Topic: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)  (Read 8740 times)

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Offline Gambler

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #60 on: September 12, 2004, 05:11:20 pm »
It's looking more and more like Ravok is gonna get lucky.



Now we've just gotta pray that the storm fizzles out in the gulf and does nothing.
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WWJKD - What Would Jim Kirk Do

I thank God I grew up in an age when a kid could still play with things that could put his eye out.


Offline J. Carney

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #61 on: September 12, 2004, 05:14:23 pm »
We're doing just that... not to mention preparing for it NOT doing it.

Oh, well... at least I got a good place on high ground to run to when it hits.
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The advantages of living in the Heart of Dixie- low cost of living, peace and quiet and a conservative majority. For some reason I think that the first two items have a lot to do with the presence of the last one.

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Ravok

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #62 on: September 12, 2004, 07:32:23 pm »
That thing is going to drop a whole lot of rain, when it hits inland.

 I'm just hoping it keeps going into the Yucatan peninsula.

Offline J. Carney

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #63 on: September 12, 2004, 07:34:59 pm »
That thing is going to drop a whole lot of rain, when it hits inland.

 I'm just hoping it keeps going into the Yucatan peninsula.

Would be nice- we'll see by morning.
Everything I did in my life that was worthwhile I caught hell for. - Earl Warron

The advantages of living in the Heart of Dixie- low cost of living, peace and quiet and a conservative majority. For some reason I think that the first two items have a lot to do with the presence of the last one.

"Flag of Alabama I salute thee. To thee I pledge my allegiance, my service, and my life."
   

Offline Gambler

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #64 on: September 13, 2004, 07:17:46 am »
Amateurs search for hurricane cures

JACKSONVILLE, Florida (AP) -- Amateur hurricane-busters have come up with any number of crackpot ideas to spare Florida from ferocious storms. Among them: blowing hurricanes away with giant fans or blowing them up with nuclear warheads.

Even the federal government got into the act, with three decades of ill-fated research called "Project Stormfury" before shelving the idea of weather modification in the 1980s.

But dozens of ideas -- part hope, part fantasy -- continue to crop up among weather wonks, Internet bloggers and others who think they have come up with a way to spare coastal residents the misery of hurricanes.

Suggestions have included coating the surface of the water with olive oil; towing an iceberg down to Florida to cool down the water temperature; or building large fans on the coast to blow away approaching storms.

"And then there was a guy who called and said he could pray them away," said Hugh Willoughby, a research professor with the International Hurricane Center at Florida International University.

By far the most outlandish proposal, and one of the most recurrent, was the idea to use a nuclear warhead to blow a hurricane out of the water.

"Hurricanes are bad enough without being radioactive," Willoughby said. "Put that genie back in the bottle. Nuclear weapons are more dangerous than hurricanes."

Willoughby, who reviewed some of the proposed inventions when he was director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's hurricane research division, said many of the ideas are quickly debunked for lacking a basic understanding of meteorology.

One government plan was to spread a substance on the water, but the wind and waves made it impossible to keep a slick, he said.

"All of these underestimate the scale of a storm," Willoughby said.

Still, one South Florida businessman thinks he has a winning idea -- flying a Boeing 747 into the monster storm, where it would hit it with tons of super absorbent powder, literally sucking it dry and breaking it apart.

Only a test will determine if it is a flight of fantasy, and there are no plans to try the process on the approaching Hurricane Ivan.

But businessman Peter Cordani, chief operating officer of Dyn-O-Mat, a company that sells environmental absorbent products, thinks he can knock down a storm by one or two categories.

He claims to have caused a thunderstorm to disappear in a test off Palm Beach, and he's assembled a team including two former astronauts to work on the plan.

"We have a lot of confidence in it," said Scott Mac Leod, one of the astronauts who tested the lunar module.

Others aren't so sure.

The government's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory describes the proposal as a long-shot: Any effect of the absorbent powder would be small, and require thousands of tons of goop, flown into the storm in hundreds of sorties every half hour or so.

Willoughby said the project would be "hugely expensive for not much benefit."

"It would really take all of the military heavy-lift aircraft that the United States has to carry the material, and there would be a major air traffic control problem around the eye," he told the AP last year.

The government suggests that amateur hurricane busters focus their energy on more realistic goals -- enforcing building codes, educating the public about preparedness and helping poorer nations prepare for the storms.

=====================================================


I give those guys an E for effort, but Jeez, nuking a hurricane?  I really don't think that would have an effect, other than put a buttload of radioactive material in the air.

As a living breathing human, I think I'd rather have the hurricane than the nuke.
I'm a Man
But I can change
If I have to
I guess


WWJKD - What Would Jim Kirk Do

I thank God I grew up in an age when a kid could still play with things that could put his eye out.


Offline Gambler

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #65 on: September 14, 2004, 06:28:08 am »
Ravok wins!  No severe hurricane damage for Florida. 
I'm a Man
But I can change
If I have to
I guess


WWJKD - What Would Jim Kirk Do

I thank God I grew up in an age when a kid could still play with things that could put his eye out.


Ravok

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #66 on: September 14, 2004, 02:26:49 pm »
 I don.t want it to hit anywhere. :) I don't want anybody to go through what we did. :(
 Believe it or not, they just got done restoring power to everybody, yesterday.

Offline Gambler

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Re: Hurricane Preparations (a must read for Floridians!)
« Reply #67 on: September 14, 2004, 02:47:56 pm »
At noon today they shut down all the Casinos in Gulfport, Biloxi, and the surrounding areas to customers.  They have until midnight to remove all the money from the cage and take it to the bank via armored car.  In addition they have to properly secure everything inside.

Once secured, gaming will search the boats to ensure that nobody is left inside and seal the doors.  Noone is allowed back into the boats until after gaming has come back and re-searched the boat.

[Edit]
So far there is no plans on shutting down the casino's here in Vicksburg.  We're 200+ miles inland so while we may get wind and rains, it won't be as severe.  During the hurricane 2 years ago they did shut us down and it was somewhat of a publicity problem because we had clear skies and sunshine instead of the problems expected.
I'm a Man
But I can change
If I have to
I guess


WWJKD - What Would Jim Kirk Do

I thank God I grew up in an age when a kid could still play with things that could put his eye out.