To: xcamel
Fortunately it's aiming for some pretty remote and sparsely inhabited real estate.
IMO the remnants will be a greater hazard for loss of life due to serious flash flooding if they make it up to Arizona.
2 posted on
09/01/2009 5:54:07 AM PDT by
dirtboy
To: dirtboy
The Sierra La Laguna mountains tend to tear them apart quite a bit, but my property manager tells me they have been getting some big thunderstorms in Lapaz (My place is across the bay near El Centenario). They are evacuating the neighborhoods bordering the dry washes around Lapaz just in case.
I just hope it doesn't start wrecking the $22 million in road improvements that have been done on the 1 and the 19 to Todos Santos the last couple of years.
3 posted on
09/01/2009 6:12:32 AM PDT by
xcamel
(The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it. - H. L. Mencken)
To: dirtboy
Tucson isn’t exactly sparsely populated, and seeing as it is slowing down a bit as it goes up the Baja it will turn into a major rain event for southern Arizona.
Also, depending on how it tracks southern California would be on the dry side but with some hefty winds which won’t exactly help the fire situation there.
5 posted on
09/01/2009 6:16:26 AM PDT by
Nahanni
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