gardenchat@hort.net
- Subject: RE: Holland bulb production
- From: &* M* <1*@rewrite.hort.net>
- Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2018 11:00:03 -0400
Daryl, Thanks for such a thorough, knowledgeable, first-hand-experience response. I wasn’t worried, just curious. The article was quite interesting while the last paragraph, troubling. I would like to see our country get more serious on this subject with planning ahead like these countries do instead of just responding after the fact and rebuilding. Some municipalities are starting to, but nothing on a national level. Kitty From: owner-gardenchat@hort.net [mailto:owner-gardenchat@hort.net] On Behalf Of DARYL PULIS Kitty, as you probably know, much of the Netherlands is below sea level. For centuries, they've been building dikes to create polders (reclaimed land) and the building and strengthening of dikes continues. My grandmother's family lost family members and friends in the great flood of 1953. I remember the tears falling and ears glued to the radio when I was a little girl, because even though my grandmother was born in Wisconsin, they kept up with family "back home". It was after the 1953 flood that serious engineering skill was called into action by law, and the dikes are truly amazing. I was in Holland in the 90s and they were incredible then, and one that we looked at was still under construction. I was told by one of the young Dutch men I know (a friend of a semi-cousin) that extreme engineering was continuing. The Dutch have also used large quantities of sand to give extra protection, and they created a complicated water gate system to manage water when it gets high. I went looking for more information and found this short article that might interest you. https://www.euronews.com/2017/11/16/dutch-show-the-way-to-deal-with-rising-sea-levels There is much more out there if you Google Netherlands climate change, dikes, polders and the like. By the way, if you're ever in the Netherlands, don't be surprised to be driving down a country road and seeing a ship above you. It's the weirdest feeling to be looking up at it instead of down. Will the dikes hold? I don't know. How high will the seas go? A meter? More? How strong will the storms be? Will the dikes hold? Probably, though they might be overtopped by waves as some of the earlier ones were. The bulb fields, as you probably know, are not far from the sea. They are raised fields with drainage ditches every little bit. Water collects there and is pumped out to sea. There is land farther inland that is higher. Bulb production might be moved there, though that would lose them the advantage of being so close to shipping points. daryl
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