Wow, what a light show last nigh. How wonderful to live in an area where we have plentiful rain and our grass and trees look wonderfully green.With this comes sometimes storms that cause problems as those in the midwest can attest with the recent tornados and high wind damage.Today we have high water on Georgetown shores. Remember we live on a 140 acre lake that is actually a large retention pond for the area. We are open to Rush Creek and our lake flows in that direction. We are also open to the drain that takes runoff water from south of VanBuren and holds it until it can flow into Rush Creek. If Rush Creek is to overflow, it could potentially backfill into our lake area. We have never seen this but it is possible.All lakes fluctuate in levels and ours is no exception. If you want to go visit a few that have a large fluctuation go look at Rushmore Lake just a stones throw away or visit Dunken Lake over by Caledonia. Both of these lakes hold run off and after major storms rise significantly.Many other lakes have moratoriums on large wake boat traffic during high water times because the wakes can further damage shorelines and docks that are underwater. We have not seen this type of increase before and so no rules have been put in place here but I think it would be a good practice. When out in the next few days, be considerate of what your boat wake is doing and please keep it to a minimum. More discussion of this topic can be found at the GS Forum http://www.georgetownshores.org/private/forum under Water Level.

I agree… good idea to stay away from large wake boat traffic–or maybe ANY wake boat traffic–while the water remains so high. We don’t need more sand washed into the lake making it more shallow, and there are several homeowners who don’t need those large wakes beating up their currently fragile and/or already damaged retaining walls.
-jv