Yes.. here is the report:
SANTA CRUZ - Drivers should beware today of at least two reported mudslides in the Santa Cruz mountains, according to the California Highway Patrol.
Traffic slowed this morning on northbound Highway 17 just south of Sugarloaf Road because of a mudslide in the second lane with a tree down, according to CHP spokeswoman Sarah Jackson. Caltrans workers were dispatched to clean up about 9 a.m.
A second slide was reported on San Jose Road at Hester Creek, about four miles south of Summit Road. The lanes weree still considered passable but county workers were on the scene to clean up the debris.
20 highway 17 city 20 highway 17 city
Can you be more specific on what mudslide your are refering to plaase
Highway # 17, the Trans Canada Highway. Is about a five hour drive.
yes mudslide is a natural disaster...
North of the mudslide in route 111 (not taking the path up the mudslide) just ahead is another mudslide connecting the path to the 1st mudslide
Take HIGHWAY 400 NORTH to HIGHWAY 69. HIGHWAY 400 becomes HIGHWAY 69. Continue STRAIGHT on HIGHWAY 69 NORTH.Take HIGHWAY 69 NORTH to (TRANS-CANADA) HIGHWAY 17 WEST in Greater Sudbury.Take the TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY WEST on HIGHWAY 17 in Ontario, then HIGHWAY 1 in Manitoba to Winnipeg.
the mudslide was invented at the Bully Ranch in Vail, CO.
a mudslide is measured by the feet and times it by every 2 feet
Northern Ontario highway 17
Take HIGHWAY 100 WEST from Timmins to where HIGHWAY 100 ENDS at HIGHWAY 17. Turn right onto HIGHWAY 17 NORTH. HIGHWAY 17 is part of the TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY network.Take HIGHWAY 17 NORTH. to Manitoba where it will become TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 1. Continue WEST TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 1 to TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 101 WEST to BRANDON at EXIT 348A.TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 101 bypasses Winnipeg. Take TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 101 to TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 1 WEST to BRANDON at EXIT 42B.Continue on TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY 1 WEST through Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, to Kamloops, BC.
23-24 highway and 17-20 town and highway
You climb out of it.