Brothers Save Home from Flood with Homemade Levee 👇
https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/brothers-save-their-home-from-massive-flood-with-homemade-levee-father-who-taught-them-would-have-liked-that-watch/
_____________________
MENTIONS
🔗 Safeguard Europe | @SafeguardEuropeLtd
https://safeguardeurope.com/shop
Fox Weather feature
https://youtu.be/PZzmBhE22gs
_____________________
Justin and Tucker Humphrey, brothers from Bogota, Tennessee, grew up learning to build dirt levees from their late father, Mike, to protect their family home from floods. In April 2025, a catastrophic storm caused the nearby Obion River to rise nine feet in nine hours, flooding 60% of Bogota’s homes and farmland.
Refusing to abandon their childhood home, the brothers used an excavator and tractor to construct a nine-foot-tall levee around the farmhouse, moving three acres of dirt to form a barrier.
Working in shifts with their mother, Amy, they reinforced the levee with plastic sheeting and sandbags, patrolling day and night to counter erosion from wind-driven waves. The Bogota community rallied, supplying generators, boats, and materials, making it a collective effort. The levee held firm, keeping the home dry while floodwaters turned the property into an island, a striking image that went viral.
The brothers’ success, rooted in their father’s practical lessons, outperformed many modern flood defences, including a $260 million state system that failed elsewhere. However, the flood damaged their farm, and recovery costs mounted. Neighbours, including Amy’s mother, lost their homes, prompting community fundraisers.
The Humphreys’ story highlights the power of local knowledge and resilience in the face of climate-driven floods, exposing gaps in rural flood infrastructure. Tucker vowed to rebuild taller if needed, reflecting their determination to stay in Bogota. Their levee, a testament to inherited wisdom and community spirit, stands as a model of defiance against nature’s wrath.