ColumbiaMagazine.com
Printed from:

Welcome to Columbia Magazine  
 



































 

Photo Archives from ColumbiaMagazine.com. Click here for more photos.

Road still blocked for FM2 bread man but he's home



2019-03-14 - Cumberland County, KY - Photo by Paul Sullivan, Farmers Market bread booth.
The popular Farmers Market booth owner that everyone knows as "the bread man from Burkesville" has reported in on the high water around his place. He is still locked in but Cumberland County EMS has been his "Godsend", rafting him in and out. He had to stay in the hospital for eight days but they got him there and then brought him safely home where he made these photos yesterday. The one on the left shows his still-flooded driveway at his home on Goose Creek. He said water from the Wolf Creek Dam release is still pushing the creek 40 yards outside its boundaries and has his drive totally covered. On the right, well, he said his farm still looks like a lake. He ended his note with, "We need some dry weather coming after the storm, please keep us in your prayers."


Permalink | Comments?


If you have photos you'd like to share with ColumbiaMagazine readers, please email .jpg files to photos@columbiamagazine.com. Please include your name, an email address or phone number, the date the photo was taken, and the location and names of anyone in the photos.

 

































 
 
Quick Links to Popular Features


Looking for a story or picture?
Try our Photo Archive or our Stories Archive for all the information that's appeared on ColumbiaMagazine.com.

 

Contact us: Columbia Magazine and columbiamagazine.com are published by Linda Waggener and Pen Waggener, PO Box 906, Columbia, KY 42728.
Phone: 270.403.0017


Please use our contact page, or send questions about technical issues with this site to webmaster@columbiamagazine.com. All logos and trademarks used on this site are property of their respective owners. All comments remain the property and responsibility of their posters, all articles and photos remain the property of their creators, and all the rest is copyright 1995-Present by Columbia Magazine. Privacy policy: use of this site requires no sharing of information. Voluntarily shared information may be published and made available to the public on this site and/or stored electronically. Anonymous submissions will be subject to additional verification. Cookies are not required to use our site. However, if you have cookies enabled in your web browser, some of our advertisers may use cookies for interest-based advertising across multiple domains. For more information about third-party advertising, visit the NAI web privacy site.