Rio Manzanares Overflowing

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In my thirty years living in Cumaná I had not seen the river grow like this.
The amount of water that has fallen has been unprecedented and the damage to low income communities along the river bank and even in areas where the river is not supposed to get is significant.

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This is the part of the river I see every day as I walk to work. Before I left for my hometown, I took these pictures. I meant to go down to the affected places, but I was unable to (that would be for another post).
The sidewalk along the river is uder water here.

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The water has alrady flooded the park, which was already innundated from previous rain.

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Like most rivers in Venezuela, populations have grown around and along their banks altering the natural course and hoping that a brick or stone wall here and there might tame these water bodies.

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History shows that sooner or later water bodies claim their ancestral territories.
If that is the case here, a good part of Cumaná will be under water soon.

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The river looks amazing from here, but if you live in a rancho or a house affected by the flood, the river becomes a hedious enemy.

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This river is trecherous. Beneath the calm surface there are strong currents that can drag even the most skilled swimmers.

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It called my atention that there were no kids jumping from the bridge (which they used to do whe the river got some extra water). They must know a thing or two about when to mess up with it and when to let it flow.

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Across the country we are seeing unprecedented rain and many communities are struggling to live their regular lives. People are losing their belongings and in some extreme cases there have been fatal reports. We are hoping nature stops sending rain. We lack the equipments, personnel and organization to deal with natural disasters at a local level, let alone at a national scale.

Thanks for stopping by

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21 comments
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Stay safe my friend

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Thanks. I'm visiting my mother now, some 400 km away, but all the way I saw flooded rivers and creeks making roads and bridges collapse. It's either that or landslides. Lots of rocks on the roads. Traveling these roads is scary now.
Here we too have a small river that grows ten times it's size when it rains hard

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People do not understand or realize the importance of forests and the build up of leaf matter on the ground under the trees.

I grew up on a small river in South Ga USA, the Canoochee. It was a wonderland, basically untouched woodland (at least around our place and where I could hike around)
Those leaves and the decayed mulch act as sponges, the trees act as flow control.

If it rained HARD for a day or so, it would TAKE a day or so for the river to rise a bit. And it wouldn't stop when the rain stopped, because all that seepage from under the trees coming up as small springs in the river bed, kept feeding the river. I could swim along slowly and FEEL ICY cold water coming up in places.

Now, much of the tree cover has been cut or harvested, plus roads, parking lots and building roofs shed water straight into the watershed, and the river rises RAPIDLY, then when the rain stops, it falls just as rapidly.
Most of the time now, it really isn't pleasant to swim in, I wouldn't eat any fish caught in it either. Snails and Clams are gone, Eels as well.

↑This is a recent photo↑

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Beautiful place indeed.
It's as simple as that. You've summarized and exemplified it nicely.
Most of the "natural" tragedies we're having now are actually man-made.
Unplanned urban developments, greed (in the case of mining-related deforestation), and lack of awareness-raising and education to prevent people building in ways that are detrimental to the environment

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Sadly, the house in those photos burned to the ground around 1985? I have only been back a handful of times in 20 yrs, it is so depressing.

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Oh, my gosh! It looks like Orinoco river! I think every year, It will be worse due to the climate change. 🥺

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It appears so. What makes it worse is the government inability and unwillingness to solve the urgent problems, to attack the source of the problem. Well, they are the source of the problem

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La madre naturaleza reclama lo que es suyo sin piedad. Mucho le hemos quitado y sin embargo ella ha tenido paciencia pero cuando quiere lo arrebata todo y nunca olvidar que siempre la debemos respetar ⛈️🌩️🌧️

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[Esp]Estimado es ver lo que ocurre en mi ciudad Cumaná, para creerlo, vivo desde 1977 aquí, y no había visto tanta crecida como estos días, es una lamentable situación, que padece mucha gente, quienes han perdido sus enseres y temen por su vida en mi querida Cumaná, ciudad que solicita el auxilio de todos, pies nuestro río Manzanares sigue creciendo. [Eng]/Dear is to see what happens in my city Cumaná, to believe it, I have lived here since 1977, and I had not seen as much flood as these days, it is an unfortunate situation, suffered by many people, who have lost their belongings and fear for their lives in my dear Cumaná, a city that requests everyone's help, because our Manzanares River continues to grow, due to the heavy rains that do not stop.

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Así es. El auxilio no se ve, llega a cuenta gotas o no ataca los problemas de fondo (política ambientalista preventiva, política de reducción de pobreza, inversion en maquinarias, equipos y personal para lidiar con desastres). Es muy penoso ver una ciudad que se vende como turística reducida a la mendicidad y el abandono

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Hi, friend. I am so sorry to hear about the floods, natural disasters are so sad. I hope the situation improves soon and everyone is safe. Greetings.

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Thanks. We are doing well. We usually get affected by the rain and sewage water that innundates Cumaná with the average rain, but we do have friends who have lost their belongings and have not been able to leave their houses.

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Keep safe. I don't know what's causing this since you said this was your first time seeing the river overflowing, but this might be caused by climate change or deforestation around your area.

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Thanks
Well, the river overflows every raining season, but this is the first time in decades it grows this big and causes so much damage. With every rain it only gets worse and it has kept raining for weeks.

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Muy duro lo que se está pasando con estas lluvias. Cuidate @hlezama un abrazote

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Gracias, @sacra97
Igualmente. Tengo entendido que Anzoátegui tiene muchas zonas afectadas, incluyendo las principales ciudades.

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