While I was working on the stories for this issue, I needed to make multiple trips to The Grill at Morris Bridge and Johnny Câs Italian Eatery on Cross Creek Blvd. at Morris Bridge Rd., and I discovered what appeared to be a new feature on my iPhoneâs âMapsâ app. For the first time that I can remember, the Maps app gave me alternative routes to take from our Silversaw Apartments to these restaurants in order to âAvoid Flood Warning.âÂ
Wait, what? I know weâve had a super-rainy last several weeks (more on this below), but I donât even remember being cautioned to âAvoid a Flood Warningâ even after some of our hurricanes hit â and the only major named storm to hit Florida, which wasnât even that bad here, was Hurricane Debby, which came ashore as a Category 1 hurricane near Steinhatchee, FL â more than 150 miles north of here â and hit our area with really only mild tropical storm-force winds on Aug. 5.
Since then, yes there have been many days with heavy rains and I saw lots of reports of major flooding in South Tampa, but very few major roads here that got flooded â and I have done a lot of local driving over the past several weeks and havenât seen any such flooding.
Of course, I also havenât driven the roads through New Tampaâs communities, staying mostly on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd., Cross Creek Blvd., Morris Bridge Rd. (which I would think would be the most likely to flood) and County Line Rd., but those were the precise streets my iPhone Maps app was telling me to avoid.
I was most stunned when the appâs âSuggested Routeâ to The Grill a couple of days before our press time told me to take I-75 north from the S.R. 56 exit (where I live) and take S.R. 54 east to Morris Bridge Rd. before turning south towards Cross Creek Blvd. That trip, however, would have taken me 35 minutes to drive, rather than the 21 minutes the fastest route offered to me (I-75 south to the BBD exit, north on BBD to Cross Creek Blvd. and east towards Morris Bridge) would take.
And, these types of go-way-out-of-my-way routes have been offered to me pretty much every day for the past two weeks or so. Of course, I always took the fastest routes instead â and never saw a single flooded road!
So, whatâs going on? Has my Maps app suddenly taken up drinking?
I honestly have no idea, but I thought I would at least attempt to look into it and ask you, our faithful readers, whether or not youâve been dealing with flooding in or around your New Tampa communities. Hereâs what I found:
Near-Record Rainfall
Spectrum Bay News 9 posted a chart on its website that said that Tampa had experienced its second or third highest rainfall total ever in August 2024, with 17.78 inches of rain, or less than an inch less than the cityâs all-time record August rainfall of 18.59â set back in 1949. The article that accompanied the chart said that âAverage rainfall in a typical August is around 8 to 9 inches. There were some unofficial observations with up to 29 inches during August!â
Of course, the official rainfall numbers are taken at Tampa International Airport, more than 20 miles from the southern tip of New Tampa in Tampa Palms, but still, how much different could the rainfall here really have been and how does it explain my Maps app trying to get me to drive miles out of my way in order to âAvoid Flood Warningsâ every single day?
As someone who hasnât had to drive young kids to school for a couple of decades, I can only imagine how difficult itâs been driving to and from school with your kids in this kind of weather, especially with all of the distracted drivers there are on the roads these days.
In other words, please take extra care out there, whether you have kids or not, and no matter where you are heading. And please, donât try to zip your way through if you do believe thereâs a lot of standing water. Itâs never happened to me, but I have known plenty of people who have flooded their engines and stranded their vehicles doing that.
But, based on what Iâve seen to date, please take these âAvoids Flood Warningsâ messages on whatever app youâre using with a grain of salt.
It just kind of feels like the boy who cried âwolfâ to me. If I keep never having to deal with flooding when Iâm being warned every day, what will happen the one time I donât heed the warning when I should have?
And, just because we havenât really had to deal with a major storm during this yearâs hurricane season yet, please donât assume that our area is out of the woods when it comes to major storms. The next few weeks represent the peak of the season, so keep those flashlights and portable generators at the ready, keep stocked up on potable water and non-perishable food and do everything else you can to keep your family safe.
I am genuinely interested to hear from any of you who have already dealt with flooding in your New Tampa neighborhood the past few weeks. If you have, you can either email me at ads@ntneighborhoodnews.com or send me a message on our âNeighborhood Newsâ Facebook page! I will run any messages I get â whether youâve experienced flooding or not, in our next issue.