Sorry, I don't have any more pictures of the flood. Spending time behind the wheel, trying to see the road, at night, when it's covered in a couple feet of water, in the driving rain and wind. The deuce in that picture is a city vehicle that took a turn a little too tight and ran into a ditch. I tried pulling it back using my deuce's winch, but that only resulted in dragging my deuce toward the stuck one. There was no anchor point behind my deuce to attach to. That and, cough cough, the bolt instead of a shear pin in the winch made for a short winching operation. No damage done to the winch. The above picture was taken after the tide had dropped a little. It was waist deep, up to the driver's side headlight with the angle the deuce was leaning in the ditch. These engines run in deep crud. The deuce was pushing water out from the hood gaps, and still running.
After failing to pull the city's deuce out with my deuce, I took their place and carried out the elderly couple that needed evacuating. Many, many, missions like that over a 3 day period. The storm staying put made for 2 or 3 high tides, each one causing flooding over and over.
My 813 or 814 would have done good too, but they were parked above the flooding, and staying there. Bad enough driving the deuce in that salt water. The 'ol girl got a good hosing off from the fire dept fire hose afterward, then another hand washing at home, then the winch cable was unwound and cleaned and regreased and rewound good and tight. Next is time to drain and refill the axles and couple times.
These deuces proved their abilities last weekend.