DULUTH - Stories from the disastrous flood that began here 10 years ago today are hard to forget.
A zoo seal languishing in the middle of a road. A young boy swept into a gushing culvert and spit out alive, nearly half a mile away. Streets buckling, a car falling into a massive sinkhole and homes filling with feet of muddy water.
All this happened when more than 10 inches of rain fell in 24 hours and raging waters overcame the city's hillside streams in its most devastating flood in history.
"It was one of the worst days of my life," said Lizzy Larson, a Lake Superior Zoo employee who helped rescue the seal.
The zoo lost more than a dozen farm animals and birds as a swollen creek running through its grounds became plugged by trees and debris at the mouth of a culvert, turning the zoo into a bathtub and sending its polar bear and seals cresting over their enclosures.
Destruction played out throughout Duluth and nearby communities, resulting in $167 million in relief aid from the state to help pick up the pieces. A decade later, as extreme storms grow more common, is the city ready for more catastrophic rain?
Still vulnerable
State, federal and city money helped replace and in some cases improve destroyed culverts, pipes and storm tunnels. Some homes built atop flooded underground creeks were bought by the city so they couldn't be used again, and alternative floodwater paths were built.