Current:Home > MarketsSignalHub-American Climate: In Iowa, After the Missouri River Flooded, a Paradise Lost -FutureFinance
SignalHub-American Climate: In Iowa, After the Missouri River Flooded, a Paradise Lost
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-11 11:17:31
The SignalHubfirst of 21 stories from the American Climate Project, an InsideClimate News documentary series by videographer Anna Belle Peevey and reporter Neela Banerjee.
For two years, a home on North Street in Hamburg, Iowa, was a refuge for Kevin and Kim Johnson.
The house was perfect. The secluded backyard had tall fences that separated them from their neighbors, creating a private sanctuary where they could relax and hide away from the world.
When the couple moved in, the backyard was barren. They planted the flowerbeds, landscaped the patch of grass, and added a pond filled with flowers and 17 koi. Each day when Kevin got home from work, the couple started their evening by feeding the fish together.
“It just felt like our own little paradise right there,” Kevin said.
In March 2019, the Missouri River flooded and put Kevin and Kim’s paradise under nine feet of water.
“Our fish are no longer,” Kevin said. “We have no idea what happened to them, obviously.”
The flooding was a culmination of several factors—heavy rains, warm temperatures, melting snow and impenetrable frozen ground—each of which was exacerbated by a changing climate.
Iowa had just experienced its third wettest winter in over a century, according to state climatologist Justin Glisan. The soils were frozen solid when a bomb cyclone struck the Midwest, dropping two weeks worth of rain on the region in just a day and a half.
As floodwaters began creeping into Hamburg last March, Kevin took the day off work to prepare. The Johnsons had only lived in their home for two years, but previous residents told them to expect about three feet of water to flood the house.
They moved some computers and furniture to safety, but left clothes hanging in the closet. In the little time they had left, they focused on helping sandbag the town rather than clearing out their own home.
“We knew that this was just going to be hopeless in a couple of hours and so I don’t know,” Kim said, “it seemed more important to help sandbag than it did a couch or a table.”
As they worked to stop the flood from reaching the majority of Hamburg, just north of where they lived, they knew the waters had already arrived at their home.
“We just had no clue what the extent was gonna be when it was all said and done,” Kim said.
It took the floodwaters a month to recede. When the Johnsons returned, their home was unrecognizable. The yellow stain the water left on the formerly white walls stopped just inches below the ceiling. Rapidly growing mold encrusted the leftover Casey’s pizza sitting on the coffee table that had been their last supper in the house. A swollen dresser laid sideways on the bedroom floor; inside of it, a battered jewelry case protected an undamaged bracelet.
“We have no fence left in the backyard,” Kim said. “What we had in the backyard is almost all gone. It’s flooded away. It’s somewhere else.”
Even if everything was fixed, Kevin said, the house would never feel the same as it was. The Johnsons decided they needed to rebuild their paradise somewhere else, on higher ground.
“I don’t think we’re willing to put the time and money that it’s going to take to make this livable again,” Kevin said.
In a changing climate, disasters like this are happening more frequently. The Johnsons fear another flood could hit this piece of land that used to be their refuge.
“I can’t imagine why you would ever want to do this twice in a lifetime,” Kim said.
InsideClimate News staff writer Neela Banerjee and videographer Anna Belle Peevey contributed to this report.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Don’t put that rhinestone emblem on your car’s steering wheel, US regulators say
- Man arrested in slaying of woman found decapitated in Northern California home, police say
- Taylor Swift walks arm in arm with Selena Gomez, Brittany Mahomes for NYC girls night
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- US orders Puerto Rico drug distribution company to pay $12 million in opioid case
- See Rachel Zegler Catch Fire in Recreation of Katniss' Dress at Hunger Games Prequel Premiere
- US senators seek answers from Army after reservist killed 18 in Maine
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Slipknot drummer Jay Weinberg leaves band after 10-year stint: 'We wish Jay all the best'
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- War took a Gaza doctor's car. Now he uses a bike to get to patients, sometimes carrying it over rubble.
- 'Sickening and unimaginable' mass shooting in Cincinnati leaves 11-year-old dead, 5 others injured
- Blinken wraps up frantic Mideast tour with tepid, if any, support for pauses in Gaza fighting
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Trial opens for ex-top Baltimore prosecutor charged with perjury tied to property purchases
- Police say a gunman fired 22 shots into a Cincinnati crowd, killing a boy and wounding 5 others
- South Africa recalls ambassador and diplomatic mission to Israel and accuses it of genocide in Gaza
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Jalen Hurts' gutsy effort after knee injury sets tone for Eagles in win vs. Cowboys
5 Things podcast: US spy planes search for hostages in Gaza
Climate activists smash glass protecting Velazquez’s Venus painting in London’s National Gallery
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
5 Things podcast: US spy planes search for hostages in Gaza
Vikings QB Joshua Dobbs didn't know most of his teammates' names. He led them to a win.
How Midwest Landowners Helped to Derail One of the Biggest CO2 Pipelines Ever Proposed