Long way to go to see. Saw where Costco, Lowes. Home Depot, and HEB are already ****shows around here.
sts7049 said:
do you know what "forecast uncertainty" means?
Cromagnum said:
Long way to go to see. Saw where Costco, Lowes. Home Depot, and HEB are already ****shows around here.
Sazerac said:
Do they ever turn west like that crossing the TX-LA border? Seems they always go N-NE once in that part of the gulf.
Premium said:Cromagnum said:
Long way to go to see. Saw where Costco, Lowes. Home Depot, and HEB are already ****shows around here.
Partaking in the fun, I see
Sazerac said:
Do they ever turn west like that crossing the TX-LA border? Seems they always go N-NE once in that part of the gulf.
Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
What are people in Houston buying at HD and Lowe's? Plywood? I figure tp and bleach supply/demand are already what they are based on COVID.
ArtVandelay03 said:
For those of you on the S,SE side - League City, Friendswood, Pearland - at what point do you think it necessary to board up? Only if the forecast changes to Cat 2 or Cat 3?
We moved here in 2015 (west League City), so first time experiencing a possible hurricane. But the house was built in 2001, and as far as I can tell, the only damage from Ike was some missing shingles. The main difference now is trees in the neighborhood are bigger and fences and roofs are older, therefore debris strike chances could be higher. We don't have any existing shutters/plywood, so I've been debating whether I should go buy some before stores run out.
It's an insurance policy of sorts, but I'm wondering if it is really necessary to go spend $700 on plywood for a TS or Cat 1, being somewhat inland and partially shielded by other homes (of course, that might just mean more debris).
ArtVandelay03 said:
For those of you on the S,SE side - League City, Friendswood, Pearland - at what point do you think it necessary to board up? Only if the forecast changes to Cat 2 or Cat 3?
We moved here in 2015 (west League City), so first time experiencing a possible hurricane. But the house was built in 2001, and as far as I can tell, the only damage from Ike was some missing shingles. The main difference now is trees in the neighborhood are bigger and fences and roofs are older, therefore debris strike chances could be higher. We don't have any existing shutters/plywood, so I've been debating whether I should go buy some before stores run out.
It's an insurance policy of sorts, but I'm wondering if it is really necessary to go spend $700 on plywood for a TS or Cat 1, being somewhat inland and partially shielded by other homes (of course, that might just mean more debris).
jetch17 said:
Marco took quite a hook in the latest
gougler08 said:jetch17 said:
Marco took quite a hook in the latest
NHC still showing the big west turn off the coast and heading our way, but I bet it changes tonight
Cromagnum said:
Dang. If this holds, the Cajuns are boned and areas in Texas that really need some rain are gonna keep scorching.
gougler08 said:
It's pouring on the SW side right now