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Posted on 08/26/2005 10:25:04 PM PDT by NautiNurse
That's why they bury them above ground in NOLA!
36 hours is usually sufficient for final storm preparations.
16 hours in traffic beats 16 feet underwater
Your feeling may be correct. She's undergoing an EWRC (eye wall replacement cycle). All that dry air in the core will be expelled. The western outflow is starting up. This time tomorrow morning she's going to fill up the Gulf.
!!....but I chose to live in Florida and have for 30 years....
...they say we're in the hurricane cycle..and should expect this kind of thing for the next few years...
...I had never experienced it before, but am seasoned now.----
I qualify that with we did ride out a category 1 called David when my son was a baby.---We spent the night bailing water from the living room that came through our bay windows---and the remainder of the night huddled in a hallway due to tornadoes..
I love Florida....the heat, bugs, humidity, sun......tropical breezes, mild winters, gorgeous sunsets :))
Our neighborhood sustained very little damage....however, a home across the lake from us is still being repaired and reroofed...(slow contractor, I guess)
...but driving back from Jacksonville (Frances)....and Orlando..(Jeanne)....
...we could see widespread damage, especially in parts of Orlando....and all along I-95 from Jacksonville, south.
My personal Tara rode it out very well.....therefore I tend towards staying put next time.
Hey,
There are those mysterious blue lines again.
"Last major Hurricane to make the hit on New Orleans was Betsy in 1965. Celebrated my 1st birthday with the roofing flying off at my grandparents house in a little town of Goodhope."
I was about 5 and living in Metairie when Betsy hit. Those memories will stay with me forever. We had to evacuate through a window (including my Grandma), go to a shelter, watched as our car, with my dad still in it, go onto two wheels as it almost got blown away, the darkness and sounds of glass breaking all over the school we were being sheltered in. To say that Betsy put us through hell is putting it mildly.
The ink was clogged in the tube. They had to scribble to get it running again. ;o)
My sister lost her husband of 25 years to Alzheimer's in July. She is all by herself now and so I think she is not thinking so clearly right now. She said she may come to see me in SC but she doesn't seem to be in too much of a hurry. She has to do everything to prepare on her own and she hasn't even started yet! I doubt she has eve put gas in her car.
And here's the morning model runs from the S. Fla. water management district website. Now I gotta go mow the grass. http://www.sfwmd.gov/org/omd/ops/weather/plots/storm_12.gif
Has anyone heard anything about the Mobile/Foley Alabama area yet? I am trying not to get to excited this time around. At first I thought that this area was going to miss the bullet, but since there will be a second landfall, things have changed.
With all this attention on NOLA, I hope the folks in Mobile are paying even closer attention. Mobile has seen her fair share of storms over the past few years, but that "nightmare scenario" for there has yet to materialize. In all those storms the eye either came right up the Bay or to the east. The result was the water being sucked out of the Bay. I've seen this effect first hand with Frederick ('79), and my Pops said it happened again with Ivan.
A Goula/Biloxi landfall will put the "dirty" part of the storm pumping water right up the Bay. A 30 ft surge in Mobile will not be pretty besides the fact that my parents and grandparents home would be completely under water. Bay Front Road and Downtown Mobile under 30 ft of water is a very disheartening thought.
Oh my--this is a very difficult time for your sister. A visit to SC sounds like a wonderful idea.
Thanks for the ping.
http://hurricane.methaz.org/hurapak/
scroll down for image.
The GFDL model has it drilling directly at New Orleans at around 8-9am Monday morning. I think that prediction is for a 930 mb storm.
Would you be able to go and get her? She may just not know where to start.
Yep - that graphic directly agrees with the GFDL data.
Agree--and all of the N GOM storms have been ultimately tracking a bit east of the early predictions. The extraordinary lead time required for N.O. evac can only result in inaccurate predictions. Then there are always the disaster wishcasters...don't get me started on that one.
Here's a wonderful history lesson of a previous hurricane that hit in the direction this one is taking...and they claimed it to be a Cat 3 on todays scale.
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