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So far, so good. Light rain and light snow melting as it hits, gusts to about 30 mph.
As you can see on this map: http://www.intellicast.com/National/Radar/Current.aspx?animate=true&location=USVA0277
(Note, this is real time and updates every 15 min or so)
FCX (radar about 5 miles from me) shows the storm breaking up and leaving me in a hole in the action. Heh, not all locations are created equal, this frequently happens.
Of course, with something like this, all bets are off - we'll just wait and see. Looks like the worst gets to me tomorrow, more or less. No trees snapping off yet, or neighbors coming over to shelter. There is zero worry about rain here, other than it makes trees fall down if there's a lot over a long time, turning the ground to mush.
I'm halfway up a mountain - winds go by mostly up top, floods beneath me. If any of you are looking for rural land - hint...
As large as this storm and as low as the pressure is, I lived south of 188th St. SW in Florida during Andrew and lost EVERYTHING. We moved to Central Florida and caught Charley Francis and Jeanne over a decade later. I was actually out of freaking town working on clean up and remediation at NAS Pensacola after Ivan when Hurricane Dennis rolled through, and each of these storms were significantly higher winds than Sandy. What makes Sandy different is the sheer size of the wind field, which is around a thousand miles across. That my friends is fucking nuts! While tropical storm winds are something we don't even think twice about here, up north folks have not built buildings to withstand sustained winds and the trees cannot take a hard blow for very long. Down here, we cut our trees back to permit a lot of flow-through so the wind doesn't drop them on our homes.
That said, winds of 80 mph don't really scare me, it's the idiots who freak out that scare me. When I see these bobbleheads panicking on TV I worry for the people who listen to too much hype, then when something bigger threatens they will not listen and as a result they get killed because the TV cried wolf the last time. Sure, there will be some flooding, power outages and eventually a lot of mold to clean up, but if a true cat 2 or 3 hurricane ever blows through, I will worry for the people who were panicked this time and made to believe it was Arrmageddon when I was nothing but a really big thunderstorm.
Sky is dreary- river is a deep gray- some light rain- and light wind.
Back when I had cable there was once a show on it about natural disasters and how animals seemed to know when things were about to kick off. It said that some animals can be more sensative to things like pressure changes, ground vibrations, and magnetic fields than humans, to the point where they can sense tremors just before an earthquate or the low pressure of an oncoming storm.Funny, the other cats know something is up. They are normally outdoor cats by choice, and the weather at this instant is nothing special for them. But they are "asking" me what's wrong and can they come in if it gets worse (of course, my friends). But they somehow know this is going to get very interesting. Could be them reacting to all the prep the last few days, but they didn't react then, just now.
Pretty windy here... less than 50 mph sustained... occasional gusts. Doesn't seem like a big deal.
Lots of power outages, but they are addressing them pretty quickly.
Skeptical me figured a "wolf cry" from the talking heads.
Everyone be safe.
ADK
I just saw an interview from ConEdison...
If the water rises just a bit more in NYC, it will impact the financial markets and potentially close them until the end of the week.
That would be interesting.
Thanks Jay!
I don't know how to tweeter but......whatever.
Thanks for the updates.
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