Jump to content

The Bangkok River Level Thread 2024 - Post your images and local situation here.


Crossy

Recommended Posts

3 minutes ago, Crossy said:

 

The news reports from the north are pretty horrific 😞 

 

At least when it gets to us it's more like a slow-motion train wreck.

 

My wife has been doing food relief all week. The whole center of the city took  1.5 meters.

 

Slow motion is right, figure maybe 1-2 meters per second, all the way to Bangkok. It may take out a lot of bridges along the way. There is a lot of water heading South from Issan too, leftovers from the Typhoon.

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, Andrew Dwyer said:

Had a little look at the levels In Ayutthaya and they seemed the same if not a little lower !

 

I'd hope they are letting water out in anticipation...

  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Really nothing much going on for now.

 

Latest high-tide at Pak-Kret

 

image.png.2b50c73629c7e143bdeb16b86258cfbd.png

 

Meanwhile, Madam has determined that we are building a 50cm "flood wall" for our downstairs area. It's actually part of the plan to enclose the area but that bit has been accelerated "just in case".

 

A height of 50cm will take us over the level experienced in 2011 and is well above the 2022 flood level.

 

 

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Crossy said:

Really nothing much going on for now.

 

Latest high-tide at Pak-Kret

 

image.png.2b50c73629c7e143bdeb16b86258cfbd.png

 

Meanwhile, Madam has determined that we are building a 50cm "flood wall" for our downstairs area. It's actually part of the plan to enclose the area but that bit has been accelerated "just in case".

 

A height of 50cm will take us over the level experienced in 2011 and is well above the 2022 flood level.

 

 

Would you advise against a trip in from Cambodia by road over the next few days? Looks a bit gnarly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 9/7/2024 at 11:15 AM, Crossy said:

We do have a slight rise in level here, 1.5m below "worry" but not a whole lot of stuff happening at Pak-Kret (latest high-tide).

 

image.png.f90cdd4e8083d288c52185199618532e.png

I think it´s a great initiative that they put red color on the pole when water is running over the fence. That way, we all understand that is dangerous. What would we do without the red color? 🤣

Anyway, it looks like it has been quite stable and no need to panic.

Edited by Gottfrid
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, John Drake said:

Pathumthani turned into a giant lake back in 2011

 

Yeah, but it didn't in 2022 (it was pretty ruddy damp mind.).

 

That's a relatively tiny level difference.

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

High tide at Pak Kret, level is up a little.

 

image.png.8d08352f03c3cb6ddd39f6571d8fe4ef.png

 

And my standard reference photos.

 

image.jpeg.b96ef460724a3dd798d462f4a1b4eed7.jpeg

 

I see that the neighbour's "shed" which was wonky at best has succumbed to last night's storm 😞 

 

image.jpeg.b586799904ad6db4e4c9b83d814b9312.jpeg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Crossy said:

Friday evening high at Pak Kret and Mueang Pathum Thani.

 

Definitely a degree of upness, nothing to worry about yet.

 

image.jpeg.869777e581a838f9acc302c82b3449b2.jpeg

 

image.jpeg.58af9414c4f5f59ed54677ca1d66e424.jpeg


Thank you. Definite upness.

The pointers on the Mueang Pathum Thani camera refer to 2011 and 2021 and 2022 levels do you know? I think that's what it looks like but not sure. I know you just found a webcam so probably don't know more than what I see but maybe you have more knowledge.  If so it surprising that 2011 is not really significantly higher than  2021 and 2022 - I guess that shows how much the infrastructure has improved since? 2011 was truly dreadful.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, josephbloggs said:

If so it surprising that 2011 is not really significantly higher than 2021 and 2022

 

Yeah, that was my thought too.

 

In 2011 we had about 30cm of water in the house, sadly we were too far along with construction to raise our floor levels by much.

 

In 2022 the water just crept into the lowest parts of downstairs.

 

EDIT Madam indicates the water level post the 2011 flood.

image.jpeg.5ed9b8dc0344e4d2589d225902553765.jpeg

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, Crossy said:

 

Yeah, that was my thought too.

 

In 2011 we had about 30cm of water in the house, sadly we were too far along with construction to raise our floor levels by much.

 

In 2022 the water just crept into the lowest parts of downstairs.

 


Yes, it's interesting, and I can only put it down to improvements in the infrastructure which have been quite significant since then (massive drainage tunnels etc). Obviously any water in the house is too much but progress is good.

And you still get people here moaning when water doesn't drain quickly enough after epic rainstorms, I don't think people realise how much Thailand has done in the last 10-15 years. When I moved here in 1995 Sukhumvit would regularly flood to a meter or so after a heavy downpour, it was almost normal. 

These days localised flooding is gone pretty quickly, I don't think any drainage system in the world can handle the volume of water that an intense monsoon can dump in one area in a very short period of time. It would definitely help if drainage paths were more regularly unclogged (and not done after the fact) but I can definitely appreciate and recognise the massive advances made here over the last 15 years or so.

Hoping your feet remain dry this year, and thanks for all the updates.

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Level here in Ayutthaya is high but no reason for concern ( yet ! ) but can change quickly if excessive water released up north.

The Chao Phraya being the main culprit as formed by the joining of several other rivers ( Ping, Nan etc ) and right here in Ayutthaya also joined by Pasak river to head off in the direction of Bangkok via Crossy’s front room !! ( only jesting ).

 

Here you can see the Pasak ( right ) joining the Chao Phraya ( middle) to continue south ( left ).

 

 

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Crossy said:

 

Yeah, that was my thought too.

 

In 2011 we had about 30cm of water in the house, sadly we were too far along with construction to raise our floor levels by much.

 

In 2022 the water just crept into the lowest parts of downstairs.

 

EDIT Madam indicates the water level post the 2011 flood.

image.jpeg.5ed9b8dc0344e4d2589d225902553765.jpeg

 

 


Just saw your edit with the picture of madam. Wow, that is serious!

In 2011 I was working with a film director who, on her personal time and money, rented a helicopter and flew all over northern Bangkok to show the authorities what it was like. She shot it with high end cinema cameras (Arri Alexa with Prime lenses if anyone is geeky and into that stuff). I wish I still had that footage, it was absolutely astonishing.

In 2012 I worked on a TV commercial for an "exclusive" housing project near Don Mueang - it was a Golden Land project but I forget the name. Right on a lake, stunning 20-30m baht houses, all of them had a water mark from the flood around 2-2.5m high which we had to clean off in post production.

Edited by josephbloggs
  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It was a well developed muban. Stilled called Grand Canal but back at the time of the floods the prices were in the 8-15 million baht range.  Now running 12-20 million. The owners cleaned and repainted the houses and life has gone on. 

 

Its not on a lake but a series of canals. The company that built this muban was excellent, they built new roads and landscaped the area once again after the floods. A very popular place to live and the residents are very happy indeed as it is still well maintained.  Pass it often and it looks great. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, marin said:

It was a well developed muban. Stilled called Grand Canal but back at the time of the floods the prices were in the 8-15 million baht range.  Now running 12-20 million. The owners cleaned and repainted the houses and life has gone on. 

 

Its not on a lake but a series of canals. The company that built this muban was excellent, they built new roads and landscaped the area once again after the floods. A very popular place to live and the residents are very happy indeed as it is still well maintained.  Pass it often and it looks great. 


Thanks. The lake was my memory playing tricks - I just remembered the water. The commercial was definitely shot after the floods as we had to clean off the water marks, maybe it was sold in different stages.

G Land are one of the good developers here so good to hear it is still well maintained. I live in a moo ban of another good developer here and it still looks like new after 15 years, the maintenance is excellent.

  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, josephbloggs said:


I remembered - it was called Golden Land Grand Canal. And I found it hilarious because the commercial ended with their logo for "G Land", but no spaces so it was just "Gland". Titter.

I'll have to see if the commercial exists on YouTube...

 


Woo Hoo, I found it! Brings back memories, one of the first projects I did at my post company back then.
 


Ok, there was a space between "G" and "Land" but it still reads Gland to me.

Hijacking of the thread is now complete, back to the informative river level posts from now on.

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure if people are aware but there is an app called Thai Water which gives various weather information including reservoir levels, daily inflow, daily outflow etc. 

Below is a screen shot of the reservoir information page. Red is above 80% capacity and dark red is above 100%.

 

Screenshot_20240930_134910_ThaiWater.jpg

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

49 minutes ago, alanrchase said:

Not sure if people are aware but there is an app called Thai Water which gives various weather information including reservoir levels, daily inflow, daily outflow etc. 

Below is a screen shot of the reservoir information page. Red is above 80% capacity and dark red is above 100%.

 

Screenshot_20240930_134910_ThaiWater.jpg

 

It's this one in the Google Play store.

 

EDIT It looks like it's only available in the Thai PlayStore, it is available on Apkpure for those who don't want to set up a local Google account.

 

image.png.354b5c51f7f0e6c7e10bb3f0dd99fdba.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Crossy said:

 

It's this one in the Google Play store.

 

EDIT It looks like it's only available in the Thai PlayStore, it is available on Apkpure for those who don't want to set up a local Google account.

 

image.png.354b5c51f7f0e6c7e10bb3f0dd99fdba.png

I got it from Play Store on my android phone, no need to set up any local accounts. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

High tide this morning: -

 

About 1.1m until "worry" although parts of the village are a bit damp.

image.jpeg.ed5c2f10bc9fd10a5a0ddc2cd74128d1.jpeg

 

image.jpeg.a248529512faf95bdedff5673524e8c3.jpeg

 

 

Pak Kret

image.png.2a9d473011480538efd07f664afdcd21.png

 

Muang Pathum Thani

image.png.ab641557b3d676c42b18792992f3c080.png

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I note that the Pathum Thani camera has moved slightly and we can now see the 2554 marker, waaaaay higher than anything more recent!

 

It's actually more in line with what we saw during the mega-flood whilst our home was under construction vs 2022 when we were mm from having water in the house.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

High tide this morning: -

 

Definitely up on yesterday, 90cm until "worry".

 

I hope the occupants of that spirit house are "water-gods"!!

 

image.jpeg.14835531d1e2cadd5b6a5291326c6b6c.jpeg

 

227972_0.jpg.01f9299ff89e995e01899cc7290af89c.jpg

 

Pak Kret

image.png.6534c8e62553e6a12730267dcfd0b3ac.png

 

Muang Pathum Thani

image.png.bcb7ad221acc6e47c53849afff52a257.png

  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...