Anonymous wrote:I’d say yes, but to a lesser extent. There are tons of little streams across the area that all lead down to the bigger/Potomac. Any area facing 20 inches of rain in 24 hours will have damage.
Vermont and the TN/NC areas have towns built along river valleys. It only seems logical that these areas would get washed away. The homes in the mountains suffered tree damage and some flash flooding damage. That’s likely what most people in the DC area would suffer.
Also, the downstream effect would likely submerge a good portion of SE and SW DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good point, there is the Potomac and really no way out.
OP here. Yes, my main concern is the Potomac and all the small tributaries that feed into it flooding if there is a cat 4 hurricane.
Anonymous wrote:Asheville and its surroundings are geographically different from the DC area and pretty distinct from most other places, as far as I understand.
It was the perfect storm (no pun intended) of a 1,000 year event, in an area that is essentially a shallow bowl surrounded by higher elevations with runoff, also surrounded by TWO major rivers and countless creeks, in a geographically remote (relatively) location with fewer resources/harder to travel roads/where it is harder to store and disseminate supplies.
I mean, catastrophic rare events can impact anyone, but the exact combination of what affected Asheville is not likely to affect DC. Take your pick or what could, including flooding, but not in that formula.
Anonymous wrote:Good point, there is the Potomac and really no way out.