Posted on 08/13/2004 10:08:09 AM PDT by Jeff400000
Joe Bastardi is a great weatherman! He does a lot of research on past weather systems - what's the same and what's different. That's given him a base of information to work from that's different from many meteorologists, and consequently his forcasts are often somewhat different. He was very concerned that Charley would strengthen rapidly right before landfall.
National Weather Service meteorologist Ron Humble states:
It was moving north-northeast at 28 mph, a speed it would likely maintain through the day on its way to Virginia, Humble said.
[This is via the AP]
The longer the storm is directly over land, the quicker its loses its energy. Moving rapidly will lessen the amount of time over any one area. To me, this sounds like good news -- get Charley out of here, and let it start dying over land...
Hurricanes/Tropical Storms rapidly diminish over land since they lose their source of energy -- warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico or the Atlantic Ocean.
Yesterday, it lost alot of its punch over Florida before gettting back in the Atlantic to be able to regain some strength.
Let us hope that by 8pm tonight the winds will be no more than 30+ MPH.
Man, what a freaking mess. We lost a bunch of trees including a giant oak that was split right down the middle. My antenna is gone but pretty lucky on the property damage all in all.
Nunya call me if you need to.
Good news.
I just talked to my niece down there; this is her first 'hurricane.' She won't be staying again......LOL.
She said they are getting about 60 MPH winds with guts higher; she already lost one tree.
And, of course, they have no power.
Glad to hear you are okay - but sorry for the mess and the loss of lives. The nation should rally to help Florida....as we always do when neighbors suffer. America's compassion will flow to Floridians in need. Unfortunately - some of the most hateful, vile, "discussions" about America - and particularly Florida - "deserving" this act of God - will also flow.
May go out and tour around a bit - check on pond levels near me. Some neighbors who back up to the pond have left. Don't blame them. May wish I had.....WRAL website talking about tree damage as what we can expect - that is NOT what I wanted to read.
I am OK; I just now posted to you on this thread: "Official: Charley's Death Toll To Climb." Thanks for thinking of me! Hope every FL FR poster is OK, too.
Well I'm from Yonkers NY but I have lived in Drums for the last 10 years. Hazleton is the same I understand as it was 30 years ago. In the Valley Area (Conyngham) there has been an influx of Homes being built and they are grand. I say thank Bush for that!
May need to contact Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton urgently to get this business back to work [killing babies] if damaged.
Business is:
Ft Myers Women's Health Ctr
Address: 3900 Broadway # C, Fort Myers, FL 33901
Phone: (941) 936-4494
Toll Free: (800) 326-0626
Email: ftmyers@abortion-clinics.com
Hours of Operation:
Open 24 Hours
Open 7 days a week
Open Sat and Sun
Open Saturday
Open Sunday
Open 365 Days
Open Late
Note: if this building was destroyed (with no loss of life), I think Heaven was on target for denying these people the ability to take the lives of innocent babies -- at least for a few days.
Since this is very close to ground zero, I am very curious if this place survived or not.
And I assure you that Planned Parenthood and NARAL will use your tax dollars to send emergency condoms and other supplies to this location ASAP if they are aware of it.
Can someone monitor this?
This is a 24x7, 365 day a year mill to kill babies...
Turning some sarcaism off!
Drove around - water is not good but our little pond has so far not overflowed yet into the homes nearby or the road - good sign.
Summer - am so glad to hear you are okay! God bless and keep all those in Florida who did suffer damage and God bless Governor and President Bush. I usually frown on government officials going around after a disaster - (cause we have to deal with the abnoxious Easley up here) - but I know the Bush brothers have true compassion in their hearts and would not be surprised to see them rolling up sleeves and helping with the work.
Worrying about those trees is going to make you sick. Where's your chain saw? :')
See Post #2832 about 24x7 (24 hours a day, 7 days a week), 365 days a year -- open Christmas, New Year, Easter -- to kill babies in the Hurricane Death Zone.
With people being concerned about those who might have died from this Hurricane, people should be equally concerned about the tragic loss of life each day due to abortion (and the pain inflicted on the women).
LOL - Chain saw in the garage. But it doesn't do a lot for a split house.....OK - will try not to worry.
I'm not really as worried about wind as I am the conbination of it with the rain and flooding.
We have had so much rain this year............and in the past 3 weeks it has been utterly ridiculous. The ground is totally saturated..that's going to cause more problems than anything.
I can imagine the numbers of uprooted trees with even just minimal tropical storm winds, which is really all we are supposed to be getting.
As far as I can tell, the storm center came through southern Polk County somewhere between the cities of Bartow and Lake Wales. There were two good things about it - it seems that the core of really damaging wind was very compact, and the storm moved through the area very fast. When I left my house around 5:30 yesterday, the winds were going about 15-20 mph or so, and by the time I arrived at my grandma's 20 minutes later they were already up to the 40-50 mph range (best guess). The power went out at her place about 6:15 or so when a transformer blew, and the really wild winds began about 7:00 PM But by 9:00 or so, it was pretty much all over. And thank God for that, because even in that short period of time it laid a lot of damage on this area. I don't even want to imagine what would have happened if it had lingered.
Lakeland may be the only part of Polk County that has electrical power. It's out just about everywhere else I've been, traffic signals are down, and a drive which normally takes me 45 minutes or so took an hour and a half. The tree damage is just indescibable. We have a lot of very old oaks throughout the area, and lots of them have just been devastated, uprooted and/or blown to pieces. And the pieces are laying in the roads, on the power lines, on homes and cars.
Even with all that, the damage this area took is nothing compared to what happened down in Charlotte County, where Punta Gorda is located. It will take years for that area to recover from Charley. The people down there are the ones who really need our support and our prayers. But the good news is that the help is pouring in - I've seen steady streams of electrical workers, tree surgeons and emergency response personnel from all over the state, and from all over the country. I am so proud to be an American, part of the greatest, most caring and most giving nation the world has ever seen.
I've lived in Florida for 31 years, and watched a series of minor hurricanes barely graze my part of the state, watched major storms turn away at the last moment, and watched Andrew rip into South Florida in '92. But until now I had never lived through a major storm making a direct hit on where I live. And if I never have to live through it again it will be too soon. I won't be posting too much in the coming days as I clean up and wait for the lights to come back on, but please do know that I deeply appreciate all your thoughts and prayers. Freepers are the greatest!
Steve
Hang in there:') It's almost over.
I'm so glad you and your grandmother are okay, Steve. Thanks for checking in with us and letting us know; it's been a worrying time for everyone.
It is always so amazing to see people help the way they do..it really makes us realize how lucky we are to live in America.
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