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Posted on 08/28/2005 9:35:34 AM PDT by NautiNurse
And what about oysters at Acme Oyster Bar, Po' Boy sandwiches at Johnny's, shrimp at Ugelisch's, and a nice Pimm's Cup at Napoleon House?
The smell of old wood at M.S.Rau and the sound of the cathedral clock in Jackson Square.
I feel like crying. The memories, the memories...
I am sitting here just about in tears...and then the report about the lone trumpet player got me....
BTW, re: Fox, I hope they don't put that ditz Dari Alexander on to handle this today...sigh
My gosh, I am shaking for these people...I don't know what to do, except keep praying, HARD!
"Does anyone have any info on how far out from the eye does each segment of wind extend and in which
quandrants? "
http://www.boatus.com/hurricanes/hurricane_field.asp
2-5A CT tomorrow.
Unreal.
yes, that is true. but if it hits NO head on with in the eastern eyewall pushing a dome of water from the sea, it will flood anyway, and the wind damage will be on top of that.
I'll take the western part of the storm and the flooding from the lake over that.
Speaking of floods, it is worth noting that people in the Ohio Valley and Appalachia should be keeping a sharp eye out on where Katrina is gonna go, because it definitely has the potential to cause some massive flooding. Camille killed about as many people in Appalachia as it did on the Gulf Coast. Of course, that's leaving New Orleans out of it. If the worse case scenarios play out there, nothing will rival that (except a 9.0 earthquake in Cali).
Yes, but that's only a part of it. They should have been talking about the possibility of issuing it late last week. It's not like this storm sneaked up on anyone.
I was arguing on Wednesday that the NHC had the track too far east going up the west coast of Florida. And when Katrina went southwest across the tip of Florida it was OBVIOUS that it was going to have a far more western landfall.
I'm not even beginning to suggest that they should have known last Wednesday that the city was in peril, but by Friday it was clear that there was only a chance that it would not be in peril.
And here it is, Sunday afternoon. The devastation will be underway within 12 hours.
Now they raise the alarm.
Whew..that takes my breath away.
"One day at a time..."
Actually, One day At A Time, Sweet Jesus."
isn't such a bad idea right now.
And over the coolest part of the GOM.
*Shudder*
Thanks -- I did a quick search through this tread and did not find it (hence the request) -- there are just so many threads... Amazing how fast things can change.
WDSU-TV reporter says it takes about a hour to get across the Causeway--traffic moving along at 5-10 mph. "It's been flowing fairly smoothly." He says 4-4.5 hour drive to get to Jackson, MS (usually about a 2-hour drive). Contraflow is "working well."
I have been trying to remind myself that these "disasters" are always much less than Fox portrays them...as comfort.
I beg to differ, Biloxi where we were took a direct hit from Camille and other than the catrostropic damage to some buildings, the majority of it survived. Same with Gulfport which was closer to the eye.
The focus is on NO simply because this storm may breach the Lake Pontchartrain levy, that's a huge risk to people drowning because there is no way out. Think downtown tsunami and you get the picture.
And what about oysters at Acme Oyster Bar, Po' Boy sandwiches at Johnny's, shrimp at Ugelisch's, and a nice Pimm's Cup at Napoleon House?
The smell of old wood at M.S.Rau and the sound of the cathedral clock in Jackson Square. Riding the St.Charles streetcar back from the Camilia Grill, and watching the cut glass windows of the Garden District mansions sparkle in the streetlights. The way the moist, hot air hugged your body in July...Making grocerties at the A & P in the French Quarter.
I feel like crying. The memories, the memories...
A "bar" is a metric-system measurement of pressure. Think "bar"-ometer. It's 100,000 Newtons per square meter.
A pressure of 1,000 millibars (mb) is the normal sea-level pressure. A pressure of 902 mb means that the pressure is extremely low, around 10% below what it normally is, equivalent to an altitude of about 3,000 to 3,500 feet above sea level in normal weather.
See http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wbarocx.htm for details.
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