Holy crap... Looked it up trying to find a way to visualize that much water. Converts to over 36 cubic MILES of water.Aggie Jurist said:
40 trillion gallons
https://www.qcnews.com/news/national-news/ap-heres-how-helene-and-other-storms-dumped-a-whopping-40-trillion-gallons-of-rain-on-the-south/amp/
agent-maroon said:Holy crap... Looked it up trying to find a way to visualize that much water. Converts to over 36 cubic MILES of water.Aggie Jurist said:
40 trillion gallons
https://www.qcnews.com/news/national-news/ap-heres-how-helene-and-other-storms-dumped-a-whopping-40-trillion-gallons-of-rain-on-the-south/amp/
Ryan Hall y’all is providing Starlink units! https://t.co/IiEvuTb3wK
— Reed Timmer, PhD (@ReedTimmerUSA) September 30, 2024
Good Sunday morning, America.
— Sassafrass84 (@Sassafrass_84) September 29, 2024
"See this line? All these ladies waited in line tonight to take loads of linemen's laundry home. One lineman asked me what those ladies were standing in line for. When I told him they were waiting to be given laundry, with a look of sheer… pic.twitter.com/fVXiJyctff
AANNNDD now with everything else going on, someone is having to actively scrub comments for the fire department social media accounts. Which could actually be an important communication tool in a situation like this.Independence H-D said:
Yeah. That's SOP. Chief could and should have done a better job communicating with the pilot as to what the issues were and not being a jerk.
One of my jobs during one particular deployment was to resolve a similar situation between a volunteer group (funded by family of some missing) and our team.
When the Cajun Navy was first getting rolling.....
Many in the professional USAR ranks were very against it. Simply because of the nightmares in the command and control structure. There were no shared communications. No shared command structure.
People are flying their own helicopters in and actively rescuing people in NC and local government officials are threatening them with arrest. You don’t hate your government enough. pic.twitter.com/V4wUtNuLob
— The Civil Rights Lawyer (@johnbryanesq) October 1, 2024
First .gov group I've seen in my area since the storm came through. It's the ATF. pic.twitter.com/9SvciuTf8I
— PK Patchworks (@PKPatchworks) October 1, 2024
MooreTrucker said:
Wasn't it addressed up above that volunteer air flights can be dangerous and interfere with the actual SAR professionals?
Must be lots of stray pets in the area.Nanomachines son said:First .gov group I've seen in my area since the storm came through. It's the ATF. pic.twitter.com/9SvciuTf8I
— PK Patchworks (@PKPatchworks) October 1, 2024
Why is the ATF there?
NC resident has a message: the government is not coming to save you, it’s up to all of us to help save each other.
— Insurrection Barbie (@DefiyantlyFree) October 1, 2024
I find this to be devastating because the amount of money our government God knows where for God knows what reason is obscene. But when it comes down to helping… pic.twitter.com/aNsJ5nzYgG
Same for Houston but millions of people still live there.BassCowboy33 said:
I found this fascinating. An almost identical scenario happened in 1916, and city leaders have been preparing for a century for it to happen again. I guess the area is historically prone to get wiped off the map by storms.
The comparisons are crazy. Severe weather events that are then followed by hurricane/tropical storms that roll through with 20-40 inches of rain. The rivers that go through Asheville apparently flood all the time, but residents believed that the crazy floods of the early 20th century would never happen again.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/30/us/asheville-hurricane-helene-damage.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
redcrayon said:Same for Houston but millions of people still live there.BassCowboy33 said:
I found this fascinating. An almost identical scenario happened in 1916, and city leaders have been preparing for a century for it to happen again. I guess the area is historically prone to get wiped off the map by storms.
The comparisons are crazy. Severe weather events that are then followed by hurricane/tropical storms that roll through with 20-40 inches of rain. The rivers that go through Asheville apparently flood all the time, but residents believed that the crazy floods of the early 20th century would never happen again.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/30/us/asheville-hurricane-helene-damage.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
redcrayon said:Same for Houston but millions of people still live there.BassCowboy33 said:
I found this fascinating. An almost identical scenario happened in 1916, and city leaders have been preparing for a century for it to happen again. I guess the area is historically prone to get wiped off the map by storms.
The comparisons are crazy. Severe weather events that are then followed by hurricane/tropical storms that roll through with 20-40 inches of rain. The rivers that go through Asheville apparently flood all the time, but residents believed that the crazy floods of the early 20th century would never happen again.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/30/us/asheville-hurricane-helene-damage.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
People continually re-build in areas that are hit over and over by hurricanes, flooding, wild fires, etc. People just don't tend move due to weather or natural disasters. That was my point. Sorry it went over your head.AlaskanAg99 said:redcrayon said:Same for Houston but millions of people still live there.BassCowboy33 said:
I found this fascinating. An almost identical scenario happened in 1916, and city leaders have been preparing for a century for it to happen again. I guess the area is historically prone to get wiped off the map by storms.
The comparisons are crazy. Severe weather events that are then followed by hurricane/tropical storms that roll through with 20-40 inches of rain. The rivers that go through Asheville apparently flood all the time, but residents believed that the crazy floods of the early 20th century would never happen again.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/30/us/asheville-hurricane-helene-damage.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is a dumb comment. The two areas are not similar in any way.
Someone from FEMA apparently told the cameraman that its going to take longer than 2 years to fix everything. Much longer.
— Paul (@WomanDefiner) October 1, 2024
Привіт, містере Байден, це Зелінський, нам потрібно десять мільярдів доларів допомоги для української області Південна Кароліна, ми спустошені
— PK Patchworks (@PKPatchworks) October 1, 2024
Five helicopters.
— Mark Gustav (@MarcusGustavus) October 1, 2024
There were 355 for Katrina. https://t.co/bjjhpv9siT pic.twitter.com/HOPBPvJVgj
redcrayon said:People continually re-build in areas that are hit over and over by hurricanes, flooding, wild fires, etc. People just don't tend move due to weather or natural disasters. That was my point. Sorry it went over your head.AlaskanAg99 said:redcrayon said:Same for Houston but millions of people still live there.BassCowboy33 said:
I found this fascinating. An almost identical scenario happened in 1916, and city leaders have been preparing for a century for it to happen again. I guess the area is historically prone to get wiped off the map by storms.
The comparisons are crazy. Severe weather events that are then followed by hurricane/tropical storms that roll through with 20-40 inches of rain. The rivers that go through Asheville apparently flood all the time, but residents believed that the crazy floods of the early 20th century would never happen again.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/30/us/asheville-hurricane-helene-damage.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is a dumb comment. The two areas are not similar in any way.
LINKQuote:
One of the groups assisting is the Mountain Mule Packers, who shared in an update on Facebook Monday, Sept. 30 they have "two fully loaded trucks and 20' stock trailers" along with their "mules and equipment" to make a staging area in nearby Weaverville, N.C.
Each of the pack animals can carry 200 pounds of supplies, volunteer Mark Toberer told the Associated Press. Toberer's dozen mules will bring food, water, diapers and supplies to hard-hit mountainous areas.