if you look at the picture with the young males in it, it looks like the one is standing waist deep on top of the boat house.....:(
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if you look at the picture with the young males in it, it looks like the one is standing waist deep on top of the boat house.....:(
I have seen a sitecalled "Boatfax" it is supposed to be like "Carfax".
I dont know if they haveas big a data base as carfax but its worth a shot.
Hate to see someone get screwed.
Todd
Dang. Just shows you Mother Nature will win in the end.
Those pics are almost unbelievable. I hate it for all those boat owners. I would bet in couple of months a lot of those boats will be on the market. Boat buyers better do there research if they are purchasing in the next few months.
if you look at this video, and then look at Texas now it is hard to believe it is the same place from the video
I was thinking the same thing when looking at your dust storm pics! Crazy extremes.
That's really too bad. I forgot about this thread and saw something mentioned about it on another site . I did notice the moomba with the bow smashed up , makes you think about maybe another brand of boat. At the speed the river was going maybe 15 mph? the moomba must have hit the tree at that speed and dead on the point. I wonder if SK could chime in on this and get their explanation on how their product destructed like that. I have been boating quite a few years safely ( thank god) , and wondered about this if I did hit another boat head on in a narrow channel such as lake powell . Most of the time the boat speeds are around 10-15 mph but take that times 2 in a head on collision.
Jim
its not really a fair comparison becuase the dust storm pics are from Lubbock which is kind of north west Texas and very flat and dry, just below the pan handle and dust storms like this happen every 3-4 years out there. The flooding was down in south Central Texas in the New Braunfels area which is part of the hill country and is typically more humid than West Texas.
Thats the thing about Texas, it is so big we have many many different geographic regions (not sure if that is the right word). From Desert in west Texas to Pine Forest in East Texas to swamp in south east Texas to the hill country in central, TX. The rocky mountians even extend all the way down into west Texas close to El Paso. It even gets cold and regular snow fall in the panhandle regions.