Archive for July, 2009

I remember when Hurricane Francis came over my home town in Florida and the Weather Channel, this is before the power went out of course, was giving us a 90% chance of precipitation for the day. I looked outside to see my bark porch flooded and winds lashing the palms. That 90% chance was the result of data entered into computer models apparently with a 10% margin of error. If these models give results like this can we really trust these global warming models? Especially when these models do not take into account variables such as atmospheric water vapor and location of weather stations?

The front of my house is brick, but the sides and back are vinyl siding.

i have to write something for school about what i would do to ensure public safety during a hurricane if i were police commisioner. does anyone have any ideas as to what could be done to ensure public safety?

I’m planning a vacation for my mom and I. We’re going to Jamaica the first week of September 2009. Is this too risky a move, in reference to hurricane season? My mom’s a little nervous about getting stuck on the island with a hurricane.

Tornado footage from 2005. From stormvideo.com.

Could Hurricane Fran be framing me???

http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-AyM7AkQ.KPSt3.SonGE-?cq=1

i know its volunteer and you have to take a prerequisite class or something? if anyone here has don this can you please tell me the process or how it works. thanks.

Do you think more tropical storms and hurricanes will develop or were the National Hurricane Center’s predictions off base again?

The cyclone in coney island =D
How much is it for one ride?
And how much is it for the pictures?

Optional: how much is one ride on the wonder wheel?

Thanks

I live in an assisted living facility. We stay 25 feet from the building, but the weather is very hard on the elderly and the employees. I have a car, so I use my car, but not everyone will fit in my car nor do they want to sit in my car. How can I present this to the resident council.

own a co=op in Broward County

We are getting ready to take the family to disney world in orlando florida and have seen on the internet a new hurricane that has formed in the carribean (near Cuba). Will this hurricane hit us in orlando or is orlando far enough inland where it doesn’t feel the affects?

What were the wind speeds @ 300′-500′ above sea level? I would like some historical data because I am building residential dwellings and want to build safe structures.

You know you grew up in tornado alley if…

The first thing you do if you hear tornado sirens during the day is check your watch to see if it’s noon…or run outside to look.

You don’t get worried unless the sky looks "green".

You use the word "tornado" as a verb.

You chuckle at all the facebook groups called "I survived the ___ tornado."

You might go indoors when there’s a tornado, but you won’t "seek shelter" for anything less than an F3.

You know what Doppler radar, Hook echo, wall cloud, and rain-wrapped all mean. And you can read the radar map.

You’ve never exactly memorized the tornado precautions, but you’ve heard them enough times that you know them by heart anyway.

Watching the weather is entertaining. And red on the Doppler radar is exciting.

The phrase "Tornado on the ground, take your immediate tornado precautions" sends exciting shivers up your spine.

You’ve seen photos/videos of tornados and said, "Wow, that’s a nice one!"

You can feel/smell tornado weather brewing a few hours before the storm actually begins.

There’s an odd feeling as though you’ve misplaced something if you make it all the way to June without a tornado warning near you.

You think people that live in earthquake and/or hurricane prone areas are crazy.

You know what people are talking about when they mention the "May 3rd/Moore" tornado and the "Greensburg/May4th" tornado.

You watch the movie "Twister" just so you can point out all the inaccuracies in it.

You know your weathermen by their first names. i.e. Gary.

When you hear the tornado sirens go off, you go outside to watch the storm and take pictures.

Most of the tornado video footage comes from everyday people with camcorders instead of from actual news/weathermen.

You’re sure there’s a giant tornado magnet hidden somewhere in Moore. And that there are smaller ones distributed throughout trailer parks.

You know that the four seasons are actually: summer, late summer, winter (if you’re lucky), and tornado.

You don’t consider it windy until the windspeed is faster than 30mph.

You are highly entertained by people from outside tornado alley when there is a tornado watch.

You learned that some other states don’t have tornado drills from this list.

There’s enough random stuff in your tornado shelter that you could live there for a year.

You stand under your carport or open your front door to watch hail and/or thunderstorms.

You know the difference between a basement, a cellar, and a storm shelter.

The weather is a completely acceptable subject for conversation, at any time, for any occasion.

Your local mall has "tornado shelter" signs posted.

It doesn’t bother you the next day to find out that your area was under a tornado watch the night before and you had no idea. Unless, of course, it caused you to miss some interesting cloud formations.

Getting to "play" in the basement/cellar/storm shelter numbers among your favorite childhood memories.

You keep matches, candles, and candleholders in more than one place in your house.

Your town will never get hit by a tornado because you’re between two rivers or because an old Indian legend says so.

You complain about severe weather reports that interrupt the TV show you’re watching.

You can get together all your most important possessions in 2 minutes flat.

When tornado sirens woke you up in the middle of the night…you rolled over and went back to sleep.

You’ve ever tried to reassure someone by saying that "if anything forms it will only be a little tornado"…and couldn’t understand why this didn’t calm them down any.

It’s normal for your area to be under a tornado watch for multiple days in a row.

When looking at houses/buildings you give them a "tornado survival ranking". i.e., how big of a tornado it would take to destroy it. Also, if you are in a new building or house, you evaluate in your mind the best place to take shelter.

You’ve ever asked (probably w/ disdain) "Don’t they know the difference between a warning and a watch?"

You know what towns/cities a tornado normally passes through before coming your way.

From watching radar maps, you’ve heard of almost every small town in your state. And you know what towns are around them, but you have no idea where in the state they are.

You know what the freight-train noise sounds like from personal experience.

You laughed at everything in this list, but you also respect a tornado’s power. And you know that after it’s over, clean-up and re-building has to begin.

100’s of tons of steel vs. one of nature’s fiercest phenomenons. Once the rain starts coming down, there’s no turning back. Shameless promotion: Check out CATCH IT KEEP IT, the TV show I host on Science Channel: sciencechannel.com Add me on twitter: twitter.com Here’s my website: mikesenese.com More info about this tornado www.crh.noaa.gov PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHICAGO/ROMEOVILLE IL 330 PM CST TUE JAN 08 2008 …BOONE AND MCHENRY COUNTY TORNADO… A TORNADO …

A collection of severe weather clips shot over the past few years, including tornadoes, large hail, lightning, hurricanes, storm clouds, dust storms and a few other videos of violent weather. Shot by Warren Faidley. Faidley, recently called America’s “Top Storm Chaser” by MSNBC, is one of the few journalists and professional photographers who has witnessed and survived both an F-5 tornado and a category 5 hurricane. Warren is a best-selling author, motion picture consultant (Twister) and has …

Like what kind of foods should i buy, and what kind of supplies?

On July 3, 2009, Chad Cowan chased a cluster of severe storms through central Kansas. After encountering wind damage caused by earlier cells, he finally documented a brief tornado from I-70 between Salina and Abilene. You can follow Chad’s chases LIVE at TornadoVideos.net!

I am a salesman for a roofing contractor and I am trying to start filing claims for homeowners who didn’t realize their homes needed to be repaired and I want to make sure I am not setting myself and the homeowner up for failure

I’m thinking of enlisting and this is the kind of stuff I wanna do. Help people, rescue, provide relief, ect. Maybe work with an aircrew

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