Posted on 08/29/2006 7:28:42 PM PDT by conservative in nyc
For the first time in nearly five decades, this tiny coral atoll in the middle of the Pacific, where its highest point barely rises to about 18 feet, has been evacuated.
The reason is Super Typhoon Ioke, whose eye is aiming straight at Wake Island, home to an American base. The fragile atoll is expected to be pummeled by gusts of up to 160 knots and waves of up to 40 feet.
"This is the most excitement I have seen in years," said Bill Wilson, one of 188 residents who were evacuated by the Air Force and flown to Honolulu in two C-17 Globemaster cargo jets yesterday.
"It's a shocker how this storm has grown so big and stayed so strong," said Wilson, who supervises fuel operations and lives in a wooden duplex near the beach. He stored his personal items, including a computer and DVD player, in plastic garbage bags. Like many of his counterparts, he hopes his belongings will survive Ioke.
Rosie Noggle and her husband, Richard, are among a handful of people who actually consider Wake Island their home. She said a longtime resident told her that the last time people were forced to flee by a storm was in 1957.
"I am told that people weren't evacuated until after the typhoon hit," said Noggle, site administrator for the civilian contractor hired by the Air Force.
"There was a lot of damage, and no one was allowed to come back for three months until after the island was restored," she said.
Her company, Chugach Support Services in Anchorage, Alaska, has 149 Thai nationals and 33 Americans on its payroll.
WAKE ISLAND was captured by the Japanese following the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, and later recaptured by American forces. It is located about 2,300 miles west of the main Hawaiian islands, at about the same latitude as Kona on the Big Island. The islands of Peale, Wilkes and Wake make up the atoll, with a runway the dominating feature on Wake Island.
Residents and Air Force personnel stationed here were warned three days ago that they might have to evacuate, and they were ready when two C-17s landed early yesterday.
Henry Lau, National Weather Service forecaster, said last night that "it's too close to call if the eye will directly hit Wake or miss it."
Typically, the eye of a typhoon is about 20 to 25 miles in diameter, according to the National Weather Service. Forecasters have predicted the eye could come within three miles of the atoll tomorrow.
Last night, Ioke was 60 miles east of Wake and rated as a Category 5 storm. Winds were recorded at 130 knots, with gusts up to 160 knots.
The Air Force said Wake, where the highest point is only 18 feet above sea level, could endure waves as high as 18 feet, with surges up to 40 feet.
The evacuees were taken to Hickam Air Force Base on the two C-17s operated by Air Force and Hawaii Air National Guard crews. Both cargo jets were configured to carry 104 passengers for the four-hour flight.
The C-17s left Hickam Air Force Base just before 3 a.m. yesterday. On Wake Island they were on the ground only for 90 minutes, long enough to load the evacuees and a small pallet of luggage.
Master Sgt. Reginald Solomon, an administrative contract officer who lives in a concrete structure about 100 yards from the beach, said all he was allowed to take was one bag and one carry-on.
"I don't know what's going to happen when the typhoon hits," said Solomon, who has lived here for almost a year. "These buildings are old."
"It's good to be leaving," he said. "It eases my peace of mind."
Ping
I've actually been to Wake Island. I don't remember much about it because I was 5 years old and it was the middle of the night. It was on the way from the US to Japan. I wonder what people do there for a living....
susie
Man can you imagine just living out there, waking up to sunshine and 80 degree weather everyday? If I get rich I'm definetly retiring to an island in the Pacific.
Where's FEMA!!!! Don't worry Wake will be rebuilt as a chocolate island!
My Mom lives in Hawaii, and told me that they are mostly on the island to study marine and island creatures, plants, etc.
Bit of an error in the article but I find it's common for people not to understand something about almost all tropical systems that do not get aircraft recon..the winds and the pressure are VERY vaguely GUESTIMATED by looking at satellite pictures, not actually measured by anything.
Nobody and nothing has actually measured the winds of Ioke in any form.
Wake is about to Quake from the wrath of nature.
Interesting you should say that. Mom also reported a 3.+ earthquake on Oahu, last night. She lived in CA for 5 years in the late 70s and remembers what they feel like. Hawaii doesn't usually get earthquakes, and it was a weird evening for her (nearly 86 yrs.old).
Do for a living?
You mean, like a job?
Us island folks have no job.
We just sit under the palm trees eating bananas!
While in the Navy flying to the Philipines we stopped over on Wake Island to refuel both the plane and the passengers. I can say I have been there.
Oh, bite me.
And send me some bananas!
Now - I think I'll go have a Guiness and go to bed. :)
In 1963 I found a worse mess hall: the "dining facility" at McGuire AFB, NJ, where we were being separated. Awful, awful, awful.
At least Wake is above sea level...whose idea was it to put several hundred thousand helpless and/or ignorant govenment dependents in a sinking coastal city already 15 feet below sea level...
Sounds like something Planned Parenthood would do...
I should be so lucky.
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