Jun. 9th, 2013
Hannover on the Bayou
Jun. 9th, 2013 10:08 pmCentral Europe is currently experiencing severe flooding. Here in Hannover our little river crested on May 30th, transforming the riverscape into something reminiscent of Louisiana (photo from May 27th):

Already the river has retreated into its normal banks. Just a few days later, the weather improved and attracted sun-deprived Germans to the still-muddy banks at Strandleben (photo from June 5th):

There's a cool online Pegelstand where you can graph the streamgauge data:

Surprisingly, the stream gauge shows that this year's high-water was only ~25 cm above the mean high water (MHW), although my colleagues all swear that they've never seen it this high.

Unlike other German and central-European cities, Hannover was never in any danger from the high water (although some of the surrounding villages deployed sandbags in defense). One popular theory (which I doubt) is that the name "Hannover" comes from "das Hohe Ufer" (the high riverbank).

Already the river has retreated into its normal banks. Just a few days later, the weather improved and attracted sun-deprived Germans to the still-muddy banks at Strandleben (photo from June 5th):

There's a cool online Pegelstand where you can graph the streamgauge data:

Surprisingly, the stream gauge shows that this year's high-water was only ~25 cm above the mean high water (MHW), although my colleagues all swear that they've never seen it this high.

Unlike other German and central-European cities, Hannover was never in any danger from the high water (although some of the surrounding villages deployed sandbags in defense). One popular theory (which I doubt) is that the name "Hannover" comes from "das Hohe Ufer" (the high riverbank).