Manitoba

Flooding hits Lake Manitoba properties - again

Property owners along Lake Manitoba are once again surveying flooding damage after gusting winds pushed water inland on the weekend.
Many properties, like this one in Twin Lakes Beach, are surrounded by water after windstorms battered the area on the weekend. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Property owners along Lake Manitoba are once again surveying flooding damage after gusting winds pushed water inland on the weekend.

The wind was so strong, it shoved the water overtop the dikes put in to protect properties.

"We had expected additional water to come in with the wave set up and that has happened. We've had some pretty heavy northwest winds and it has inundated the back countries," said Earl Zotter, reeve of the Rural Municipality of St.Laurent, where many of the communities are located.

The road to Twin Lakes Beach, located on the lake's southeast shore, has been closed because of the high water, Zotter said.

'A lot of the places that were just hanging on are no longer hanging on.' —Jim Stevenson

Jim Stevenson, who has a property in Twin Lakes Beach, said some cottages look like they're sliding into the lake after the storm eroded the shore.

"A lot of the places that were just hanging on are no longer hanging on. There's a lot of damage down a couple miles past our place that obviously was just [new] because we've never seen this before," he said.

In Twin Lakes and nearby Sandpiper Beach, cottages are surrounded by water.

"It's eight inches deep, right to the skirting of the cottage," said Dale Crawford, who has a cottage at Sandpiper.

"All the progress we've made in the last six weeks; right back where we were."

 The year of flooding

A resident in Twin Lakes Beach, in the RM of St. Laurent, wades through high waters to save belongings during a flood and storm in June. ((CBC))

Flooding has plagued the area for much of the year.

In May, some 700 residences in the RM of St. Laurent were evacuated after wind-whipped waves violently crashed into the shore, tearing open some structures.

Five families had to be rescued by RCMP in Zodiac boats because the roads were swallowed by rushing water. Others were rescued by helicopter.

Then a storm in June damaged numerous properties in Twin Lakes, Laurentian Beach, Delta Beach, and Sandpiper Beach. The water was chest-deep in places several metres from the shoreline and a number of homes were torn open from the raging waves.

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Lake Manitoba has been at a record-high level for most of the year, leaving it extremely vulnerable to any strong winds.

The lake levels were initially raised due to floodfighting measures along the Assiniboine River in the spring. Excessive water from the river was channeled through the Portage Diversion for months.

The 29-kilometre long channel takes the water from an entry point just west of Portage la Prairie and empties it into Lake Manitoba.

Diverting the Assiniboine helps minimize flooding where the Assiniboine joins the Red River downstream in Winnipeg but it has created a perilous situation on the lake.

Chronic rainstorms in the early part of the summer continues to play havoc with the levels.

Zotter said he's lost count of how many times the road to Twin Lakes has been covered by water.

"Almost every time the wind blew, we'd lose the road. So right now our coordinator is down there taking a look at it," he said.

"We're probably going to have to bring in some material to re-establish the road again."

Storms along Lake Manitoba devastated properties in Delta Beach earlier this year. ((CBC))