|
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42
ChatMaster - 6,000
|
OP
ChatMaster - 6,000
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42 |
I hope all our friends in the Florida area are safe by whatever means available to them. By what the Aus news are saying Katrina wasnt trying in comparison to todays big wind. Tony
1938 1/2 ton Hope to drive it before I retire
|
|
|
VCCA members have access to a list of over 50 Technical Advisors who can help you with your car. It's worth the price of membership! While you can get a lot of information for free in this forum, sometimes the info that you REALLY need is only available from the right person. This is what "The World's Best Chevrolet Club" is all about!
JOIN THE VCCA TODAY!
|
|
|
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 222
Backyard Mechanic
|
Backyard Mechanic
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 222 |
Not a Florida storm,Louisiana and north. No matter how good weather forecasting gets they will never predict Mother Nature. CorvairEd Dade City Fla
|
|
|
|
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 4,024 Likes: 99
ChatMaster - 4,000
|
ChatMaster - 4,000
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 4,024 Likes: 99 |
Hi Tony,
Thanks for your note checking on our a fellow VCCA members. As CorvairEd noted this storm shifted to the west and then went north up the Gulf of Mexico. It primarily aimed towards Louisiana and where the Mississippi River enters the Gulf. The path included the City of New Orleans. The area where it made landfall is also the area that they are planning to have the Southern Fall Tour in October. Hopefully things will recover enough by then so the tour can proceed.
It did make landfall as a Category 4 hurricane but has now been downgraded to a tropical storm. That difference is defined by the wind speed. There is still lots of rain over a large area as it moves north and east.
Based on the news accounts I am reading there is a lot of wind damage and flooding. There are many people without electricity and access to the areas is pretty limited due to deep water, downed trees, and bridges that were damaged. One weather station reported that there was a short term backwards flow in the Mississippi River.
Right now we seem to be in a really bad weather pattern across the continental United States. The southern and eastern portions of the country are dealing with lots of water from multiple storms. In the west it is so dry that there are unprecedented wildfires consuming unbelievable amounts of land. There are also wildfires starting in the northern portions of Minnesota. Here in the Midwest there are days that we have hazy skies and a few times you could even “smell” the burned ash from those western fires.
Whether it is natural or man-made, there are lots of signs of climate change.
Rusty
VCCA #44680
|
|
|
|
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42
ChatMaster - 6,000
|
OP
ChatMaster - 6,000
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42 |
I must admit my US geography is very poor but the local news here tonight showed lots of wind destruction and flood damage apart from an estimated 1,000,000 without electricity and will possibility be for months. I certainly hope everyone managed to get themselves to a safe place and if they got their cars safe as well would be a bonus.
CorvairEd is right, I learnt many years ago there is no way of predicting what mother nature will and can do.
There had been reports of fires in the west I think in an area north of California and possibly up to Oregon but I understood it to be several small burns. We are familiar with the might of fire in my area on the East Coast of Aus as last year we had a fairly big burn which took a lot of the area between me and the coast (about a 2 hour drive away) and quite a distance along the coast.
Tony
1938 1/2 ton Hope to drive it before I retire
|
|
|
|
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 3,511 Likes: 48
ChatMaster - 3,000
|
ChatMaster - 3,000
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 3,511 Likes: 48 |
The wild fires in the Western states are definitely not small burns. Over 80 incidents in 10 states that total 2.5 million acres burned as of yesterday. Here's a website that is updated daily with info about the US natural disasters: https://www.predictiveservices.nifc.gov/outlooks/outlooks.htmOur hearts and prayers are with all those affected. Dean
Dean 'Rustoholic' Meltz old and ugly is beautiful!
|
|
|
|
Joined: Dec 2019
Posts: 1,139 Likes: 75
ChatMaster - 1,000
|
ChatMaster - 1,000
Joined: Dec 2019
Posts: 1,139 Likes: 75 |
Gotta agree with you Rusty. It changes.
Been farming long enough to know it periodically goes around and comes around. And we ain't seeing anything that even I haven't seen before.
Still hurts when it hits though.
Ole S Olson
|
|
|
|
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42
ChatMaster - 6,000
|
OP
ChatMaster - 6,000
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 6,149 Likes: 42 |
The fires are bigger and more of than the news down here are saying then. After fighting several smaller burns locally I know it is not an easy task especially in timbered country, grassed country is bad enough but if the fire gets into the tree tops get out. Seems like the US is copping it from all angles, the only thing missing is pestilence. My hope is there are no lives lost (near an impossibility). Tony
1938 1/2 ton Hope to drive it before I retire
|
|
|
|
|