A River Runs Through It

Image
  • At the height of runoff on Oct. 27, the LCRA Hydromet river gage showed a raging Llano River in the city of Llano at 10.25ft. (20,317 cfs). Floodwater pushed its way past the spillway on Town Lake and downstream. Contributed photos/Llano County Office of Emergency Management
    At the height of runoff on Oct. 27, the LCRA Hydromet river gage showed a raging Llano River in the city of Llano at 10.25ft. (20,317 cfs). Floodwater pushed its way past the spillway on Town Lake and downstream. Contributed photos/Llano County Office of Emergency Management
  • At the height of runoff on Oct. 27, the LCRA Hydromet river gage showed a raging Llano River in the city of Llano at 10.25ft. (20,317 cfs). Floodwater pushed its way past the spillway on Town Lake and downstream. Contributed photos/Llano County Office of Emergency Management
    At the height of runoff on Oct. 27, the LCRA Hydromet river gage showed a raging Llano River in the city of Llano at 10.25ft. (20,317 cfs). Floodwater pushed its way past the spillway on Town Lake and downstream. Contributed photos/Llano County Office of Emergency Management
Body

At the height of runoff on Oct. 27, the LCRA Hydromet river gage showed a raging Llano River in the city of Llano at 10.25ft. (20,317 cfs). Floodwater pushed its way past the spillway on Town Lake and downstream. LCRA opened two floodgates on Max Starcke Dam as a result. Contributed photo