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Although the job requires 24-hour vigilance, Reynold Minsky, president of a north Louisiana levee district, said there are some places in his mostly rural district of forest and farmland where he will not ask anyone to go after sundown. "Unless we've got a serious situation that we know we've found before dark, we don't ask these people to go into these wooded areas because of the snakes and the alligators," Minsky said while taking a break from helicopter tours of the levees. "That's inhumane." Minsky's 5th Louisiana Levee District is plagued these days by "sand boils," places where river water has found a way through earthen levees and bubbled up on the dry side like an artesian well. He insists they are no reason for alarm. If the water is clear, as it has been so far, that means the levee is not eroding. Stopping the boil involves ringing it with sandbags. In New Orleans, workers inspect the levees daily when the water is high to look for potential trouble spots. The levees there
-- which are not among those that failed along canals after Hurricane Katrina
-- have survived high water before and will survive this latest test, city officials said. The opening of the Morganza has stopped the river's rise at New Orleans, but the relief valve sent water gushing into the mostly rural Atchafalaya River basin. For those in the path of waters let loose by the Morganza, a tense waiting game has begun. On Monday, 75-year-old Leif Montin watched a truck tow away a storage pod containing most of the furniture he and his wife have in their home in Butte LaRose, a community emptied by residents fleeing the rising waters. "I guess you guys are ready to get out of here," the driver said to Montin. "Yep. Pretty much," responded Montin. Water hadn't reached Montin's home, but a canal behind it has been rising by about a foot a day since the Morganza was opened. He's trying to remain optimistic that his house won't take on too much damage. "I'm keeping my fingers crossed," he said. About 60 miles north, 38-year-old Michelle Reech said she and her family decided to evacuate to Magnaville from the community of Big Bend when waters came within 150 yards of her home. Reech's mother, Patricia Desselle, 64, said their neighborhood in Big Bend hadn't flooded since the last time the Morganza spillway opened in 1973. "You could pick crawfish off the side of the levees," she recalled. "I'm not lying." ___ Online:
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