to stay there and they are going to take that as a loss, what are they going to do?

Olivia Moody,
“Trying to take as much as they can. We have a crowd of men working together. They are working along together.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
Anyone of you guys have gotten sick yet?

Shereth Moody,
“No mam, only the old man who I told you had chills two night ago.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
What is it like though because you guys look like you don’t want to move? What is it like as you see this water getting even higher?

Shereth Moody,
“I don’t know what to say. For Mitch water I stayed here, only me and those three children so I feel like I could pass this one at the same spot.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
And how high the water got then?

Shereth Moody,
“It was at three steps by the kitchen and it hasn’t reached there as yet. We are already used to this mud and water because Keith water was higher than this.”

Before we left Sherreth Moody and her family she did promise that if the water does get any higher they would move out. While some livestock have been taken to higher ground we also saw a number of animals including cows, horses and dogs that are now trapped in the rising water. The flood waters have also brought every possible kind of creature seeking dry ground like this tarantula that came up to our boat.

The flood has also started to affect the lower end of Flowers Bank Village. Nine year old Vince Robinson had to be brought onboard so the medical team could treat a sore that had become infected due to the contaminated water

Eleanor Mitchell, Resident - Flowers Bank Village
“My grandson is complaining that his foot itches and in searched his foot and it is having itch. It is rising still.”

Eleanor Mitchell and her family have also been trying to save what is left of their crops especially the rice from the fields that have not yet flooded..

Eleanor Mitchell,
“The crops are being affected because some of the rice is under water and they are going to spoil. We can’t get them in.”

Jacqueline Godwin,
And what you’ve been able to salvage, I notice you’re drying it out here in your front yard?

Eleanor Mitchell,
“Well we reap those and put them in the house until the little sun comes out and then we put them out to get dry because if it stays in the house right there they will stay moist and it will start growing again.”

The teams will continue to visit the affected communities and it is envisioned that this will require a sustained effort and monitoring to suppress major outbreaks of illness.
http://7newsbelize.com/sstory.php?nid=12512

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#307522 - 10/29/08 11:46 AM Re: san ignacio weather [Re: Marty]
Marty Offline
Second Body Recovered in Cayo

Reliable but unconfirmed reports are that a second body has been recovered from the Mopan River. The discovery was made around 2:15 this afternoon and it is of an adult female. It is believed to be the body of the Guatemalan woman from Arenal who currents swept away after their dory capsized on Friday afternoon. The body was immediately taken to Guatemala for burial. On Sunday afternoon the body of 17 year old Elsa Romero Mendez, a Guatemalan national, was recovered from Arenal.

And in other news from Cayo, in Bullet Tree and Calla Creek, all residents have already or about to leave shelters and schools will soon reopen. Bank accounts have been opened to help flood victims. At the Belize Bank the account number is 1120458 and at Atlantic Bank it is 1000185773. Both accounts are under the name of Cayo Disaster Relief Fund.

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