Fritz, I imagine that the Bastrop State Park soils, laid bare of vegetation by 
the fire and no longer held in place by living root systems, was easy to erode, 
as well, in such a deluge.


But while Logan is right that no amount of volunteers could have averted this 
particular disaster, I think he would also agree that our parks are all 
deteriorating in a less dramatic but inevitable fashion due to gutting of the 
state parks staffs and maintenance funds all across the state.  


Roger Moore



-----Original Message-----
From: Logan McNatt <[email protected]>
To: Fritz Holt <[email protected]>
Cc: Texas Cavers <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Jan 30, 2012 11:47 pm
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] new sinkhole drains pond in south Austin


              Fritz,
    
    Joe Datri posted a good photo of the sinkhole on the U.T. Grotto    
Facebook page.  A lot of dirt and rubble in the bottom to be    removed.  
Cavers are working on getting permission to enter.  I hope    the city or 
whoever is in charge decides to leave it open, but I    have no idea what will 
happen.
    
    Regarding the culverts at Bastrop State Park, the staff is    short-handed 
and dealing with layoffs and budget cutbacks as are    most of the state parks. 
 Not to mention the drought and one of the    worst fires in Texas history.  
Even if they had an army of    volunteers to clean out all the culverts after 
the fire, enough pine    needles and other debris have fallen that the culverts 
would have    clogged up again very quickly during the deluge.
    
        
      
    On 1/30/2012 12:13 PM, Fritz Holt wrote:    
                                                                                
                              
                  
May this                        sinkhole be currently viewed? Will              
          this water quality pond be repaired or allowed                        
to remain as a recharge circuit                        to the aquifer?
                  
 
                  
Whether it                        would have averted the problem                
        or not, it seems the park authorities should                        
have forseen this possibility and kept                        the culverts 
clear of debris.
                  
 
                  
Fritz, with                        hindsight
                  
 
                  
                    
                          
                        
                    
From: Logan McNatt [mailto:[email protected]]                          
                          Sent:                          Saturday, January 28, 
2012                          4:49 PM
                          To:                          Texas Cavers
                          Subject:                          [Texascavers] new   
                       sinkhole drains pond in south Austin
                  
                  
 
                  
Thanks                        to Peter Sprouse and Zara Environmental for       
                 forwarding this information; original source                   
     unknown.  The early morning                        storm of Jan 25th 
dumped 5 to 7 inches of rain                        over much of Travis and 
Bastrop                        counties in 6 to                        10 
hours.  I didn't see anything in the news                        about this 
sinkhole.
                  
                    
 
                  
                  
                    
The hugewater                          quality pond located at Mopac and 
William                          Cannon "Shops at                          
Arbor Trails" (inc. Costco, Target, Chuy's                          etc) went 
from full to empty                          during this morning's storm.  Over 
the past                          year, it was speculated that                  
        the pond was leaking.  Few storms had tested                          
the pond over the last                          few months, but this one 
clearly revealed the                          issue.  The liner gave            
              way (split) to reveal a large sinkhole which                      
    slurped down all the water.                           Musta been one 
helluva whirlpool.
                        
                          
                          (not cave related)  Bastrop State Park                
          got hit real                          hard by the storm because the 
fire removed all                          the ground cover.  The old            
              Civilian Conservation Corps culverts had                          
gotten clogged during the long                          drought, so the water 
overflowed and took out                          large chunks of the park       
                   roads.  See the following link for photos.
                  
                  
https://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Friends-of-the-Lost-Pines-State-Parks-Bastrop-and-Buescher-State-Parks/313894840447
                        
                        Logan
                
              
  
 

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