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Acqua Alta In Venice At Near-Record Levels

Where: Venice, Italy
December 1, 2008 at 10:50 AM | by pbb | 2 Comments

Parts of Venice were under more than five feet of water today, as the Adriatic overwhelmed the city's canals in near-record-breaking fashion. While the flood waters quickly receded from the crest, another surge of acqua alta is predicted early Tuesday. The mayor has warned everyone to stay indoors, which shouldn't be a problem, since the city's vaporetti, or water buses, aren't operating normally because of a national transportation strike.

By mid-morning, almost every walkway in Venice was submerged because of the exceptionally high waters, and St. Mark's Square was more than 2.5 feet under. The brave few who did trudge outdoors had boots pulled up above the knee to fend off the sea.

While the flooding looks really awesome in photos, it's horrible for the long-term survival of the city, which is slowly being eaten alive by salt water and sea breezes. Get there now for the best chance of seeing high seas yourself: Floods are most common in the winter.

Related Stories:
· Venice Suffers Worst Flooding in 22 Years [AFP, via Google]
· Have Kayak, Will Travel [Jaunted]
· Water Taxi Travel: Brad on a Boat! [Jaunted]

[Photo of the flooding today: TangOblivion]

2 Comments

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  1. juliana

    Jaunted Contributing Editor

    i just had a brillz idea

    the luxury hotels in venice should give each guest a pair of hunter wellies!
    December 1, 2008 at 11:04 AM
  1. JetSetCD

    Jaunted Member

    eek

    The Acqua Alta means more than Hunter wellies...people traverse the busiest areas of Venice via thin planks raised on cinderblocks and sawhorses. It's slow and perilous going, and no one wants to fall into the seeping lagoon water. My heart goes out to the Veneziani during the Acqua Alta; depths like 2.5' in San Marco (the lowest point anyways) seriously cramp the tourism cash and local business. It's not anything they haven't soldiered through before of course, and they know how to deal with it best: properties that are most affected by the Acqua Alta are sold off to unsuspecting foreigners.
    December 1, 2008 at 11:54 PM

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