jetch17 said:
Straight out a comic book.
Never gets old.
jetch17 said:
texasaggie2015 said:
I grew up in Angleton and remember the Rita evacuation. Dad worked at BASF and was on the storm crew so he stayed behind. I was probably 13ish and was so freaked out about the Katrina mess I thought I was never seeing my dad again.
It took us around 14 hours to get from Angleton to Katy. We said screw it and stayed at my grandparents place there (we had an extra key).
To this day I'll say those 14 hours on the road with panicked masses was probably more dangerous than the storm itself.
bluefire579 said:I was in school at A&M at the time, living in Bryan, and there was a pretty big panic even there. Went to the grocery store just for normal shopping and had trouble getting what I needed. Ended up not even getting a drop of rain at the house I was in.Bad Poster said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
For the benefit of folk that may be new.
I was a teenager when rita came. We tried to leave and was in standstill traffic near liberty for hours. We decided to turn back and wait out the storm. It was a complete nothingburger where we lived (north shore). So i dont really have the storm anxiety. I live in Bryan now. Have a plan. Stick to it. Yall stay safe!
Al Bula said:why is the Harris county judge doing law enforcement/Joe Biden sunglasses cosplay?jetch17 said:
This was awesome except when I showed it to my wife, the volume from all 6 stations was on so it about made us deaf.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Also will never forget that someone on here posted a link to a live stream of all 5 Houston news stations and CNN that would run simultaneously on one screen. Back in 05 this was some wizardry.
Dr. Doctor said:My old roommate was one of the idiots; except he drove FROM CS to Cypress, since his mom said she wanted him and his brother with her through the storm.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
For the benefit of folk that may be new.
So he was one of like 5 cars the whole way going INTO town. Took him like a week to get back home, because of the cars, no gas and clogged roads.
~egon
jetch17 said:
A lot of folks got caught in the trap of heading up into east Texas during Rita which turned out to be right in the direct path of the storm. Fallen pine trees had power out for weeks.Quote:
In theory now you'd still have a east option to travel as well as north
jetch17 said:
Dr. Doctor said:
Just as friendly advice for those in a direct path or those wanting to prep.
- Water (from the faucet) can be stored in many things. Cooking pots, bathtubs, jugs, etc. This water can be used for personal needs as well as drinking water.
- A bathtub filled to the brim with a solid, no leak stopper (rubber type) can be used to fill the toilet when going to the bathroom. Can also use for water to sponge bath.
- A stock pot for cooking holds 2 to 3 gallons of water. Can be used for pets or drinking.
- Put drinking water in a freezer NOW for 2 reasons: provide additional thermal mass (to keep temperatures cold in freezer) and to have drinking water once it is thawed.
- REMEMBER WATER EXPANDS 9% WHEN FROZEN COMPARED TO LIQUID. So if refilling a used bottle (which is a great idea, because you can control the amount you put IN the bottle), fill about 90% full then cap. Larger bottle (not the 0.5 L ones) are good, like 2-L coke bottles, 1 gallong jugs, etc. You might mark the cap with a sharpie to denote 'old' vs. new bottles.
- Pick up any loose stuff in the yard. Toys, potted plants, etc.
- Disconnect any powered items you want to make sure don't get fried in any weird lightning issues. Computers/laptops that won't be used, unplug them so they are 'safe' from power surges.
- Get cash form ATMs or the bank. Places may be open, but CC might not be used. Couple Benjamins (but in smaller demoninations) work best.
~egon
The one factor that could hold #Beryl back in the Gulf is mid-level dry air. 12Z GFS shows this wrapping into and around the core, and so it never deepens significantly. If it's able to wall off a core, though, it could intensify much faster. Tricky forecast for sure. pic.twitter.com/rLGZBQWXgE
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) July 5, 2024
Recon aircraft flying into #Beryl found the 700mb circulation center just offshore of the northern Yucatan Peninsula. Max winds on north side in the 50-60 mph range. pic.twitter.com/gp5wLvWD8c
— Dr. Levi Cowan (@TropicalTidbits) July 5, 2024
DDub74 said:
The best time to evacuate from a Hurricane is when the winds at your house are 30 plus MPH. This means the storm is still hours away but by then everyone else is gone. We did this for Ike in 2008 and it was clear sailing to Austin in no traffic. The two days before it was a 10 hour drive.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:Also pre-social media and pre-smartphone era.Quote:
One has to remember that was fresh off the heels of Katrina. Everyone was freakin out.
People were on the road communicating via SMS ... "We've moved 1/10th of a mile in the past 3-hours." Now 20-years later people got the ability to live stream 4K video from their car.
We also looking at the total level of hysteria being amplified at light speed, see Covid.
During Rita it seem like the tipping point was when schools and employers started to cancel and send people home mid-day. Nobody knew what to do so people got in their car and started driving all at the same time.
As I recall emergency management pleaded with people that everyone north of Dick bayou stay put and allow costal dwellers to get north first.
As we saw, human nature took over and it was everyman for themselves. Mad Max on every road north out of Houston. Then what mad it even more ****ed was them reversing the traffic on all lanes going north. People tried to turn around and there was simply nowhere to go.
Complete gridlock.
Was wild to watch it all go down. Turned out texags was the best source of info as people were posting info they received by text from people out in it.
The ICON has been locked in to a solution taking Beryl right at Galveston/Houston metro as a major hurricane late Sunday PM/Monday AM.
— Garrett Bastardi (@garrettmb) July 5, 2024
Hard to ignore its consistency.
Corpus Christi to GLS/Houston Metro all in play… pic.twitter.com/9vnCXYQwvj
PJYoung said:The ICON has been locked in to a solution taking Beryl right at Galveston/Houston metro as a major hurricane late Sunday PM/Monday AM.
— Garrett Bastardi (@garrettmb) July 5, 2024
Hard to ignore its consistency.
Corpus Christi to GLS/Houston Metro all in play… pic.twitter.com/9vnCXYQwvj
Now add the 18Z Euro to the camp of an intensifying Hurricane Beryl directly impacting Galveston and the Houston Metro Sunday night and into Monday.
— Garrett Bastardi (@garrettmb) July 5, 2024
A high impact event Verbatim... pic.twitter.com/H43Aw85ms3