Ron,
Here is what I observed last year, while we where out on the BSF and had most of the SpeedWeek event set up.
Wednesday evening we had some pretty bad Thunder Storms right on the lakebed. That happened at about 6 or 7 pm Mountain time.
On Thursday morning when we went out to asses the damage, it did not look bad. Course 4 was almost dry. Course 3 needed about
one day after the finish line. Course 2 had about 1/2" to 1" in spots (bottom base of cones did not show) and the rest was drying somewhat quickly. Course one had about a couple of inches over most of the course and same for the inspection area and pits.
Nothing we had not dealt with before. We had storms and that much water on the lakebed before and started running the very next day.
But, it was all WHITE and still beautiful. No mud, silt or dirt on the salt at that point.
Then the second storm came in and I don't quite remember if that was Thursday or Friday night. But what I do remember, we went out
the very next morning and the second storm must have hit right above the mountain range. There was sooo much mud, I had never seen
it like that. Here is what the courses looked like:
Course 4 was still nice and White, with very little water covering it. Course 3 was about the same with close to 2 1/2" of water standing
on it. Course 2 had about 3" at the starting line, going down course 2 it became less and then again deeper at about the 4 or 5 mile.
But, most of it was still white, with very little mud, silt or dirt in the water.
Now, coming to course 1, our Long Course. There was about 6 to 8 inches of water on the entire course, with the bottom 1 or 2 inches
being mud. The Inspection area and Pits were about a foot under water. But there was about 2 to 4 inches of mud/silt on the bottom.
There was soo much mud, that we could not drive in most of the areas. We got close enough and got out, to patrol the area by foot.
Some of us had tennis shoes, others were bare foot. There was soo much debris floating in the water and the biggest problem was,
everything hidden on the bottom in the mud/slush. There were ladders, tables, cones filled with mud, rebar etc.. We could not drive through all these areas, until we knew they were clear. Luckily, none of us got a flat or stuck out there, while we had to clean this
mess up. Of course after we where able to retrieve it all, it had to be cleaned at the car wash and put away for next year (or the next event I guess).
I am a hands on guy, kind of like Sid. I hate if someone tells us, they don't know how the mud/silt got on to the BSF. Quit the BS.
We were there when it started and there were more storms like it last year. To restrict future mud flow coming down from the mountains
on to the BSF is essential. Many teams as Landspeed Louise and Rick V. mentioned, are working on getting this ship steered in the right direction. The entire LSR family needs to stand 100% behind their efforts and give them help as much as we can.
Mike