Flooding: A natural disaster all homeowners must deal with
August 24, 2011 by Darcy Beg · Leave a Comment
This week we’ve written about earthquakes, hurricanes and now flooding. Although earthquakes made an exception of where they typically strike this week, with the epicenter of a 5.8 quake centering just outside our nation’s capital, all natural disasters tend to occur in only specific parts of the country.
Well, all except one…Flooding.
Flooding strikes in rain forests, it strikes in deserts, it hits highly-populated areas, it hits the sticks, it thumps the mountains, and it hammers the valleys.
Flash floods can develop very quickly, sometimes in just a few minutes and with no warning, explains HSH.com contributing writer Gina Pogol in her latest article titled, “Flooding: The most common natural disaster in America“:
Flash floods can be dangerous walls of debris-carrying, roaring water and can sweep away most things in their paths.
You need to be especially aware of flash-flood danger if you live in a low-lying area or near water. Even tiny or seasonal streams, gullies, creeks, culverts, dry streambeds, or low-lying areas that appear harmless in dry weather can flood and flood fast.
Since flooding doesn’t discriminate on which parts of the country it targets, homeowners nationwide need to make sure their homes are prepared to handle heavy rains and rising tides.
5 ways flood insurance may soak you
Who needs flood insurance?
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