Hurricane Irene (2 Viewers)

I spent the morning preparing for Irene. I got up on a ladder and, using galvanized steel wire, double wired all my shutters to their anchors to make sure the shutters don't blow loose, put all the lawn furniture and anything else portable in the garage, closed the lawn umbrella, and did a shop and bought bottled water, non-perishable food, additional flashlights and spare batteries. My house was built in 1843, and has survived every hurricane to blow through this area in the last 170 years, so I think it should hold up.
 
We're far enough inland/upriver that we expect just a lot of rain. It'll be a good day tomorrow to sit inside and paint. Sunday, though, I have tickets to the Reading Phillies. Don't think they'll get the game in...
 
The worst panic inducing media hype yet,,calling a low level cat 2 storm a "major hurricane",,,Bromhead,,ground zero hurricane andrew 1992,cat 5 plus
 
Here's a feel good story from CNN for you New Yorkers:

A simulation done by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows what a Category 2 hurricane could do to a tunnel linking Brooklyn and Manhattan. Donald Cresitello with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers mapped out some worse-case scenarios.

"If a storm were to occur, it could be catastrophic, given the population density in the Northeast," Cresitello said.

National Hurricane Center computer models and comprehensive studies are chilling. If the worst-case scenarios come true, the impact could be devastating.

Water would be pushed into lower Manhattan, steadily rising. Seawater would pour through the Holland and Brooklyn Battery tunnels.

JFK airport would go under an astounding 20 feet of water. The famous Fulton Ferry boat landing in Brooklyn, a popular spot for young couples to take wedding pictures, could also end up under water. Wall Street could find itself in deep water - about 7 feet. The subway system could also be knocked out.


Coastal geologist Nick Coch, himself a New Yorker, says that a major hurricane could have catastrophic effects.

"Because the most dangerous thing in New York is the New Yorker," he said. "And the New Yorker thinks they've been tested by everything, but very few New Yorkers have been in the eye of a hurricane and know how uncontrollable the energy is."

For years, Coch has been sounding the alarm about how vulnerable New York City is because of its topography. He says storm surges could trigger massive flooding in low-lying areas, particularly lower Manhattan – even if the city is spared a direct hit.


'There's going to be glass all over the street, glass flying through the air," he said.

One study puts economic losses from a Category 3 hurricane at $100 billion.

"Metropolitan areas have high population density and very expensive properties," Jeanne Salvatore of the Insurance Information Institute told CNN. "So you throw a hurricane into that scenario, and the results can be really catastrophic."

There is a plan in place, if necessary, to move 2.3 million people out of coastal zones. But how many will go? Dolores Orr, head of the community board in Rockaway, says that could be a problem.

"For those that were raised here, I hear them today talking that they're not going anywhere," she said. "And that's a concern."

BS and a croc
 
The worst panic inducing media hype yet,,calling a low level cat 2 storm a "major hurricane",,,Bromhead,,ground zero hurricane andrew 1992,cat 5 plus

I went through Donna, a category 5, in 1960. Didn't notice any panic then. I'm in direct contact with friends & relatives along the Atlantic Seaboard; no panic. The media love a good distraction.......... SQUIRREL!!!!!!.....and then, just as quickly, they'll move one to something else, like Shark Week. As you know, you prepare for the worst & hope for the best. Disregarding any warnings is worse than complacency.
 
Guys,
Just heard from my daughter who is in the Big Apple with her mates to compete in the Police and Firefighters' Games. Her event the Dragon Boat Race has been cancelled. I wonder why.^&grin^&grin
I hope all my TS mates in NY weather this Hurricane out safely.
Cheers Howard
 
The worst panic inducing media hype yet,,calling a low level cat 2 storm a "major hurricane",,,Bromhead,,ground zero hurricane andrew 1992,cat 5 plus
This is where the unofficial motto of the Fire Department comes into use. "When in danger, or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout." Works every time. -- Al
 
Guys,
Just heard from my daughter who is in the Big Apple with her mates to compete in the Police and Firefighters' Games. Her event the Dragon Boat Race has been cancelled. I wonder why.^&grin^&grin
I hope all my TS mates in NY weather this Hurricane out safely.
Cheers Howard

Howard Mate,

I just sent you an e-mail with my cell phone number. Have your daughter get out of NYC and come stay with us for the weekend. I don't know how bad the storm will be, but they are shutting down mass transit at 12:00 noon tomorrow, and evacuating parts of the City, so she may not have any way of getting around or anything to do or eat if she stays in Manhattan. I will make sure she is safe, well fed, and I can take her whereever she wants to go once the storm has passed.
 
I really don't like the fact that on every storm map they show my town Toms River is always highlighted as being in the direct path of this storm. I think I need to go on another liquor run tomorrow.
 
I really don't like the fact that on every storm map they show my town Toms River is always highlighted as being in the direct path of this storm. I think I need to go on another liquor run tomorrow.

TSB , you may want to head to the stationery store as well as the liquor store !!


The storm is heading west and we are only expecting some rain in our local area


Keep safe everyone
Kirk
My emphasis added

Cape May, NJ: Chilling Warning Issued To Those Riding Out Storm
(Friday, August 26th, 2011)
In Cape May County, Emergency Management Director Frank McCall gave a chilling deadpan admonishment to Cape May residents and vacationers wanting to stay behind to ride out the storm.

[B]He asked them to put a 3-by-5 index card in their left shoe with their Social Security number, next of kin and telephone number of next of kin, “so we know how to identify you.” He did not seem to be joking.[/B]

NJ State Police Superintendent Rick Fuentes said troopers began working with county and local emergency management offices when they woke up Thursday morning to find the storm heading up from the Bahamas had “wobbled westward.”


“That was not a good sign for us because it looks like the eye is going to pass very close to, if not over, Cape May, which means that the barrier islands that are concentrated in Atlantic County and in Cape May County are going to be subject to some very high winds,” Fuentes said during a news conference with Christie Thursday in Ewing.

“They are going to be subject to a storm surge which may run as much as 12 feet as a result of the coincidence of astronomical tides on Saturday night and Sunday morning. And so we’re engaged in somewhat extraordinary discussions beyond the normal discussions that we’ve had over the last few days about the nature of evacuations.”

By the time Hurricane Irene has passed, which could be Sunday evening, it may make Tuesday’s earthquake feel like a sneeze.

Jersey weather authority David Robinson said Irene had all the makings of the “most devastating storm to ever hit the state.”

“I don’t want to invoke panic, but anyone who doesn’t treat this with the utmost respect could put themselves in danger,” said Robinson, the state climatologist at Rutgers University.

In a worst-case scenario, the storm could bring the record-breaking rains of Hurricane Floyd in 1999, the statewide 70-mph wind gusts of the March 2010 nor’easter and the coastal destruction of the Great Atlantic Hurricane of 1944.

“No one is saying they’ll all come into fruition,” he said. “But you have to understand, we are very vulnerable.”

National Hurricane Center Director Bill Read said that although plenty of uncertainty still exists regarding the intensity and track of Irene, there was little doubt that havoc was in store just from the sheer amount of rain even if the storm weakened before hitting the state.

(Source: NJ Star Ledger)
 
We got back yesterday (prematurely) from a small vacation and started getting ready, putting stuff away and such. We have three cars and mine sits outside so I'm dropping it off this morning at my company, which has a covered garage; don't need a tree falling on it.
 
The way that the hurricane keeps downgrading, it is beginning to look like we might not get much more than wet this far west of the I-95 corridor. Still going to beat up the coastal and low areas. -- Al
 
Listening to WABC 770 out of New York, just heard Mayor Bloomberg lecture everyone for 20 minutes on the danger of the storm. Lots of references to Hurricane Katrina, and makes it sound like an Irwin Allen movie. I'm not saying there's nothing to worry about, or that folks shouldn't be prepared. But they're certainly beating the drum about it.
 
We got back yesterday (prematurely) from a small vacation and started getting ready, putting stuff away and such. We have three cars and mine sits outside so I'm dropping it off this morning at my company, which has a covered garage; don't need a tree falling on it.

Everything is now packed away. Can't worry about what you can't control.
 
The way that the hurricane keeps downgrading, it is beginning to look like we might not get much more than wet this far west of the I-95 corridor. Still going to beat up the coastal and low areas. -- Al

From your lips (not AJ Burnett's ^&grin) to God's ears.

Listening to WABC 770 out of New York, just heard Mayor Bloomberg lecture everyone for 20 minutes on the danger of the storm. Lots of references to Hurricane Katrina, and makes it sound like an Irwin Allen movie. I'm not saying there's nothing to worry about, or that folks shouldn't be prepared. But they're certainly beating the drum about it.

Rather safe than sorry, right, Herr Excellency? {sm4}
 
Listening to WABC 770 out of New York, just heard Mayor Bloomberg lecture everyone for 20 minutes on the danger of the storm. Lots of references to Hurricane Katrina, and makes it sound like an Irwin Allen movie. I'm not saying there's nothing to worry about, or that folks shouldn't be prepared. But they're certainly beating the drum about it.

It's a no win situation. Tell everyone not to worry and when the storm hits they will complain you didn't do enough. Tell them it's the end of world and they will say that you are overreacting.
 
Howard Mate,

I just sent you an e-mail with my cell phone number. Have your daughter get out of NYC and come stay with us for the weekend. I don't know how bad the storm will be, but they are shutting down mass transit at 12:00 noon tomorrow, and evacuating parts of the City, so she may not have any way of getting around or anything to do or eat if she stays in Manhattan. I will make sure she is safe, well fed, and I can take her whereever she wants to go once the storm has passed.

Louis mate,
You are a true gentleman and a great mate. I have spoken to my daughter and given her your phone number. Please pass onto your wife my many thanks for your kind offer of assistance. I pray that you and your family remain safe and well, as I do for all my good TS mates in the Big Apple.
Cheers from the Land Downunder, Howard
 
Louis mate,
You are a true gentleman and a great mate. I have spoken to my daughter and given her your phone number. Please pass onto your wife my many thanks for your kind offer of assistance. I pray that you and your family remain safe and well, as I do for all my good TS mates in the Big Apple.
Cheers from the Land Downunder, Howard

My pleasure Howard.:smile2: If your daughter contacts me, my family and I will take good care of her.
 
It looks like it will hug the Jersey shore, then head it out to LI, then up from there. Everything is battened down here. Just dropped the car off at my company.
 
Left Friday morning before Irene hit and made it home today. 14hrs of drive time with two little ones sure tests ones patience. I think we definitely made the right decision. News reports from where we stayed showed heavy wind, rain and flooding plus numerous power outages. Now I just need to find something to do for the remanding 5 days of vacation that I have. Hope everyone on the East coast makes it through Irene safe.
 

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