Posted on 08/26/2017 4:39:50 AM PDT by NautiNurse
Hurricane Harvey made landfall near Rockport TX about 10:00PM CDT Friday night. Top sustained winds were 130mph. Rockport High School sustained heavy damage when a portion of the roof collapsed. A senior housing complex collapsed. The Rockport courthouse sustained major damage with a cargo trailer halfway in the building. Multiple tornadoes reported in the Houston/Galveston areas. There are reports of scattered structural fires and a shooting was reported in Corpus Christi. Residents along the San Bernard River were advised to evacuate and most TX Gulf coast counties are under flash flood watches.
Many locations are under a boil-water notice. Power outages are widespread. President Donald Trump promptly granted a Disaster Declaration to Texas Governor Greg Abbotts request. More than 700 members of the Texas Army and Air National Guards, Texas State Guard and the Texas Military Department have been activated and are positioning themselves throughout the state ahead of Hurricane Harvey and its anticipated landfall later this week. Ahead of the storm, FEMA sent supplies from its warehouse in Fort Worth to a staging point at Randolph Air Force Base near San Antonio.
Mash image to find lots of satellite imagery links
Public Advisories
Severe Weather Watches and Warnings TX
NHC Discussions
NHC Local Hurricane Statements Corpus Christi
NHC Local Hurricane Statements Galveston
Buoy Data near Harvey
Thread I: Potentially Catastrophic Hurricane Harvey Approaches Texas Gulf Coast
KHOU reports a woman drowned when she got out of her car. Her body was found by her neighbor.
That guy from Fort Bend was a maroon. Didn’t know water level of Barker Dam, didn’t know how much notice people would get for evacuation, didn’t know how many homes would be affected. He really didn’t know much of anything beyond his name. He was an embarrassment to Fort Bend County Emergency Management.
Not yet; the web site is updated every few minutes and still shows 17-18 feet left.
Been catching up, the rain totals are unbelievable
Other that this thread I am glued to the weather channel on cable
Oh, man. Prayers up.
Was listening to KTRH this evening and had to turn it off. I lived in Houston and have seen stalled storms before (1979). This is more than I could ever imagine. Praying forecasts are wrong and this will move north
Yesterday TX Gov. Abbott was pooh-poohed for saying Houston residents should evacuate. Well, now it is too late and in the next 48-hours Houston may experience a Katrina-type disaster. Shelter in place doesn’t work when your shelter goes under water. And the very worst case would be if those two retention dams upstream listed several years ago as structurely deficient were to fail.
Harris County flood official on KHOU says in the SE part of the county flooding is so bad that residents are climbing into their attics to escape the water. Water is too high to effect rescues in some areas plus there are many, many calls for help.
15 inches of rain in 3 hours!!
From several interviews--it appears a substantial number of people went out tonight to watch the fight at friend's house. Then they couldn't get home.
My mother grew up in Meraux, SE of New Orleans. She said, with total seriousness, they kept a couple of axes in their attic.
I heard that (15” in 3 hours) also. Incredible!
I’ve experienced that sort of rate, but only for 20 minutes...
Advice on KHOU is exactly that, just now: “Take an axe...”
The entire Houston metroplex just experienced 45 minutes of heavy rain. These current bands will clear past, but a new very nasty one will soon follow.
KHOU weather reporter said he got admin. permission before he came on air and said that if people must go into their attic to escape flood water—take an axe with you.
So he is implying a lot of flooded vehicles on road. Since many probably tried to drive home from the fight ?
KHOU just reported that officals are telling those at home threatened with rising water that if you must climb to the highest point in your house which may be your attic, take an axe so that you can cut your way to the roof. In some areas of the city rainfall and flooding exceed those from Allison.
Two bayous in SE side of Houston (Edgebrook) have exceeded their limits. People are moving up to their attics to escape flood water.
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