This thread has been locked, it will not receive new replies. |
Locked on 09/21/2005 4:38:48 PM PDT by Admin Moderator, reason:
Locked - New Thread http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1488924/posts |
Posted on 09/21/2005 1:36:24 AM PDT by NautiNurse
After NO was hit, we started talking about the next 'worst case scenario' on the weather boards. A storm like this going towards Houston/Galveston would be just about it.
I can't believe this season.
I'm hoping for a quick decrease in strength.
Now all we need is for her to speed up to about 15kt and just get it all over with. What a nightmare.
FYI
Shelter opening in the unused Lubys cafeteria in Burleson, Renfro exit just past 174 coming up I35 from the south...
If you are coming up 35 with no where to stay this would be a good choice.
Churches will help people from there.
Guy just got his car stolen on KPRC CH2
Ditto
I can't do that. They are flying in patients from Galveston to her hospital. Can we just leave them unattended for the next week or so?
Obviously, some employees don't care. If you were a patient there, you'd be begging the staff to stay. We're not going to do a New Orleans on those folks.
1 atmosphere is about 14.7 psi. It's also 1000 millibars or one Bar (Barometric pressure).
But are you expecting it?
Millibars is just a different measurement for inches of mercury for measuring atmospheric pressure.
The lower the pressure the stronger a storm is, generally.
Meterologists use millibars almost exclusively.
Interestingly it's not the official metric name, which is Hectopascals; 1 Hectopascal is the same as one millibar though. Why this is so is a long and confusing story.)
What good are the 60 in your pantry if your house gets blown away?
None of the landbased NEXRAD radars can reach the center of Rita and won't be able to for a couple of days.
Please get on out of there early, especially if she's already having contractions from the stress! You don't want to take the chance that she'll go into labor early while you're in an area with no power, no potable water, and possibly no functioning hospital!
Good luck!
inches, is inches of mecury in a barometric gauge
mb is millibars, the metric measurement of barametric pressure.
as we get lower and lower in millibars it indicates storm strenght
see the tables at the start of the article.
its pressure is now very low like Katrina and other super storms
Thanks for the info...the before-after pics are, sadly, going to be something..
That includes the Space Center down at Clear Lake.
I only worry about earthquakes!
Beautiful storm...
Oh...
No, I'm on the west side of Houston, supposedly out of the flood plain or storm surge area.
I know I'm out of the storm surge, but they're talking about 12-18 inches of rain at my location in 12 hours, so I'm less confident about the flood part.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.