Fargo calm, confident as Red River approaches crest

A Saturday stroll
With a clay dike occupying half of a street in the Forest River development south of Fargo,N.D., area resident Steve Harter and puppy Buster had limited places to walk on Saturday morning (March 20, 2010). Residents in rural North Dakota and Minnesota are dealing with overland flooding, swollen rivers and elaborate dike systems.
MPR Photo/Ann Arbor Miller

They passed out cigars in Fargo on Saturday, but no matches just yet, as a flood-weary city that's spent the last week getting ready to hold back the Red River cautiously prepared to celebrate what appeared to be a successful defense against the swollen waterway.

The river continued to inch upward toward an expected crest Sunday a few feet below last year's record, to be followed by a quick and steady drop.

As they waited, Fargo's residents turned their attention to cleaning up debris in low-lying neighborhoods where more than a million sandbags held back the waters, with some taking a break for basketball.

"Last year I was not sleeping well. This year I am sleeping like a baby," said Fargo resident Kevin Pladson, who last year counted on mounds of sandbags to keep the river away from his back deck. This year, the water isn't close. "I'm relaxing and watching as much of the NCAA tournament as I can."

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The easygoing mood stood in stark contrast to last year, when floods along the north-flowing Red River sparked a last-minute frenzy of sandbagging that brought life to a halt and forced thousands to evacuate.

This year, residents in Fargo and neighboring Moorhead, Minn., were calm as the river completed a rise driven by the spring thaw of a thick snowpack: they walked their dogs, went shopping and worked out at the gym.

Overland flooding
Overland flooding consumes backyards, ditches and fields on Saturday, March 20, 2010, in the Forest River development south of Fargo, N.D.
MPR Photo/Ann Arbor Miller

At one mobile command center on the Minnesota side of the river, the focus early Saturday was on breakfast instead of levee breaks as sheriff's deputies spent the morning cooking deer sausage.

"It's been actually quite relaxing, compared to last year," said Fargo resident Jim Papacek.

Papacek had been so worried earlier this year about the prospect of flooding that he rented an apartment on higher ground away from the river and moved much of his furniture into it, just in case he had to evacuate. But on Saturday, the retired teacher sat in his mostly empty living room looking out at the river, which had flooded part of his yard but hadn't reached his house.

In Fargo and Moorhead, flooding has so far been limited mostly to areas along the Red River, where 3-feet-high piles of sandbags that stretch for miles have prevented the water from reaching homes and other buildings. Some yards, bike paths, a baseball diamond and golf course have flooded - but without major damage.

In rural areas outside Fargo, more widespread overland flooding has submerged several farm fields and washed out a few roads.

Sandbaggers
Sandbaggers were back at work in Fargo's Timberline subdivision Friday morning after officials called for an additional levee, which was needed due to a pesky storm sewer drain. Area residents and volunteers -- including Jared Steinberger, 18, left, Hannah Erickson, 14, center, and her sister Elizabeth Erickson, 12, right, responded quickly. The levee will provide additional protection as the Red rises to an anticipated 37.5 feet Sunday.
MPR Photo/Ann Arbor Miller

Earlier this week, thousands of volunteers filled and placed sandbags and the Army Corps of Engineers built dozens of temporary clay dikes in Fargo and Moorhead to hold back a river that was forecast to approach last year's record.

After the preparations were largely complete, the National Weather Service lowered its crest prediction several times as below-freezing temperatures helped slow the melting of snow and clear skies free of major rain storms were forecast for the next few days.

Though Fargo's mayor cautioned against celebrating too early, he was among the city officials handing out cigars at a meeting early Saturday. They were told to wait until after Sunday's crest to light them.

There is a chance the river could later threaten homes and roads, especially if any of the clay levees are breached or if there is heavy rain in April.

Mayor Dennis Walaker warned residents not to take down any flood barriers even as the city began cleaning up the surplus plastic, plywood and unused sandbags.

"There's always a battle between people who say it's over when it's crested. ... This is an ongoing problem," Walaker said. "Right now I feel all the dikes and sandbags and earthen dikes should stay in place at least until it's down to 30 feet," or about 12 feet above flood stage and well out of the danger zone.

Big Bags
The Red River Valley is using a variety of flood-fighting tools in its effort to hold back rising rivers. A row of Big Bags, which hold roughly the equivalent of 100 regular sandbags, stand ready to do their part along 40th Avenue South in Fargo, N.D., on Friday, March 19, 2010.
MPR Photo/Ann Arbor Miller

Walaker said he was not aware of a single public building damaged by this year's floods, and National Guard soldiers who were watching the dikes found no major problems on Saturday.

Still, rural areas outside of North Dakota's largest city faced some significant flooding from the Red River's smaller tributaries.

Several farms were surrounded by water or had been turned into soggy fields. The nearby Sheyenne River was about a foot over flood stage at the town of Lisbon and was expected to stay at or near its crest level for about a week in most places.

"Any place affected by the Sheyenne still has a long ways to go in the flood fight," said Cass County engineer Keith Berndt.

The Coast Guard said it helped 10 people in rural areas on Saturday including five people in a disabled boat who were towed to a car waiting at the shore. None of the 10 were in any immediate danger.

Meteorologists said there were scattered reports of flooding in much of the country's midsection - along the Mississippi, Missouri and Ohio rivers and the smaller waterways feeding them. The swamped areas generally involved agricultural ground, secondary roads and outbuildings, with no immediate reports of significant damage to homes.

While there was still the worry that the runoff from melting snow in the northern Plains would swell major inland rivers in the Midwest, factors such as the heavy rains that conspired to create serious flooding in the past couple of years appeared to be absent - at least for now.

In Fargo, Pamela O'Leary took a stroll in her neighborhood near the river with a bag of recyclables in one hand and the leash of her golden retriever, Max, in the other. She said it was a different feeling from this time a year ago, when she and her family were evacuated in the middle of the night.

"Last year we felt like we were fleeing from something, which we were," O'Leary said. "I think we are all in a different state of mind this year. Everyone just seemed really on top of things."

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Associated Press Writers James MacPherson and Jim Suhr contributed to this report.

(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)