Lake Champlain is having flooding issues with waves crashing into low lying cottages. So on Winni we are still lucky not to have that occur here.
Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, Vt. — The Lake Champlain ferry between Charlotte and Essex, N.Y., is running again.
The Lake Champlain Transportation Company says 50 truckloads of gravel were used to elevate the ferry dock on the New York side to keep vehicles and passengers out of the water.
After heavy spring rains and snowmelt, the lake level is 102.2 feet above sea level, nearly 2-feet above flood stage.
The Charlotte ferry service was suspended at the end of April. It resumed Thursday.
The ferry between Burlington and Port Kent, N.Y., hasn't started its summer service yet. Other ferries are running normally.
Vermont Public Radio:
Gusts Expected To Cause More Flood Damage
Thursday, 05/26/11 12:04pm
Ross Sneyd - Colchester, VT
(Host) Residents and officials along the Vermont side of Lake Champlain are worried about more flood damage as winds pick up today. Forecasts call for gusts out of the west. And Burlington Public Works Director Steve Goodkind says that will cause more of the kind of damage the lakeshore saw earlier this week with southerly winds.
(Goodkind) "I think there was a lot of destruction, maybe as much from the waves on Monday as there had been from the flooding in some areas. And it could repeat today. The westerly wind has just about the same effect. We're exposed from the south, the west and a little bit from the north with the winds."
(Host) The damage is caused when the wind kicks up waves. They cause erosion along the lakeshore. They also throw driftwood and other debris onto beaches and into fragile lakeside banks.
Officials say the problem will be concentrated in the northern part of the lake. Many summer camps were damaged earlier this week and they could be in danger again.
There also are a number of lakeshore roads that are exposed, including the causeway that links the Champlain Islands to the mainland.