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MIDLOTHIAN, Texas - Police in Midlothian are warning residents that the dam on Padera Lake, often referred to as Texas Lake, will soon give way. The chief said he expects it to fail sometime Wednesday morning. When that happens, a flood wave will go down Newton Branch into Cottonwood Creek, along Highway 287. The highway has been shut down as a precaution. West and northbound traffic is being diverted to Highway 67 and east and southbound traffic is being detoured to Old Fort Worth Road. There are about 25 homes downstream. Those people were asked to evacuate. Livestock owners were also asked to move their animals to higher ground. The water will eventually flow into Soap Creek, Joe Pool Lake and Mountain Creek. http://www.fox4news.com/story/29165636/midlothians-padera-lake-dam-failure-imminent
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Keep This Forum Viable, Read Pond Boss Magazine - America's Journal of Pond Management
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Lunker
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Keep your fingers crossed. http://www.wfaa.com/story/news/local/201...oment/28000473/MIDLOTHIAN -- Engineers and builders at Padera Lake in Midlothian say it was a close call, but an earthen dam won't breach after all.
They are still waiting on official word from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
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Ambassador Field Correspondent Hall of Fame Lunker
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I commented about this on another thread also...Seems siphons made out of water supply pipe could be made in a matter of minutes and be far more effective than all those water pumps being used...
I hope the dam doesn't fail, but it sure didn't look good when watching live about 10 minutes ago. I was shocked to hear some official said the dam won't break when there is still water flowing over it and it is eroding away...
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The dam, just breached. I just pray no one is killed and damage is minimal!!!
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Joined: Mar 2014
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Keep your fingers crossed. http://www.wfaa.com/story/news/local/201...oment/28000473/MIDLOTHIAN -- Engineers and builders at Padera Lake in Midlothian say it was a close call, but an earthen dam won't breach after all.
They are still waiting on official word from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. I guess they were wrong.
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That is an engineering nightmare and if life is lost because of it...truly tragic. I know hindsight is perfect vision, and my expertise is not in dams or water management but where are the fail safes in these designs?
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I guess the news reports of the breach were premature....now officials say the dam will "last another day".
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That is an engineering nightmare and if life is lost because of it...truly tragic. I know hindsight is perfect vision, and my expertise is not in dams or water management but where are the fail safes in these designs? mnfish, I hear ya! In most cases, it comes down to cost and how much "chance" there is of the torrential and high amounts of rainfall an area sees. These current rains in TX have never been seen before, even in hurricanes, in many areas. That makes it hard to protect against, and predict, what has never happened before.
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Am I looking at this picture right? Where they are pumping water over is actually where the emergency spillway is located on the dam? Is this still under construction?
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I don't know Shorty. To me, it looks like emergency repairs wer made and the dirt pushed from the backside/outside-in to shore up a failed area. You don't make a spillway, the most erosion susceptible area, the least built up area, as these pictures show.
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I know next to zero about dam construction so excuse me if this is a dumb question...When the water goes over a dam, is the erosion of the soil what ultimately leads to a dams failure?
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Shorty,
The spillway I believe is under where that picture was taken. This is a 100 acre soil conservation lake about 20 miles from where I work.
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Are they in the process of rebuilding the outlet structure? I looked it up on Google maps, then switched to Google Earth and it shows the lake empty and looks like they had started dirt work. The dam appears to run straight across with no bulge out into the lake at the outlet point. Looks like they are: http://jobs.ourcareerpages.com/job/80455About the Mountain Creek FRS #10 (TX):
The project includes draining the existing Padera Lake; removing and replacing the principal spillway pipe and outlet structures; excavating, lime treating and replacing certain areas of the existing dam embankment; raising and widening the existing dam cross section; and constructing a new RCC emergency spillway. Principal items of work include approximately 100,000 CY of excavation.
Last edited by Shorty; 05/27/15 12:41 PM. Reason: found answer
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I know next to zero about dam construction so excuse me if this is a dumb question...When the water goes over a dam, is the erosion of the soil what ultimately leads to a dams failure? They generally do not make big dams out of soil.
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Lunker
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It's true hard work never killed anybody, but I figure, why take the chance? Ronald Reagan _______________ The good Brian
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Another question.. I imagine tilapia is probably popular and common in private ponds in the south, Texas, assume oklahoma, Florida, Georgia etc? If Texas has had so much high water, flooding etc I can imagine that many ponds are seeing their tilapia overflow into neighboring rivers and lakes.
I assume then the tilapia will then take up residence in nearby lakes and multiply. This is probably happening right? Are some of these nearby lakes seeing tilapia for the first time or do most lakes in the Dallas area already have tilapia in them?
Will they survive and multiply and provide new 'natural' forage for lakes and ponds that never had them before? Will this on balance be a benefit from all the recent flooding for the forage base for the local bass fisheries?
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Another question.. I imagine tilapia is probably popular and common in private ponds in the south, Texas, assume oklahoma, Florida, Georgia etc? If Texas has had so much high water, flooding etc I can imagine that many ponds are seeing their tilapia overflow into neighboring rivers and lakes.
I assume then the tilapia will then take up residence in nearby lakes and multiply. This is probably happening right? Are some of these nearby lakes seeing tilapia for the first time or do most lakes in the Dallas area already have tilapia in them?
Will they survive and multiply and provide new 'natural' forage for lakes and ponds that never had them before? Will this on balance be a benefit from all the recent flooding for the forage base for the local bass fisheries?
Canyon, there are many Texas lakes with year-round, established populations of Blue Tilapia. With the exception of one lake, there have been no downsides reported that I am aware of. In the one lake, LMB were declining and in the absence of an explanation, a state biologist simply blamed the Blue Tilapia, yet offered nothing in support his claim other than being present. The allowed mozzies will eventually die out from cold.
Last edited by Rainman; 05/28/15 08:33 AM.
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