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Mr. Luddite[_4_] October 30th 17 04:26 PM

Crazy Night
 

Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.

Its Me October 30th 17 05:06 PM

Crazy Night
 
On Monday, October 30, 2017 at 12:26:03 PM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


It was breezy in SC Saturday, then we had a 70% chance of rain overnight into Sunday. Got up Sunday morning to no rain at all, but plenty of wind all day. The temps dropped as the day went on, then down to 36 degrees last night, with 32 in some outlying areas. By Friday it's back up to 80.

Mr. Luddite[_4_] October 30th 17 05:17 PM

Crazy Night
 
On 10/30/2017 12:55 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:

Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


We had heavy rain and this morning we had Gusty winds. No power outages.



There were over a million people without power in MA as of this morning.
Apparently, it was quite a storm that passed through. Many trees down,
large tree limbs, etc. I wouldn't know ... I slept through the whole thing.

Where's Whitefish when you need them?




Mr. Luddite[_4_] October 30th 17 05:19 PM

Crazy Night
 
On 10/30/2017 1:06 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Monday, October 30, 2017 at 12:26:03 PM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


It was breezy in SC Saturday, then we had a 70% chance of rain overnight into Sunday. Got up Sunday morning to no rain at all, but plenty of wind all day. The temps dropped as the day went on, then down to 36 degrees last night, with 32 in some outlying areas. By Friday it's back up to 80.



That's colder than anything we've seen up here so far this fall. Maybe
I should cross South Carolina off the "maybe" list. :-)



[email protected] October 30th 17 05:33 PM

Crazy Night
 
On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 13:19:22 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/30/2017 1:06 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Monday, October 30, 2017 at 12:26:03 PM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


It was breezy in SC Saturday, then we had a 70% chance of rain overnight into Sunday. Got up Sunday morning to no rain at all, but plenty of wind all day. The temps dropped as the day went on, then down to 36 degrees last night, with 32 in some outlying areas. By Friday it's back up to 80.



That's colder than anything we've seen up here so far this fall. Maybe
I should cross South Carolina off the "maybe" list. :-)



===

I once spent a winter in South Carolina courtesy of the US Army. It
wasn't exactly tropical but temps were almost always above freezing
and we only had one very light dusting of snow. You would have
thought it was a blizzard however based on how people were acting.

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Its Me October 30th 17 06:19 PM

Crazy Night
 
On Monday, October 30, 2017 at 1:33:11 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 13:19:22 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/30/2017 1:06 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Monday, October 30, 2017 at 12:26:03 PM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.

It was breezy in SC Saturday, then we had a 70% chance of rain overnight into Sunday. Got up Sunday morning to no rain at all, but plenty of wind all day. The temps dropped as the day went on, then down to 36 degrees last night, with 32 in some outlying areas. By Friday it's back up to 80.



That's colder than anything we've seen up here so far this fall. Maybe
I should cross South Carolina off the "maybe" list. :-)



===

I once spent a winter in South Carolina courtesy of the US Army. It
wasn't exactly tropical but temps were almost always above freezing
and we only had one very light dusting of snow. You would have
thought it was a blizzard however based on how people were acting.


Ah, Ft. Jackson. Yes, we can get a light snow and everything shuts down. No bread or milk in the stores, school lets out, and everyone goes home. It's a little crazy, but you have to remember that there are no snow tires, no snow plows, and no salt. The DOT will sand the overpasses and bridges, but that's about it. Oh, and most people don't have a clue how to drive in snow.

The quattro on the Audi eats it up. :)

Bill[_12_] October 30th 17 06:37 PM

Crazy Night
 
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/30/2017 12:55 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:

Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


We had heavy rain and this morning we had Gusty winds. No power outages.



There were over a million people without power in MA as of this morning.
Apparently, it was quite a storm that passed through. Many trees down,
large tree limbs, etc. I wouldn't know ... I slept through the whole thing.

Where's Whitefish when you need them?





They are forecasting rain for the weekend. Hopefully little wind, as in
the sport Dungeness crab opener.


[email protected] October 30th 17 11:06 PM

Crazy Night
 
On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 12:26:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:


Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


I didn't even know it was a named storm until I turned in the TV. It
was just wind and rain. I guess anything that was going to get blown
away blew away 6 weeks ago.

[email protected] October 30th 17 11:07 PM

Crazy Night
 
On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 13:17:09 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 10/30/2017 12:55 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:

Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


We had heavy rain and this morning we had Gusty winds. No power outages.



There were over a million people without power in MA as of this morning.
Apparently, it was quite a storm that passed through. Many trees down,
large tree limbs, etc. I wouldn't know ... I slept through the whole thing.

Where's Whitefish when you need them?



They are available ;-)


Mr. Luddite[_4_] October 30th 17 11:19 PM

Crazy Night
 
On 10/30/2017 7:06 PM, wrote:

On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 12:26:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:


Curious as to how those south of us experienced this latest storm that
worked up the coast yesterday. We got wacked pretty hard up here.
Many schools are closed, trees and limbs are down all over the place and
power is out for about 93 percent of the affected areas. Ours was out
since about 1 am but had been restored by mid morning. Little Honda
generator to the rescue again to keep the refrigerator cold along with
running a few lights.


I didn't even know it was a named storm until I turned in the TV. It
was just wind and rain. I guess anything that was going to get blown
away blew away 6 weeks ago.


It must have intensified as it worked it's way up the coast.
It's being referred to as the "Surprise" storm around here, not due to
the heavy rains but the 50 mph sustained winds and gusts over 80 mph.
One place in New Hampshire recorded a 132 mph gust.



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