Posted on 08/14/2004 2:49:30 PM PDT by jpsb
Say Hello to Earl
OMG -- they got both my husband and his ex-wife! Ewww.
I also see two nephews, a niece and a cousin.
They never do me! (stomps foot)
6000.
Yeah. Different times. A lot was learned from that.
Retired Atlantic hurricane names | ||
Name |
Year
|
Location(s) affected |
Agnes |
1972
|
Florida, Northeast USA
|
Alicia |
1983
|
North Texas
|
Allen |
1980
|
Antilles, Mexico, south Texas
|
Andrew |
1992
|
Bahamas, south Florida, Louisiana
|
Anita |
1977
|
Mexico
|
Audrey |
1957
|
Louisiana, north Texas
|
Betsy |
1965
|
Bahamas, southeast Florida, southeast Louisiana
|
Beulah |
1967
|
Antilles, Mexico, South Texas
|
Bob |
1991
|
North Carolina, Northeast USA
|
Camille |
1969
|
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama
|
Carla |
1961
|
Texas
|
Carmen |
1974
|
Mexico, central Louisiana
|
Carol* |
1954
|
Northeast USA
|
Celia |
1970
|
South Texas
|
Cesar |
1996
|
Central America [Crossed into the Pacific Ocean, becoming Douglas]
|
Cleo |
1964
|
Lesser Antilles, Haiti, Cuba, southeast Florida
|
Connie |
1955
|
North Carolina
|
David |
1979
|
Lesser Antilles, Hispaniola, Florida, Eastern USA
|
Diana |
1990
|
Mexico
|
Diane |
1955
|
Mid-Atlantic & Northeast USA
|
Donna |
1960
|
Bahamas, Florida, Eastern USA
|
Dora |
1964
|
Northeast Florida
|
Elena |
1985
|
Mississippi, Alabama, western Florida
|
Eloise |
1975
|
Antilles, northwest Florida, Alabama
|
Flora |
1963
|
Haiti, Cuba
|
Floyd |
1999
|
Bahamas, North Carolina, mid-Atlantic & Northeast USA
|
Fran |
1996
|
North Carolina, mid-Atlantic USA
|
Frederic |
1979
|
Alabama, Mississippi
|
Georges |
1998
|
Greater Antilles, Florida Keys, Mississippi, Alabama
|
Gilbert |
1988
|
Lesser Antilles, Jamaica, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
|
Gloria |
1985
|
North Carolina, Northeast USA
|
Hattie |
1961
|
Belize, Guatemala
|
Hazel |
1954
|
Antilles, North Carolina, South Carolina
|
Hilda |
1964
|
Louisiana
|
Hortense |
1996
|
Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic
|
Hugo |
1989
|
Antilles, South Carolina
|
Ione |
1955
|
North Carolina
|
Inez |
1966
|
Lesser Antilles, Hispaniola, Cuba, Florida Keys, Mexico
|
Janet |
1955
|
Lesser Antilles, Belize, Mexico
|
Joan |
1988
|
Curacao, Venezuela, Colombia, Nicaragua [Crossed into the Pacific Ocean, becoming Miriam]
|
Keith |
2000
|
Mexico
|
Klaus |
1990
|
Martinique
|
Lenny |
1999
|
Antilles
|
Luis |
1995
|
Barbuda, St. Martin
|
Marilyn |
1995
|
U.S. Virgin Islands
|
Mitch |
1998
|
Honduras, Nicaragua, San Salvador, Mexico, Florida
|
Opal |
1995
|
Northwest Florida, Alabama
|
Roxanne |
1995
|
Yucatan Peninsula
|
*The name "Carol" was used again to denote a hurricane in the mid-Atlantic Ocean in 1965. However, because the name does not appear after that time, it is assumed that the name was retired retrospectively for the damages caused by the 1954 storm of the same name. |
It has to be one for the record books.
Now, a cold summer seems to lead to a warm winter, which with El Nino coming probably, makes a lot of sense.
The current weather pattern would create just unbelievably brutal cold if this was wintertime......just brutal, record-breaking Katie bar the door cold.
But, I doubt it will stay that way through winter. There is almost always a pattern shift between summer and winter.
I like harsh winters (provided lots of snow falls...), so I hope I am wrong about it being a warm winter in reaction to the cool summer.
|
I hope you are wrong, I haven't had to turn the central heat on in three years. Save lot's of money that way.
NOAA - Galveston Storm of 1900
American Heritage magazine, my old standby for American history, had a very comprehensive article with many photographs. The most pitiful one was a dead child's outflung hand from under a pile of debris, the most horrible the barges loaded with bodies. I read it as a young child and it gave me nightmares.
My daughter is just barely old enough to remember the blizzard we had here in early '93. She was 5 - we sledded down our street (4 inches of snow). Of course she wasn't here for Snowjam '82 - 6 inches of beautiful snow that started at 3 p.m. and caused the biggest traffic jam in Atlanta history. We waited it out at a trade show at the Georgia World Congress Center downtown, then drove home through deserted streets (we still had snow tires on the car from when we lived in N.J.) We cross-country skiied on local roads from Virginia-Highlands all the way to the golf course at Emory University and then spent a happy afternoon schussing down the front of the 7th tee (in those days you could buy skis with wire bindings that converted from Xcountry to downhill by removing the rear binding.)
Atlanta is great for ad hoc skiing or sledding, but we just don't get enough snow. Every fifth year or so there's something that covers the ground enough to slide on.
The anecdote I remember best from the article - the Bishop of Galveston and several priests had taken refuge in the cathedral. As they stood there, the wind tore the bell tower from the roof and the bells fell around them. The bishop turned to his rector and said, "Prepare these priests for death." AFAIK they all survived. The rector, Father Kirwin, was a major force in disaster relief after the storm.
The NAO config is just perfect for brutal cold, if this were winter.
That is why it has been so cool this summer.
Well, you know what? If I have evacuate now, I'll need a shelter where I can take my horse:')
Seriously, I would make arrangements with a boarding stable in a safe area, just for pasture board. If you've got a trailer, no reason you couldn't do that.
My parents have arrangements to stay with a friend in Madison, about halfway to Atlanta from the coast. Of course, they don't have a horse to deal with, but Madison is full of stables and there are plenty of farmers with barns.
The problem is that you never know how far inland these storms will travel and going up coast a gamble because if the storm turns you have moved closer to it. I can't go south or I would be in Mexico. I'm kind of blocked in.
I wouldn't go up the coast either. Inland is better.
How close are you to the coast? You are in Ga, aren't you?. I'm exactly 1 mile from the port and then nothing but Gulf. Okie about 8 miles inland.
LOL. We have concrete hills probably here til El Paso. San Antonio area my closest probably. I'm going to talk with some of the boarders that have money horses and see where they go.
My parents live on a tidal island on the GA coast. We were just down there visiting, but scampered back ahead of the hurricane (that missed them after all, turned east further than anyone expected.)
I remember Agnes. Retired, but not forgotten.
I notice that I'm scheduled again in 2007.....hopefully I won't do as much damage then as hubby did in Florida on Friday.
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