I still see blue roofs everwhere I go, albeit less of them, but there are still quite a few.
The debris yards where the tons upon tons of debris was taken are mostly cleared out and all that's left is mountains of mulch.
Hopefully people who have been waiting or struggling with their insurance companies and trying to come up with deductible money will be able to get everything taken care of and finalized before anything major develops. (Hopefully, nothing major will develop.)
My Y2K supplies came in handy last year. I was able to have warm coffee, hot omelettes and didn't have to eat my soup out of the can. :)--> My huge oak tree has been trimmed so that the wind will blow through it without much resistance and the roof is brand new.
And, most importantly, my neighbors and I have our bars stocked for any post-hurricane parties we may have again this year! :D-->
Assuming that it even makes it past the Central American mountains, it's unlikely that this disturbance will regain tropical storm strength. If it does, it will be called Arlene (and some other names).
I heard that they are predicting another active season, much like last year, so stay on your guard, and I'd consider moving somewhere other than Florida (although Houston isn't exactly immune from problems due to hurricanes either, so I might not be the best one to say that.)
Hurricanes are the only natural disaster I can think of that has awesome parties associated with it. People don't have tornado or earthquake parties, but post-hurricane parties....those are THE best! :D-->
There's a huge baby boom after hurricane season, too! :o-->
Assuming that it even makes it past the Central American mountains, it's unlikely that this disturbance will regain tropical storm strength. If it does, it will be called Arlene (and some other names).
This is incorrect. It will retain the name Adrian if it regains strength in the Gulf or Atlantic. Arlene will be the first hurricane/tropical storm that actually forms in the Atlantic or the Gulf.
It's no longer considered likely to affect South Florida in the slightest.
I think they're called typhoons if they hit the Eastern Hemisphere. I'm pretty sure on our side we call them hurricanes, no matter what.
Here is a great hurricane site. You can get the models when storms are going. Good message board also. People reporting as long as they can on the message board untill the power goes out. Good info and tells you when to duck.
But it is true that they don't change the names of hurricanes if they cross from the Pacific to the Atlantic or vice versa. That's in the story in the opening post.
I absolutely hate hurricane season! I hate the boarding up, I hate the constant threat, I hate having to get everything worth anything off the floor, I hate wondering where the hell I'm going to go for the day it hits, I hate having to sit in traffic while escaping the madness and I hate the fear of coming back to a home under water. Did I say I HATE hurricane season? Well, I do!
GC iam with you.I too am close to the water. I am 13 feet above a mean high tide. Hurricane fran put 1 1/2 feet of water in my garage, I lost half of my trees, 3 piers washed up in the yard and 2 boats not to mention a couple of feet of marsh grass. Yep nothing fun about them IMO.I know I live in the way of them but I still don't have to like them and I can still bit*h about them. :)-->
Hurricanes are the only natural disaster I can think of that has awesome parties associated with it. People don't have tornado or earthquake parties, but post-hurricane parties....those are THE best! :D-->
Belle -- then ya ain't never been to a 4-wheeler get together when the snow is really coming down, and making roads impassable.
Up here, we wait for the snow to get a foot or so deep, and get together, and plow through it before the county can clear the roads. The deeper it gets, the better we like it. And it is party time -- all the way into the wee hours of the morning.
Meebe snow isn't a *natural disaster*, but it sure as **** reeks havoc on the local roadways (both paved, and off-road), and we make it a point to hit them all, coolers and thermos's well stocked, tunes, cb's for talk, and yes -- we need winches to get some unlucky soul unstuck, whose truck isn't high enough to clear the drifts -- usually in the *backwoods*.
Heee! We are out there in the middle of this happening, no *post party* to it at all. :)-->
If you like NASCAR -- you would love a *midnight sled ride* party, up here -- and we don't wait until it is over, we are out there while it is all happening.
David, thou almost persuadeth me to relocate! :D-->
It sounds like a BLAST!! I used to work for Fish and Game Finder magazine and got to type photo captions and stories from the Great White Northern States and it did always look like fun tooling around on snowmobiles and big @ s s trucks in the snow! There was one lodge you could only get to by snowmobile so it was like a little family of regulars all winter.
I'm much more partial to cold weather than the 100 degree heat with 100% humidity we get down here. You can always put on more clothes, but there's only so much you can take off before you start getting in trouble. For the life of me I can't figure out how I ended up staying down here as long as I have. -->
p.s. ;)--> You know that any self-respecting southern gal LOVES NASCAR!! :D--> :D--> :D-->
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oenophile
ommm...if they are from the Pacific wouldn't they be called typhoons or do they become hurricanes when the enter the Gulf of Mexico?
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krys
Isn't there still dammage from last year's storms that hasn't been repaired?
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smurfette
Tell Adrian to go home--it's too early!! I thought the official hurricane season started June 1!
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ex70sHouston
The season starts May 15 for the Pacific.
It will turn north and die. The water in the Gulf is to cold.
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Belle
Krys, there IS still damage from last year.
I still see blue roofs everwhere I go, albeit less of them, but there are still quite a few.
The debris yards where the tons upon tons of debris was taken are mostly cleared out and all that's left is mountains of mulch.
Hopefully people who have been waiting or struggling with their insurance companies and trying to come up with deductible money will be able to get everything taken care of and finalized before anything major develops. (Hopefully, nothing major will develop.)
My Y2K supplies came in handy last year. I was able to have warm coffee, hot omelettes and didn't have to eat my soup out of the can. :)--> My huge oak tree has been trimmed so that the wind will blow through it without much resistance and the roof is brand new.
And, most importantly, my neighbors and I have our bars stocked for any post-hurricane parties we may have again this year! :D-->
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GeorgeStGeorge
Assuming that it even makes it past the Central American mountains, it's unlikely that this disturbance will regain tropical storm strength. If it does, it will be called Arlene (and some other names).
George
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Mister P-Mosh
I heard that they are predicting another active season, much like last year, so stay on your guard, and I'd consider moving somewhere other than Florida (although Houston isn't exactly immune from problems due to hurricanes either, so I might not be the best one to say that.)
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coolchef1248 @adelphia.net
hurricanes were in florida long befor you were MOVE lol! will keep you all in my prayers!
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Belle
MOVE??? No way!!
Hurricanes are the only natural disaster I can think of that has awesome parties associated with it. People don't have tornado or earthquake parties, but post-hurricane parties....those are THE best! :D-->
There's a huge baby boom after hurricane season, too! :o-->
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Ron G.
Hey Raf...
Look at the bright side. It'll help keep the forest fires under control and you don't have those pesky sand storms like they have in west Texas.
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Raf
This is incorrect. It will retain the name Adrian if it regains strength in the Gulf or Atlantic. Arlene will be the first hurricane/tropical storm that actually forms in the Atlantic or the Gulf.
It's no longer considered likely to affect South Florida in the slightest.
I think they're called typhoons if they hit the Eastern Hemisphere. I'm pretty sure on our side we call them hurricanes, no matter what.
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justloafing
Here is a great hurricane site. You can get the models when storms are going. Good message board also. People reporting as long as they can on the message board untill the power goes out. Good info and tells you when to duck.
Hurricane City
Yes Raf your right on accounts. I don't know what the longitude is that they change from Hurricane to Typhoon
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krys
They are called typhoons if they form in the western Pacific or Indian oceans according to www.dictionary.com
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Raf
Cool. I was moslty guessing.
But it is true that they don't change the names of hurricanes if they cross from the Pacific to the Atlantic or vice versa. That's in the story in the opening post.
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gc
I absolutely hate hurricane season! I hate the boarding up, I hate the constant threat, I hate having to get everything worth anything off the floor, I hate wondering where the hell I'm going to go for the day it hits, I hate having to sit in traffic while escaping the madness and I hate the fear of coming back to a home under water. Did I say I HATE hurricane season? Well, I do!
gc
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justloafing
GC iam with you.I too am close to the water. I am 13 feet above a mean high tide. Hurricane fran put 1 1/2 feet of water in my garage, I lost half of my trees, 3 piers washed up in the yard and 2 boats not to mention a couple of feet of marsh grass. Yep nothing fun about them IMO.I know I live in the way of them but I still don't have to like them and I can still bit*h about them. :)-->
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TheSongRemainsTheSame
Hello Raf~~~
Seems like only last hurricane season all this type of thing was happening.
There is a story in the May 05 Popular Science by Michael Behar~~~ "When Earth Attacks!"~~~ worth a perusal.
Tsunamis, Volcanoes, Hurricanes, Landslides -
The single certain thing about natures's killers is that they will strike again, and again. Our only defense: Ever better prediction and protection.
Michael Behar
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dmiller
Belle -- then ya ain't never been to a 4-wheeler get together when the snow is really coming down, and making roads impassable.
Up here, we wait for the snow to get a foot or so deep, and get together, and plow through it before the county can clear the roads. The deeper it gets, the better we like it. And it is party time -- all the way into the wee hours of the morning.
Meebe snow isn't a *natural disaster*, but it sure as **** reeks havoc on the local roadways (both paved, and off-road), and we make it a point to hit them all, coolers and thermos's well stocked, tunes, cb's for talk, and yes -- we need winches to get some unlucky soul unstuck, whose truck isn't high enough to clear the drifts -- usually in the *backwoods*.
Heee! We are out there in the middle of this happening, no *post party* to it at all. :)-->
If you like NASCAR -- you would love a *midnight sled ride* party, up here -- and we don't wait until it is over, we are out there while it is all happening.
(sorry for the de-rail, Raf.)
.
.
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Belle
David, thou almost persuadeth me to relocate! :D-->
It sounds like a BLAST!! I used to work for Fish and Game Finder magazine and got to type photo captions and stories from the Great White Northern States and it did always look like fun tooling around on snowmobiles and big @ s s trucks in the snow! There was one lodge you could only get to by snowmobile so it was like a little family of regulars all winter.
I'm much more partial to cold weather than the 100 degree heat with 100% humidity we get down here. You can always put on more clothes, but there's only so much you can take off before you start getting in trouble. For the life of me I can't figure out how I ended up staying down here as long as I have. -->
p.s. ;)--> You know that any self-respecting southern gal LOVES NASCAR!! :D--> :D--> :D-->
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Raf
Derail?
What derail? The hurricane that spurred this thread no longer exists. Derail! Die, thread, die!
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