KOSCIUSKO —
If you go to the center of the State of Mississippi map and head West, you will find the a crooked and gnarly Issaquena County with Sharkey County right up against it.
Both are places that I call home. Home – where the land is as flat and the people’s laughter is as rich as the soil, where cotton, corn and soybeans grow.
It’s a simpler life where your home-cooked meals consist of butter beans and corn bread with plenty of sweet tea.
And now, it’s my home that is preparing for the mighty Mississippi River’s overflowing contents.
‘Be prepared’
I traveled home Friday and even though Rolling Fork probably won’t see any water, my parents, sister and I are now prepared.
We’ve packed photos, aged hand-written letters and mementos of our childhood. Those only one-of-a-kind items that money can’t buy.
The attic has been cleaned out and is ready for more stuff. Like the Boys Scouts of America boast “Be prepared.”
Last Wednesday, a public meeting was held in Rolling Fork with the following findings being reported by The Deer Creek Pilot:
Expect backwater to reach 95 feet, unless the Yazoo Backwater Levee is breached.
If that occurs, Corps and Levee Board predict backwater levels at 106. People in areas of Issaquena and Sharkey Counties who were flooded in 2008 should prepare to leave their homes in the next few days.
Those at elevations of 92-95 should also be making preparations to relocate or secure their belongings.
Packing up
My first home was in the small community of Valley Park in Issaquena County.
While the house that my parents and I lived in is no longer there, there are still Newmans in these parts.
My great-aunt and uncle, Florence and Horace Newman, left their home on Tuesday and will be staying with their son.
Packing up their home was no easy task, when several generations of Newmans have lived in that house including my dad.
When you’ve got lots of family, you got lots of family stuff.
’79 flood
As I have been told, in the 1979 flood, the Newman house had two feet of water in it and it was six months before they moved back in.
There are photos of me “fishing” out of a the back end of my dad’s truck and in a boat in the flood waters that hit the area a year after my birth. Our house wasn’t flooded. Hopefully, that will be the case this time.
Grandpa says
My grandpa, at age 91, doesn’t think the flood waters will be lapping up at his door in Rolling Fork.
If you’ve survived the 1927 flood on the Mississippi River bank, then the flood of 2011 shouldn’t be hard to out last.
So while you’re saying your prayers for those devastated by the recent tornadoes, add the folks in the Delta. They need it.
Leslie N. Dees is the managing editor at The Star-Herald. Email her at editor@starherald.net or follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/lndees
Opinion
Water everywhere? Well, maybe
- Opinion
-
-
To ‘my boy’ and the Class of 2013
Legendary coach Vince Lombardi said, "The price of success is hard work, dedication to the job at hand, and the determination that whether we win or lose, we have applied the best of ourselves to the task at hand."
-
Can ‘good’ news sell the newspaper?
As the saying goes – “If it bleeds, it leads.” The “hard stuff” – murders, wrecks, fires, deaths and the like – has been selling newspapers and upping the ratings of television stations for years.
-
On Getting ‘Stranded’
Beth and I were in Kosciusko last week for our semiannual visit to the dentist. As we rounded the corner from West Adams onto North Madison, there she stood in all her refurbished splendor: The Strand Theater!
-
Fear of Big Red canceled fishing
I have said before that my daddy loved fishing. Not having a son to fish with for eight years, I was his fishing buddy. He had his favorite “fishing holes” and one of them belonged to Mr. John Yates. The only problem was, we had to walk about a mile from where we parked our car to get to the pond.
-
Summertime visiting
I was always so excited for summer break to come about because that meant that I could begin my visits to my cousin’s houses out in the country. I loved to spend several days with my aunt and uncle and three cousins in the Hebron community. I would always go during their revival time and we would go every night.
-
Parlez-vous francais?
Absolutely not! Some of my Southern English is so drawn out with my Southern accent that some cannot understand me at all times.
-
Bacon accident
My husband loves bacon. But only if it’s cooked in the oven at 425 degrees. It comes out in about 20 minutes crispy and crunchy.
-
‘The night before Christmas’
T’was several days before Christmas and all throughout The Star-Herald everyone was scurrying to get the next edition out.
-
Fire escape fear becomes a reality
When I was in middle school, we went to school in the big three story red brick building that used to set where the Attala County Library now sets. The first floor was third grade, second floor fourth grade, and third floor fifth grade
-
Memories of The Strand
The Strand Theatre was so important to me and my life during my childhood. I was given 50 cents a week for an allowance and all of it would go to my Saturday movie time.
- More Opinion Headlines
-
To ‘my boy’ and the Class of 2013

