As the Russian River began receding, so did expectations in this community that has seen floods before, where some residents still acted surprised.
[Ads /]
VIDEO: Difference in water levels along Russian River in Guerneville from start of flooding to day after
"Forty-six feet? Crazy," said resident James Carevich.
"You sound like you didn't believe it," we asked.
"I believe it, now. Hell, yes," said Carevich.
That's hell as in high water, block after block north of Main Street. It's a region of Guerneville where front porches now double as docks.
Wendell Joost is glad he raised his house after the flood of '97 and good that he did.
[Ads /]
"The water was four steps up last night," he showed us. "The step I am standing on would have been underwater."
"How much room did you have till it got into your house," we asked Matt Lonardo.
RELATED: A look back at Guerneville's 'Great Valentine's Day of Flood 1986'
"Maybe four feet? But we have a three-story house."
Monte Rio Fire Chief Steve Baxman has seen all of this before. He remembers the flood of 1986, and all that followed.
[Ads /]
"What happens next? The water comes down. The people look at the damage. Then they pull out the rotten food from their refrigerators. We go house to house. We turn on the power."
In Guerneville, proof once again that history repeats itself.
And when water hits 46 feet, that learning will take them only so far.
"What does the world need to know about Guerneville?" we asked Jeff Bridges as he looked down from his deck of a house still surrounded by water.
"That we are alive and functioning."