@@dragoonseye76 lmao did you even watch the video? Let me explain it easier for you 🤣 they show a picture of the shore line in drought...then they show the exact same area flooded.... Not how it normally looks. They wanted more dramatic visuals so instead of showing normal vs drought, the showed flooded vs drought ..all the while exclaiming that the water has dropped so so much. Go away lol
The Mississippi is some 200 feet deep at Algiers Point/New Orleans, so barge traffic there is nor affected. I was invited into the pilot house on the steamboat Natchez and personally saw the depth gauge as we were arriving back to port. It is the deepest part of the Mississippi so for New Orleans, this is a non- story.
this would be a good time to dump soil into the basin.
The side by side of the rivers isn't even the same spot even the buildings are different
lol showing drought conditions vs flooded conditions ...wow lose what little credibility you have
Agree, this whole broadcast seemed slanted, but comparing current photos to flood pics convinced me.
Yeah. Crazy how weather conditions are wildly different depending on where the location is. S. T. F. U.
@@dragoonseye76 lmao did you even watch the video? Let me explain it easier for you 🤣 they show a picture of the shore line in drought...then they show the exact same area flooded.... Not how it normally looks. They wanted more dramatic visuals so instead of showing normal vs drought, the showed flooded vs drought ..all the while exclaiming that the water has dropped so so much. Go away lol
It call NEWS
Wonder if the river reveals dumped cars with skeletons 🤷🏼♀️
Somebody forgot her mud boots this morning 😁💛
Bet there's a bunch of stuff or treasures in there
Rising sea levels will fill the Mississippi again.
It's low but it'll come back in some years
I’m guessing the smell is getting there
The Mississippi is some 200 feet deep at Algiers Point/New Orleans, so barge traffic there is nor affected. I was invited into the pilot house on the steamboat Natchez and personally saw the depth gauge as we were arriving back to port. It is the deepest part of the Mississippi so for New Orleans, this is a non- story.
Mark. Mark Twain.
"There was a 100 year old ship wreck". Hahahaha!! Fake news! That wood boat has probably been there less than 10 years.
Okay, Karen.
You must be a Trump disciple.
@@thhdhn2 You must be a Ray Nagin d
isciple
Ephrate dring up.
If the water rises