Hurricane Rita thread

  • #121
Sassygerl said:
Breaking News CNN-----Rita expected to be cat 4 by 2 pm ET tomorrow :eek:
Rita is going to be one nasty hurricane. Pity those poor people living along where it makes landfall. They project the eye making landfall on Saturday, or so; so that's four days from now, and if it is a category 4 by tomorrow?? That's scary

Hurricane Rita Projected Path
http://tinyurl.com/c4fym
 
  • #122
Sassygerl said:
Breaking News CNN-----Rita expected to be cat 4 by 2 pm ET tomorrow :eek:

HOLY CRAP....

Still don't understand about the plywood - didn't look like it was much help to most of those homes that got hit by Katrina - maybe if its' a 1 or 2 I guess it might help, but above that, forget it, just get the H out.
 
  • #123
Poco

Plywood works fine on the windows, just hope your house isn't made of it. LOL
 
  • #124
deandaniellws said:
But the slower it travels the more water is picks up....making it all the worse. ;( I am so glad it is going to miss Houston. I feel so bad for who it hits.
I am hoping you didn't speak too soon about it missing Houston. Landfall is about 4 days away; anything could happen between now, and then. But wouldn't it be ironic if it did hit Houston?? Those New Orleans evacuees, that are now in Houston, are going to think they are snake-bit.
 
  • #125
  • #126
Beyond Belief said:
There is no sheer to effect it over the gulf, so it will strengthen. However it will meet a low off the coast of Texas which might slow it down a a little. This is going to be a very dangerous storm and all precautions should be taken.

The old expression 'DON'T MESS WITH MOTHER NATURE' should be heeded.
It's another big'un. This could be another Katrina. It's a fairly massive hurricane already, with days to go.

Hurricane Rita Satellite Imagery (Patience Required)
http://tinyurl.com/6fmsy
 
  • #127
Buzzm1 said:
I am hoping you didn't speak too soon about it missing Houston. Landfall is about 4 days away; anything could happen between now, and then. But wouldn't it be ironic if it did hit Houston?? Those New Orleans evacuees, that are now in Houston, are going to think they are snake-bit.
We are trying to ship them out of Houston at the moment. I am hoping I haven't spoken too soon either. I should know better than to open my mouth after the little jolt Hugo took at the last minute. If it wasn't for that..it would have hit us straight on. The fact that they were so SURE it was going to hit us.... others didn't bother to prepare properly and it was deadly. I will :silenced: my lips.
 
  • #128
  • #129
Beyond Belief said:
Good grief that image is beyond belief! thanks for sharing.
Rita appears to finally be opening her eye (Cyclops) and is carrying an incredible amount of rain, as signified by the large red area, and also the brownish yellow.

Hurricane Rita Satellite Imagery (Patience Required)
http://tinyurl.com/6fmsy


REPEATING THE 8 PM EDT POSITION...24.0 N... 82.6 W. MOVEMENT
TOWARD...WEST NEAR 12 MPH. MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...105 MPH.
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE... 969 MB.


Category Two Hurricane:
Winds 96-110 mph
(83-95 kt or 154-177 km/hr). Storm surge generally 6-8 feet above normal. Some roofing material, door, and window damage of buildings. Considerable damage to shrubbery and trees with some trees blown down. Considerable damage to mobile homes, poorly constructed signs, and piers. Coastal and low-lying escape routes flood 2-4 hours before arrival of the hurricane center. Small craft in unprotected anchorages break moorings. Hurricane Frances of 2004 made landfall over the southern end of Hutchinson Island, Florida as a Category Two hurricane. Hurricane Isabel of 2003 made landfall near Drum Inlet on the Outer Banks of North Carolina as a Category 2 hurricane.


Category Three Hurricane:
Winds 111-130 mph
(96-113 kt or 178-209 km/hr). Storm surge generally 9-12 ft above normal. Some structural damage to small residences and utility buildings with a minor amount of curtainwall failures. Damage to shrubbery and trees with foliage blown off trees and large trees blown down. Mobile homes and poorly constructed signs are destroyed. Low-lying escape routes are cut by rising water 3-5 hours before arrival of the center of the hurricane. Flooding near the coast destroys smaller structures with larger structures damaged by battering from floating debris. Terrain continuously lower than 5 ft above mean sea level may be flooded inland 8 miles (13 km) or more. Evacuation of low-lying residences with several blocks of the shoreline may be required. Hurricanes Jeanne and Ivan of 2004 were Category Three hurricanes when they made landfall in Florida and in Alabama, respectively.
 
  • #130
Buzzm1 said:
It's another big'un. This could be another Katrina. It's a fairly massive hurricane already, with days to go.

Hurricane Rita Satellite Imagery (Patience Required)
http://tinyurl.com/6fmsy


Yep......once it hits the Gulf and the warm waters it'll be huge.

Said it'll be a Cat 4 by tomorrow afternoon and hit Galveston midnight Fri/Sat

been helping buddies board up beach houses on Galveston and Bolivar Peninsula all afternoon.

Plywood scarce, water selling out, lines at gas stations.....


http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/storm_graphics/AT18/refresh/AL1805W5+gif/151209W_sm.gif
 
  • #131
Prayers to all on the Gulf Coast. I will be watching and praying but please leave north of College Station. Go to Colorado at the very least. For good hotel rooms and such. Don't depend on evacuation centers if you can help it, just max out your credit cards.
 
  • #132
DEPUTYDAWG said:
I'm very glad you asked, Sassy...as I'm in the Waco area, and it's showing part of the "cone" up as far as us. I figured that's maybe some wind/rain...but it's my understanding that tornadoes are a real concern after a hurricane makes landfall, sooooo......

DPS is already putting Troopers on Rita assignments (schedules already published, on stand-by) ready to rock and roll.


I am not that far from you DAWG........
 
  • #133
I would love to see somebody assembling boats on the west coast of Florida with relief supplies to start the journey to texas as soon as the gulf is safe. They could move right in beachside with help and supplies. And maybe keep looters from coming in that way.
 
  • #134
  • #135
They are saying tropical storm here where I am....70 mph winds....what the heck goes with those winds??? Fences down...tree branches all over..what??? Someone please tell poor Sassy :) We've had incredible storms, but nothing this big.......we lived here back when the F5 hit Jarrell and were in the tub (tornadoes coming down all around)...that was scary as heck, but blew over quick. This booger is a bigun!!!!!
 
  • #136
Forecasters Fear Hurricane Rita's Strength

By MICHELLE SPITZER, Associated Press Writer


Rapidly strengthening Hurricane Rita lashed the Florida Keys on Tuesday and headed into the Gulf of Mexico, where forecasters feared it could develop into another blockbuster storm targeting Texas or Louisiana.

Thousands of people were evacuated from the Keys and low-lying areas of northern Cuba. On the far side of the Gulf of Mexico in Texas, Galveston started evacuations and officials made plans to move refugees from Hurricane Katrina who had been housed in the Houston area to Arkansas.

Forecasters said Rita could intensify in the Gulf of Mexico into a Category 4 storm with winds of at least 131 mph. The most likely destination by week's end was Texas, although Louisiana and northern Mexico were possibilities, according to the hurricane center.

Acting FEMA Director R. David Paulison told reporters that the agency has aircraft and buses available to evacuate residents of areas the hurricane might hit. Rescue teams and truckloads of ice, water and prepared meals were being sent to Texas and Florida.

"I strongly urge Gulf coast residents to pay attention" to the storm, he said.

Stung by criticism of the government's slow initial response to Hurricane Katrina, President Bush signed an emergency declaration for Florida and spoke with Texas Gov. Rick Perry about planning for the storm's landfall.

"All up and down the coastline people are now preparing for what is anticipated to be another significant storm," Bush said.

Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said more than 2,000 Florida National Guard troops and dozens of law enforcement officers were ready to deal with the storm's aftermath, although it appeared the Keys were spared the storm's full fury.

"I think we did, so far, dodge a bullet," said Key West Mayor Jimmy Weekley.

Rita started the day as a tropical storm with top sustained wind of 70 mph. But as it cruised through the Florida Straits between the Keys and Cuba, it gathered energy from the warm sea, becoming a Category 2 hurricane with top winds of 105 mph, the National Hurricane Center said.

Bush received a briefing about Rita aboard the USS Iwo Jima, which is docked near downtown New Orleans, as the hurricane caused new anxiety among Katrina victims in Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama.

"There's still plenty of warm water that it needs to move over in the next couple days. The forecast is favorable for further intensification," said Michelle Mainelli, a meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center.

Residents and visitors had been ordered out of the Keys, and voluntary evacuation orders were posted for coastal mainland areas such as Miami Beach. Some 130,000 people were evacuated in Cuba, on the southern side of the Florida Straits.

Many of Key West's shops and bars were boarded up.

"This city was really very well prepared," said Jim Gilleran, owner of the 801 Bar in the Old Town section of Key West. He kept his business open despite the heavy rain and a power outage.

At least one segment of the Keys highway, U.S. 1, was barricaded because of water and debris, the Florida Highway Patrol said. Wind-driven water was flowing across other sections of the two- and three-lane highway that connects the Keys.

At 8 p.m. EDT, Rita's eye was about 65 miles west-southwest of Key West. The storm was moving west at 12 mph on a track that kept the most destructive winds at sea, the hurricane center said.



Nearly 900 miles from Key West, officials of Galveston were already calling for voluntary evacuations, with mandatory evacuations to begin Wednesday. Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco urged everyone in the southwest part of the state to prepare to evacuate.

Even those who had survived major hurricanes were getting ready to leave. Catherine Womack, 71, was busy boarding up the windows on her one-story brick house in Galveston.

"Destination unknown," she said. "I've never left before. I think because of Katrina, there is a lot of anxiety and concern. It's better to be safe than sorry."

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin suspended his plan Monday to start bringing residents back to the city after warnings that Rita could follow Hurricane Katrina's course and rupture his city's weakened levees.

The Pentagon stationed coordinating officers and staff at Tallahassee, Fla., and Austin, Texas, to assist storm preparations and recovery. The USS Bataan, an amphibious assault ship, was off Florida's Atlantic coast near Jacksonville, preparing to follow behind Rita to support relief efforts.

Crude-oil futures rose above $67 a barrel Monday, in part because of worries about Rita's effect on Gulf of Mexico production, but dropped briefly below $65 on Tuesday.

Oil companies and drilling contractors increased offshore rig and platform evacuations. Katrina destroyed 46 platforms and rigs and significantly damaged 18 platforms and rigs, according to the American Petroleum Institute.

Rita is the 17th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, making this the fourth-busiest season since record-keeping started in 1851. The record is 21 tropical storms in 1933. Six hurricanes have hit Florida in the last 13 months.

The hurricane season isn't over until Nov. 30.

___

Associated Press writers Jill Barton in Marathon and Vanessa Arrington in Varadero, Cuba, contributed to this report.

___

On the Net: National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov
 
  • #137
Holy crap, they are now saying that there is a good possibility that Rita will become a Cat. 5 before making landfall. Could be a Cat. 4 or possibly even a Cat. 5 when it makes landfall. This is one scary storm. I hope that everyone gets out of the way.
 
  • #138
Shadow205 said:
Holy crap, they are now saying that there is a good possibility that Rita will become a Cat. 5 before making landfall. Could be a Cat. 4 or possibly even a Cat. 5 when it makes landfall. This is one scary storm. I hope that everyone gets out of the way.

And while I'm so worried about everyone...I have family in Houston and also near Houston...I am still wondering what the heck a tropical storm means??? Guess I should Google eh??? LOL Like I said, I love storms and TX has some great ones, but this one worries me.
 
  • #139
Texas needs to treat this like a cat 5. It has 4 days to turn into one of the biggest monsters ever seen.
 
  • #140
Are you struck by the parallels or the differences between Katrina and Galveston? In what happened to New Orleans, I see few parallels other than the obvious—that Galveston and New Orleans both were disasters waiting to happen, Galveston because the entire city was at sea level, New Orleans, because much of the city is below sea level.

snip snip

Indeed, the great unsung engineering miracle of the early 20th century occurred when Galveston raised the grade of the entire city well above sea level, in part to convince the world that Galveston would be safe from future storms.
Galveston isn’t safe, by the way. Those same top hurricane experts all included Galveston in their top five nightmare scenarios. I can only wonder what Galvestonians were thinking as Katrina bore down on Biloxi and Gulfport.

Oh My....
 

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