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SUMMER HURRICANES - I miss the coverage

go high fast

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One thing I really enjoy about summer TV is watching the news channel guys on location covering the storm by standing out in the middle of it. I like when the busted street signs, siding, roofing, bill boards and tree limbs go whizzin' by at 90 MPH and they are yelling at the top of there lungs that the storm has come ashore. I also like when they visit the local marina the next day an about half the boats are 4 blocks up town on Main St.

Hopefully we will have a few monsters before the season is over.
 
our hurricane out here is down to a tropical depression...wimpy. I was almost looking forward to being in my first CAT I hurricane.
 
I'm sure the people in the middle of the hurricane, that lose everything they have, really appreciate a cheerleading squad.
 
OMG where is Algore? has there been any hurricanes this year?
What's wrong?

"global warming"?
i mean "global cooling".
no i mean "climate change".
awww CRAP it's the weather!


Algore is 100 times worse than that ripoff banker Madoff.


.
 
OMG where is Algore? has there been any hurricanes this year?
What's wrong?

"global warming"?
i mean "global cooling".
no i mean "climate change".
awww CRAP it's the weather!


Algore is 100 times worse than that ripoff banker Madoff.


.





Yeah, whatever happened to all those dire predictions of a dozen or more monster hurricanes every year because of global warming ????????
 
Having lived on the Gulf coast for nearly 25 years, I don't miss a d*mn thing about them. And yeah, the hurricane season is just hitting it's active time of year.

Also pretty sure I'll never see another one either, worse storms now are blizzards, much easier to deal with.
 
I've lived thru a few when I was younger.
My Dad worked for NASA and we lived in Cocoa Beach in the late 60's.
I remember the folks throwing Hurricane parties when they came in.

The whole storm is damn impressive and exciting when the full force hits your neighborhood.

The thoughts that go through your mind...
Wow, It's really going to be ugly (still excited)
Holy cow, it's really raining hard and the wind's kicking up too.(a little on edge)
Damn, I don't remember being in one this bad before.(worried about your house)
Holy F**king sh*t, get into the closet (Panicked now)
Je**s chr**t, I hope the house doesn't explode.
Thank God, We made it intact.
Aw Hell...It was nothing...Barely a storm...(Yeah, right tough guy)
 
I was home ported in Charleston while in the navy.
Rode out 4 hurricanes, not fun.

What I find really interesting is, no reporting of any kind.
What happened to the Al Gore types that were extolling the end of the world, massive hurricanes and many more of them. Weren't they saying that by 2010 the hurricane activinty could make living in Florida hazardous at best and too dangerous at worst??

What ever happened to those folks?
 
I was home ported in Charleston while in the navy.
Rode out 4 hurricanes, not fun.

What I find really interesting is, no reporting of any kind.
What happened to the Al Gore types that were extolling the end of the world, massive hurricanes and many more of them. Weren't they saying that by 2010 the hurricane activinty could make living in Florida hazardous at best and too dangerous at worst??

What ever happened to those folks?
It is just now getting into the hurrican season...
Give it time, Algore might still be sucked up and blown out to sea like the bag of hot air that he is!
 
here we go.........



MIAMI (Reuters) – Hurricane Bill, the first hurricane of the 2009 Atlantic season, gained strength quickly as it churned across open ocean on Monday in the direction of Bermuda, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

Two other tropical cyclones, Ana and Claudette, were fading; Ana in the Caribbean Sea just south of Puerto Rico, and Claudette in the southern United States after slogging ashore on the Florida panhandle.

Bill's top winds reached 90 miles per hour (145 kilometers per hour), just below Category 2 on the Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane intensity, the Miami-based hurricane center said. Forecasters expected it to hit Category 3, with winds of more than 110 mph by late Tuesday or early Wednesday.

Category 3, 4 and 5 storms are considered "major" hurricanes, the most destructive type.

Bill was about 1,080 miles east of the Lesser Antilles at 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT) and was charging to the west-northwest at 16 mph, the hurricane center said.

On its most likely track, Bill would move well north of the northernmost Caribbean islands toward the U.S. East Coast, forecasters said. The hurricane center's long-range track showed it southwest of Bermuda by Saturday morning.

Tropical Storm Claudette hit the U.S. Gulf of Mexico coast near Fort Walton Beach in the Florida panhandle early on Monday and quickly weakened to a tropical depression as it moved over southern Alabama.

Florida emergency managers reported sporadic power outages but no widespread damage. They cautioned residents to watch for rising rivers and flooding in low-lying areas.

CLAUDETTE MISSES ENERGY FACILITIES

Claudette, which sprouted with surprising speed on Sunday in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, missed the largest concentration of U.S. oil and gas production platforms, which stretch along the coast from Mobile Bay, Alabama, to Brownsville, Texas.

The Gulf is home to almost half of U.S. refinery capacity, a quarter of oil production and 15 percent of natural gas output.

Tropical Depression Ana doused Puerto Rico with heavy rain on Monday as it charged through the Caribbean Sea to the west-northwest at a brisk 28 mph, the hurricane center said.

It was located about 75 miles south of San Juan Puerto Rico and had top winds of 35 mph, forecasters said.

A tropical storm watch was in effect for Puerto Rico, the U.S. and British Virgin Islands and parts of the Dominican Republic, although forecasters said Ana could degenerate further on Monday.
 
"Its not if .... the wind is blowin ...it's what the wind is blowin " "You get hit by a VW bus ...it don't matter how many sit ups you did that morning .......
 
this one shows some potential.

Hurricane stronger, heads for Mexico's Los Cabos

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Extremely dangerous and strengthening Hurricane Jimena roared toward Mexico's resort-studded Baja California Peninsula on Monday, prompting emergency workers to set up makeshift shelters and chasing away an international finance conference.

Jimena, just short of Category 5 status, could rake the harsh desert region fringed with picturesque beaches and fishing villages by Tuesday evening, forecasters said.

At least 10,000 families will be evacuated from potential flood zones, said Francisco Cota, the local director of Civil Protection. He said 60 shelters would be set up.

A spokesman for the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information said it decided Monday to move the conference — including more than 170 representatives from 54 countries — to Mexico City, even though some delegates had already arrived in Los Cabos.

"The meeting has been planned for two months and the meteorological conditions, by their very nature, are unpredictable," said conference spokesman Anthony Gooch.

Los Cabos Mayor Oscar Nunez said people in poorly constructed homes face "a huge potential risk" right now and they may be forced to evacuate.

Brenda Munoz, who lost her home to a 2001 hurricane, was taking no chances and stocking up on food this time.

"I remember when Hurricane Juliette hit with a lot of intensity. It flattened our home, lots of flooding, lots of disaster," Munoz said in Cabo San Lucas. "We're already prepared with food and everything so it won't catch us off guard."

As rain started falling Monday morning, Mitch Williams of Orange County, California, waited at the airport to fly home from his vacation.

"I know that it's getting closer. ... The hurricane can do a lot of damage if it hits at that strength," he said.

Williams said poorer residents who live in shacks in this vacation town are not well prepared. "It will wipe them out," he said.

His advice for tourists was simple: "Get out."

But on Cabo's famous beaches, some tourists were doing just the opposite, getting into the Pacific to play in the hurricane's big waves.

Although city officials shut down the port, lifeguard Roman Dominguez with the Cabo San Lucas Fire Department said there's no feasible way to close a beach.

"We struggle a lot with surfers," he said. "They're looking for waves."

Lifeguards perched in a tower looked on Monday as two women, one with her boogie board, another on a surf board, paddled into pounding surf under cloudy skies.

Farther south, Jimena kicked up surf along Mexico's mainland western coast and generated strong winds that bent and uprooted trees in the resort town of Zihuatanejo.

By midday Monday, Jimena was a Category 4 storm with maximum sustained winds near 150 mph (240 kph) and was moving northwest near 8 mph (13 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami reported.

It was centered about 340 miles (545 kilometers) south of Cabo San Lucas.

Hurricanes reach Category 5 — the top danger rating for a hurricane — at 156 mph (250 kph).

Ironically, the entire peninsula is grappling with a severe drought.

Martin Rozendaal who moved to Los Cabos in 1992 to run the Hotel Club Cabo, said residents have a "love-hate relationship" with harsh storms that flood the region almost every summer.

"We need a lot of rain but we don't need the destruction," he said.

Authorities in Cabo Corrientes were setting up shelters in case of heavier winds and rain, said Arturo Garcia, an official with Jalisco's Civil Protection agency.

The U.S. hurricane center issued a public advisory for residents in western Mexico and the southern part of the Baja peninsula to keep tabs on Jimena.

Farther out in the Pacific, Tropical Storm Kevin weakened to a tropical depression with top winds of 35 mph (55 kph). It was centered 880 miles (1,415 kilometers) west-southwest of the Baja peninsula's southern tip.
 
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