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Tropical Storm Could Develop in the Gulf of Mexico Next Week and Track Toward Texas or Louisiana
Some locations in southern Mexico have already received more than 8 inches of rain.
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Sounds like a standard hurricane season then...
Tropical Storm Could Develop in the Gulf of Mexico Next Week and Track Toward Texas or Louisiana
Some locations in southern Mexico have already received more than 8 inches of rain.
Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com
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The first was in may last year not sure what the predictions are for how many or there strength but I am sure we will get hit...
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Grand Isle, Louisiana, measured sustained winds at 40 mph. An oil rig south of the southeastern coast of Louisiana reported sustained winds of 44 mph and a wind gust of 58 mph.
Tropical storm-force winds can be felt as far as 205 miles from the center of the disturbance, forecasters said.
The storm is forecast to hit Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle through the weekend, according to CNN meteorologist Robert Shackelford.Tropical storm warnings extend from Louisiana into the Florida Panhandle, affecting cities like New Orleans; Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi; Mobile, Alabama; and Pensacola, Florida.
Heavy rainfall is expected to bring flash flooding across the central Gulf Coast on Friday night. These flood impacts are forecast to spread across the Southeast much of Saturday and into Sunday.
Widespread rainfall totals of 4-8 inches are expected but upwards of a foot of rain is possible, especially along the coast.
Tropical Storm Claudette remains likely to form late Friday, bringing heavy rains to Gulf Coast
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Tropical Storm Claudette: Flash flooding rises in southeast US and death toll as it continues towards the Atlantic
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Two disturbances in the Atlantic. One could reach the southeast coast as depression
The one closer to the U.S. was about 500 miles east-southeast of the Georgia-South Carolina border as of the 2 a.m. update on Sunday and headed west at about 15 mph.
The other disturbance, an area of low pressure associated with a tropical wave off the coast of Africa, was more than 700 miles southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands as of the afternoon update. It was booking it west at 20 mph and forecasters said “little, if any” development of this system is expected in the next few days.
Three have formed so far and the next name on the list is Danny.
NOAA forecasts another active storm season this year, with 13 to 20 named storms.
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Looks like we may have one heading towards Florida...
Hurricane Elsa, 1st of season, could hit Florida next week
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The fear from this causing issue for the rescues which are on going in florida but its still doing its damage 180,000 Cubans flee their homes as Tropical Storm Elsa slams ashore, roars toward Florida's Gulf Coast
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Another one heading for Florida
Florida may see tropical storm conditions by Saturday as a 'poorly organized' Fred swirls past Cuba
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Fred seems to have fizzled but in its place is
Tropical Storm Grace maintains strength as it keeps heading in South Florida’s direction
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Right behind Fred was Grace is a hurricane heading towards southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands and Henri will be soon
New England preps for 1st hurricane in 30 years with Henri
That was Bob.....
Tropical Storm Henri is the 8th named system of what has already been an active 2021 season.
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Useful info on this site:
https://www.iii.org/fact-statistic/fact … hurricanes
When you compare five year periods:
2005-09 - 37 hurricanes
2010-14 - 37 hurricanes
2015-19 - 35 hurricanes
No sign of a rising trend there.
Of course there's much more live reporting now, which gives people the impression there are more hurricanes. And of course there's much more coastal development in hurricane prone areas meaning that there's a lot more costly damage when a hurricane hits.
2021 seems a very low hurricane count. I'm seeing the figure of 2.
Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com
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Here is the readiness website for the state
https://www.readynh.gov/disasters/hurricanes.htm
Classification: Hurricanes are classified into five categories according to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, based on wind speed and potential to cause damage:
Category One – Winds 74-95 mph
Very dangerous winds will produce some damage
Minor damage to exterior of homes
Toppled tree branches, uprooting of smaller trees
Extensive damage to power lines, power outages
Category Two – Winds 96-110 mph
Extremely dangerous winds will cause extensive damage
Major damage to exterior of homes
Uprooting of small trees and many roads blocked
Guaranteed power outages for long periods of time – days to weeks
Category Three – Winds 111-129 mph
Devastating damage will occur
Extensive damage to exterior of homes
Many trees uprooted and many roads blocked
Extremely limited availability of water and electricity
Category Four – Winds 130-156 mph
Catastrophic damage will occur
Loss of roof structure and/or some exterior walls
Most trees uprooted and most power lines down
Isolated residential areas due to debris pile up
Power outages lasting for weeks to months
Category Five – Winds greater than 157 mph
Catastrophic damage will occur
A high percentage of homes will be destroyed
Fallen trees and power lines isolate residential areas
Power outages lasting for weeks to months
Most areas will be uninhabitable
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'Potential disaster in the making,' forecasters eye major threat in the Gulf
The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30, with the crest of it occurring on Sept. 10.
Hurricane watch in effect for New Orleans as Ida heads for Gulf Coast
ouch IDA forecast to reach Category 4 strength as Louisiana coast braces for direct hit
Category 4 strength with winds estimated at 140 mph.
The incoming storm could provide a test for the city's levee system, which was reconstructed after Hurricane Katrina. The system's failure in the 2005 storm helped flood 80% of the city, with areas under 6 to 20 feet of water.
Ida is forecast to hit the area Sunday – 16 years to the day that Katrina made landfall in Louisiana and Mississippi as a catastrophic Category 3 storm. Nearly 2,000 people died during Katrina and damage was reportedly $125 billion, according to NOAA.
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Much like the wild fires in California done its damage.
In Ida's wake, Louisiana faces a month with no power as heat soars
Smaller supply stations is one way to keep the power on. Another is more underground cabling...
1.3 million customers were without power about 48 hours after the storm made landfall, most of them in Louisiana, according to PowerOutage https://poweroutage.us, which gathers data from U.S. utility companies.
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still reeling from the wake of ida with many power outages cause by its strength we are now seeing the next form an head towards the US Larry: the next major hurricane in the Atlantic
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It may have been a week but the effects of IDA have not gone away. sure this is the damage from coming a shore but the rain did as much damage as it followed a coastal course after coming onto land with many power problems with much floodng.
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We have had some more storms generate a lot of damage to the US this year and while I missed a few the lingering effects are still there for those in Louisiana still in power outages.
They pass with lots of rain that cause flash floods to damaging roads and more.
we are already seeing that Nicholas passed by and then we have Odette headed well offshore of Nova Scotia in Canada to be followed by Tropical Storm Peter, the 16th named storm of the season, was centered about 435 miles east of the northern Leeward Islands and now we have Tropical Storm Rose develops, 595 km west-southwest of Cabo Verde Island
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We to the letter Sam Becomes a Category 4 Hurricane
Sam became the eighteenth named storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season Thursday, now has maximum sustained winds of 150 mph.
Tropical Depression – wind speed less than 39 MPH
Tropical Storm – wind speed between 39 MPH and 73 MPH
Hurricane – wind speed between 74 MPH and 110 MPH
Major Hurricane – wind speed greater than 110 MPH
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Its hard to believe that help has not gotten to some after IDA rolled through. More than a month after Hurricane Ida devastated Louisiana, residents are still waiting for FEMA assistance. Dad, daughter living out of truck, a month after Ida destroyed home
Fema would "probably start placing trailers" for people like Guidry "sometime in the November time frame."
He said the reason he didn't get approved for money from FEMA is because he couldn't prove he owned the property. FEMA used to require people to provide a deed but they changed that recently. You can give them a letter from a local mayor who says you own, or a home improvement receipt or proof that you paid property taxes. Sterling went digging, looking for proof. He even went to the tax office.
But the office was closed until further notice and the number was disconnected.
CBS News called FEMA back, and that's when they did something very rare. They accepted a handwritten, signed letter from Guidry that said he has "lived on the property for 31 years." He wrote that his mother passed away two years ago, "but before she died she told me that the property is mine."
FEMA has fast-tracked Guidry's case, and as early as Wednesday, it is expected to approve him and give him up to $36,000 so he can rebuild his home. Guidry told Begnaud he has $200 to his name, and there are thousands of people like him in southeast Louisiana right now.
Wow when bad luck is all the luck you have...
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More than 100 dead, some got lucky, there was a short warning with Air raid sirens. The late season Tornado outbreak of December 10–11, 2021
FEMA approves Gov. Parson's federal disaster declaration for Dec. 10 storms and tornadoes
https://www.kmbc.com/article/fema-appro … n/38738336
Tax Relief Available for Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky and Tennessee Tornado Victims
https://www.kiplinger.com/taxes/tax-dea … do-victims
FEMA approves Missouri federal disaster declaration request for December 10 tornadoes
https://newstalkkzrg.com/2022/01/11/fem … tornadoes/
It was the deadliest on record for the month of December, produced catastrophic damage and numerous fatalities across portions of the Southern United States and Ohio Valley, , some towns and cities were then hit by a winter storm already damaged by Tornadoes.
Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2022-01-12 16:08:09)
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Will Hurricane Lee Affect the United States? -The Weather Watcher-Looking Ahead to Fall/Winter Weather
https://medium.com/weather-watchers-cen … 5da78ba9be
New England..its coming your way..
https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1548647677678325769
Hurricane Lee live updates: Wind, rain heading to Massachusetts, Maine
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/hurricane-lee … 56170.html
‘Still in the water’: 75 crocs on the loose in China after typhoon
https://www.news.com.au/technology/scie … f0d35b446c
Disasters getting worse, say Brazil cyclone victims
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/2 … ne-victims
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For Mars_B4_Moon re #22
Thanks for these updates on Hurricane Lee.
The human race seems to be headed toward a period of stress testing.
Architecture is likely to change over time, in anticipation of extreme weather events.
Individual humans may begin to think ahead in anticipation of disaster of various kinds.
I am not aware of a topic anyone might have created to identify points of weakness or vulnerability in human infrastructure, but every now and then I see an article about flood plains or earthquake fault zones.
(th)
Recruiting High Value members for NewMars.com/forums, in association with the Mars Society
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It has been windy, but the path took the Hurricane more out to sea with gusts through the afternoon bring down a few trees not far from home.
Power is one here, but some are without 60,000 without power in Maine as Lee makes landfall near U.S.-Canada border
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For SpaceNut re 24
Glad to hear you missed the worst of what Lee had to offer.
So how's preparation for winter coming?
That furnace is waiting for some TLC.
(th)
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