Uh Oh, Forget About Dolly, What About Ike?

Sam Walker

New member
Who needs an upstate New York matchmaker or a Tennesee Bluegrass singer :smilep when you can have a general? :disgust
It looks like a repeat of Dolly for Ike. :amgry :cry Jim, did you batten down the hatches before you left? It looks like it was good planning to go w/ the new RV. Of course it is a little early to tell exact course and I have not seen any strength forecasts. I think that I will stick w/ the earthquakes. We will be hoping for the best for you and the area. :thup
 
We are very Lucky that Ike did not turn on Southwest fl. But with that said I feel for the people of the Gulf coast from Fl. Panhandle - Texas and also our southern neighbors Mexico I hope this storm gets Beaten down and makes landfall somewhere in a less populated place. Jim we pray that you guys will come out OK on this one and Hope this is the last big storm of the season. Take care come on down to Fl. this winter Jim on Jennykatz
 
Hi Guys,

Don't know what we did to tick off Mother Nature, but the computer models seem to be saying somewhere north or south of our place... yeah, I really don't care to hear that. :disgust

When we left, we put the hurricane shutters down, left nothing outside, emptied and turned off the fridge, turned off water... and have the insurance paid up. Dolly messed up our summer travel plans; we're hoping Ike doesn't mess with this trip out. At this point, it's not looking real good.

When we came to southwest Missouri last week to pick up the new 5th wheel, the rain bands from Gustav were right on our tail... it poured on us for days. It's not like I'm paranoid or anything. :roll:

While it's still too early to call a reasonably close landfall, two days out on Dolly, the weather weasels were putting it right over our place. Right now, they show Ike's potential path heading our general direction. I guess we're as ready as we can be.

Best wishes,
Jim
 
Jim, How do these storms affect the ticky fricky dolphins??? it's all just pay back for those winter pictures you are so fond of. :wink: Looking at the forecast you are going to get hit again. I heard a news caster describe your area as "Having more cattle then people and good place for the storm to hit" man that was cold.
 
starcrafttom":10qe667i said:
Jim, How do these storms affect the ticky fricky dolphins??? it's all just pay back for those winter pictures you are so fond of. :wink: Looking at the forecast you are going to get hit again. I heard a news caster describe your area as "Having more cattle then people and good place for the storm to hit" man that was cold.

Hi Tom,

The dolphins seem to do OK... not sure where they go to hide, but there were seagulls seen 100 miles inland when Dolly hit. While the coast is not densely populated, there are over 1 million people in the Rio Grande Valley (and at least that many just south of the border)... and there were many thousands of people inland who were impacted by the flooding caused by 20+ inches of rain. There were still communities with a couple feet of standing water when we left, 5 weeks after Dolly hit. The media used that "more cattle than people" line when a hurricane went between us and Corpus several years ago. It seems that the media likes to focus on the Category of the storm and the number of people who will suffer... as though it's a contest.

The current predictions are showing a landfall in the vicinity of Corpus Christi (population somewhere around 250,000). Odds are pretty good that prediction is going to change over the next couple days.

While our part of the coast isn't as populated (South Padre Island - 2,500, Port Isabel - 5,000, Brownsville - 200,000), Dolly was an economic kick in the guts to our local businesses; those that didn't suffer a lot of damage still saw their customer base go away. Personally, we got off pretty easy; a lot of our neighbors are still not back in their homes. Once the storm goes away, so does the national news coverage. Most folks in the rest of the country have no idea how much damage was done... after all, it was "only" a Category 2. :disgust And all the high rise hotels and condos were still standing... nevermind that many of them had to be gutted.

There was a lot of complacency in our area - the last serious hurricane to hit there was in 1980.

So, is it a bad place because of the weather? Depends on your tolerance. You build to hurricane specs so you can get insurance. You prepare your home for it, then get out when you are in the crosshairs. Most years, it's a non-issue. Unlike winter in the north where it is a guarantee there will be cold and snow for months at a time... or the Rocky Mountain area and California where forest fires are a fact of life... or the river areas in the midwest who are going to see floods. I've even heard about places that have months of no sunshine and it gets so cold your mustache will freeze from the sn... well, you know.

To get back to your question about the dolphins... there was so much rain that it changed the salinity of the Laguna Madre; fishing was pretty awful for a while, so I can only assume that the dolphins had some problems with their food source. But when we put Wild Blue back in the water, our dolphin buddies were out there... evidence that life goes on. :wink:

I have the national news on right now... looks like Ike intends to slap our house around then come chase us around Missouri or Arkansas!

:shock:

Wish us and the dolphins luck.

Jim
 
Well getting out of the way is the smart thing. I was in Charleston when Hugo hit in 89? What a mess. I could not believe the number of nit-wits that planned to "stand up to the storm" I left and came back after the storm cleared the area. Your house is going to make it or not, you being there has nothing to do with it.

This is why I live in a place with little earth quakes, no hurricanes, no tornados, no volcano valley, high above a river and not much snow really. If either volcano goes up I will get a good seat to the show but will not get affected that much other then ash maybe. Even a tidal wave would not get my house I think. We even have dolphins some times.
 
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