Bondag said:I was just at Home depot buying things for work and saw a soccermom with 3 kids in tow buying 6 bags of mulch.Collard Greens said:
Neighbors have resorted to potting soil in lieu of sand bags
Mulch? Lol
Bondag said:I was just at Home depot buying things for work and saw a soccermom with 3 kids in tow buying 6 bags of mulch.Collard Greens said:
Neighbors have resorted to potting soil in lieu of sand bags
Aw, quit getting butthurt. You disagree with those panicking, they disagree with you. Is there anything more to be said? Just leave it be.claym711 said:
Careful with that kind of talk. Your head will roll if you do not panic.
suggest you monitor Google Traffic maps. No significant traffic on any roads leaving Houston right now... tonight might be a different animal as people get off work and start the freak out mode. I did the Rita evacuation - never again.MAS444 said:
Any reports on the highways/traffic getting out of town? Trying to figure out if/when I'm leaving...
devastor said:
Here is 5-day forecast showing second landfall
Thanks for this. I am up in Dallas, but I am in charge of facilities in Houston, Freeport, Corpus, and Brownsville.Hennessy11 said:
Good site to monitor river levels near you. Recommend viewing on a desktop. It will show you when it's approaching the bank level.
https://www.harriscountyfws.org/
I am using potting soil and mulch bags since sand bags are impossible to find. Not perfect but probably better than nothing.DRE06 said:
Anyone know where I could get 5-6 sand bags in West houston/spring branch area?
Praying you're right. I don't think people are panicking overmuch based on the forecasts but there's always a "the end is NIGH!!" sense with these big storms. I live here in Cypress, all the roads around my house are under construction so flooding will be a total wild card since the drainage will be impacted - we have never flooded before but we've never had the drainage behind out house torn up and culverts half-finished either. And I have family in Port A and Rockport and my heart is breaking for the losses they may have. My cousin is a Rockport first responder so his wife and mom don't even get to be with him while they wonder what they're coming home to. Frankly if this whole thing turns out to be a huge nothingburger I would pop champagne.rononeill said:
my "this is going to be meh" meter is starting to tick up... this second landfall business is sounding like an attempt to save face. that said, I've 34 gallons of bleach in the attic ready to go...
Sounds like 5-25" with the higher totals towards the coast is a better alternative than the other. Granted, he talks about a model where it makes landfall in SW LA and not in Texas which I think that picture shows.Quote:
The Euro special
Odds: 40 percent. Earlier today we discussed the European model solution for Harvey, which brings the storm into the Texas coast, stalls it, then pulls it back over the Gulf of Mexico and eventually into southwestern Louisiana. Under such a scenario, depending upon the track, much of the Houston area would likely get 5 to 25 inches of rainfall, with the greater totals closer to the coast.
The wandering 59 special
Odds: 35 percent. This solution is favored by many members of the GFS model ensemble, in which Harvey comes inland, and wanders around Corpus Christi, and the rest of the Valley until Sunday or Monday. Then it moves up the Highway 59 corridor, into Houston, over Beaumont, and off into Louisiana. Such a scenario would likely bring 10 to 25 inches of rain to much of the Houston metro area, but totals might not necessarily be greatest along the coast.
Are you supposed to cut the bleach anything or just drink it straight from the bottle?rononeill said:
my "this is going to be meh" meter is starting to tick up... this second landfall business is sounding like an attempt to save face. that said, I've 34 gallons of bleach in the attic ready to go...
where abouts in cypress are you? I'm in far west Tomball and I'm wondering how this is all going to play out. Part of me thinks it won't be that bad.jenn96 said:Praying you're right. I don't think people are panicking overmuch based on the forecasts but there's always a "the end is NIGH!!" sense with these big storms. I live here in Cypress, all the roads around my house are under construction so flooding will be a total wild card since the drainage will be impacted - we have never flooded before but we've never had the drainage behind out house torn up and culverts half-finished either. And I have family in Port A and Rockport and my heart is breaking for the losses they may have. My cousin is a Rockport first responder so his wife and mom don't even get to be with him while they wonder what they're coming home to. Frankly if this whole thing turns out to be a huge nothingburger I would pop champagne.rononeill said:
my "this is going to be meh" meter is starting to tick up... this second landfall business is sounding like an attempt to save face. that said, I've 34 gallons of bleach in the attic ready to go...
depends on how bad the storm getsVery Tolerant Nice Guy said:Are you supposed to cut the bleach anything or just drink it straight from the bottle?rononeill said:
my "this is going to be meh" meter is starting to tick up... this second landfall business is sounding like an attempt to save face. that said, I've 34 gallons of bleach in the attic ready to go...
yeah, hitting in Texas is the difference for the metro areaQuote:
Granted, he talks about a model where it makes landfall in SW LA and not in Texas which I think that picture shows.
BowSowy said:Based on the SCW blog last night, this is actually a better scenario for large parts of Houston than if the thing traveled up here along the 59 corridor.Ag13 said:
I'm at the very eastern edge of Cypress, at Louetta & Grant. Normally I wouldn't be very worried about flooding - we are not near any creeks or watersheds and I've run the DFIRM hydrography layers and our house looks fine - but the Grant Rd construction has me puckered tighter than as snare drum. Our house backs up to Grant Rd.Quote:
where abouts in cypress are you? I'm in far west Tomball and I'm wondering how this is all going to play out. Part of me thinks it won't be that bad.
Sorry, that wasn't clear. I use a program called Landvsion for my job and it allows you to lay in the FEMA, DFIRM and Wetlands layers for an area to see where they are. I'm in commercial real estate and we have to let buyers know if properties are in one of these wet layers before they buy.rononeill said:
tell me about the DFIRM study?
Idiots. Sit them on their sides so you get more than 3 inches of displacement.Bondag said:I was just at Home depot buying things for work and saw a soccermom with 3 kids in tow buying 6 bags of mulch.Collard Greens said:
Neighbors have resorted to potting soil in lieu of sand bags