Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. The storm took
out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! |
#2
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
On Sep 16, 7:55*pm, JimH wrote:
We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. *The storm took out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. * Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. * Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). * *Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. *We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. *Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. *As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! Been there, Sunday afternoon. It poured rain and wind in the morning, and got really windy about noon. Same conditions. Sunday evening I played cowboy, and went out and rustled up the trash cans, yard swing, trash. then took the shop vac to the Chris Craft seeing it's out in the open untarped, waiting for that perfect boating Saturday that seems to never materialize. Yeah, it was full of leaves and twigs. *ugh!* Yippie- Ky-Yay! |
#3
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
JimH wrote:
We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. The storm took out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! Monday *night*? It messed with us around 3 Monday *morning*. That's when we lost power. We didn't get it back until 11am Tuesday. We also lost a third of an old weeping willow in the back yard and a few shingles from the barn roof, but little damage other than that. I'm thankful it wasn't a couple of days quicker than that. My nephew was married on Saturday in our hayfield, selected because of the view of the valley to the east. There were tents, of course, and they definitely wouldn't have survived. As it was the portable facilities hadn't been picked up yet, and they, uh, were no longer right side up. (Good thing he hadn't wanted our front yard for a location!) We didn't get any rain to speak of, but one spot east of Lake Ontario clocked a wind gust in excess of 90 mph. A wind farm site near here clocked a peak gust of 56mph. The newspaper article explained that the high winds were caused by the remnants of Ike combining with a strong cold front moving through the area. We've had a generator since shortly after the Labor Day storm I described in another thread. It was enough to keep refrigerators and freezers cold, but not really enough extra for anything else. However, we could get water from a spring about four miles away, and I hooked up an old seven-inch Sony TV to the sealed lead-acid battery I use for my portable fish finder. (Note to self: Start looking for a digital TV converter that runs on a 12V wall wart!) Our propane stoves don't need electricity to run, and while it was cold enough at night to want some heat, our furnace doesn't rely on electricity, either. It was really nothing more than an inconvenience, but it was damned annoying. But the most annoying part came when I got power back, and with it Internet service. When I checked in here, I found the Unspeakable One had changed his handle, and I see another flood of crap showing up from him. Worse mess than the tipped outhouses made. Now I have to update my killfile - again. Sigh. TJ |
#4
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
TJ wrote:
JimH wrote: We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. The storm took out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! Monday *night*? It messed with us around 3 Monday *morning*. That's when we lost power. We didn't get it back until 11am Tuesday. We also lost a third of an old weeping willow in the back yard and a few shingles from the barn roof, but little damage other than that. I'm thankful it wasn't a couple of days quicker than that. My nephew was married on Saturday in our hayfield, selected because of the view of the valley to the east. There were tents, of course, and they definitely wouldn't have survived. As it was the portable facilities hadn't been picked up yet, and they, uh, were no longer right side up. (Good thing he hadn't wanted our front yard for a location!) We didn't get any rain to speak of, but one spot east of Lake Ontario clocked a wind gust in excess of 90 mph. A wind farm site near here clocked a peak gust of 56mph. The newspaper article explained that the high winds were caused by the remnants of Ike combining with a strong cold front moving through the area. We've had a generator since shortly after the Labor Day storm I described in another thread. It was enough to keep refrigerators and freezers cold, but not really enough extra for anything else. However, we could get water from a spring about four miles away, and I hooked up an old seven-inch Sony TV to the sealed lead-acid battery I use for my portable fish finder. (Note to self: Start looking for a digital TV converter that runs on a 12V wall wart!) Our propane stoves don't need electricity to run, and while it was cold enough at night to want some heat, our furnace doesn't rely on electricity, either. It was really nothing more than an inconvenience, but it was damned annoying. But the most annoying part came when I got power back, and with it Internet service. When I checked in here, I found the Unspeakable One had changed his handle, and I see another flood of crap showing up from him. Worse mess than the tipped outhouses made. Now I have to update my killfile - again. Sigh. TJ I also see another twit who is just as bad on the other side of the coin. What IS it with these people? Another killfile resident, coming up! And they say the PRISONS are overcrowded... TJ |
#5
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
TJ wrote:
Monday *night*? It messed with us around 3 Monday *morning*. That's when we lost power. We didn't get it back until 11am Tuesday. We also lost a third of an old weeping willow in the back yard and a few shingles from the barn roof, but little damage other than that. I'm thankful it wasn't a couple of days quicker than that. My nephew was married on Saturday in our hayfield, selected because of the view of the valley to the east. There were tents, of course, and they definitely wouldn't have survived. As it was the portable facilities hadn't been picked up yet, and they, uh, were no longer right side up. (Good thing he hadn't wanted our front yard for a location!) We didn't get any rain to speak of, but one spot east of Lake Ontario clocked a wind gust in excess of 90 mph. A wind farm site near here clocked a peak gust of 56mph. The newspaper article explained that the high winds were caused by the remnants of Ike combining with a strong cold front moving through the area. We've had a generator since shortly after the Labor Day storm I described in another thread. It was enough to keep refrigerators and freezers cold, but not really enough extra for anything else. However, we could get water from a spring about four miles away, and I hooked up an old seven-inch Sony TV to the sealed lead-acid battery I use for my portable fish finder. (Note to self: Start looking for a digital TV converter that runs on a 12V wall wart!) Our propane stoves don't need electricity to run, and while it was cold enough at night to want some heat, our furnace doesn't rely on electricity, either. It was really nothing more than an inconvenience, but it was damned annoying. But the most annoying part came when I got power back, and with it Internet service. When I checked in here, I found the Unspeakable One had changed his handle, and I see another flood of crap showing up from him. Worse mess than the tipped outhouses made. Now I have to update my killfile - again. Sigh. TJ I also see another twit who is just as bad on the other side of the coin. What IS it with these people? Another killfile resident, coming up! And they say the PRISONS are overcrowded... TJ Speaking of twits, have you looked in the mirror this morning? Got any interesting boating related posts? |
#6
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
On Sep 17, 8:26*am, TJ wrote:
JimH wrote: We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. *The storm took out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. * Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. * Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). * *Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. *We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. *Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. *As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! Monday *night*? It messed with us around 3 Monday *morning*. My bad..........Sunday night. |
#7
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
High Winds
"JimH" wrote in message ... We had wind gusts up to 75 mph from Ike Monday night. The storm took out old standing oak trees, amongst others, as well as large sections of large tree brances and trunks. Our suburb, along with all surrounding suburbs, looked like war zones the next morning with fallen trees over power lines, house and roads. 2 large trees took down 3 utility poles and power lines feeding our (and many other) ever though our lines are underground. Needless to say I was 10th in line at Costco Monday morning to purchase a portable generator as we had no idea how long the power outage would last (and we have suffered through too many in the past). Portable generators could not be found through any source by noon that day. Some 350,000 folks in Greater Cleveland lost power as well as hundreds of thousands (perhaps over a million) in Columbus and across the rest of the State. We lost power for 24 hours and were lucky to get it restored so fast. Parts of the State (including parts of Clevleland and Columbus) will not be restored till the weekend. My neice living in Texas took the brunt of the storm (although she is in middle Texas) and does not expect power to be restored to her house till the end of the month. As I said before in another thread the footprint of this hurricane was tremendous. As a result it made a major hit across an entire State as far north as Ohio. Ike was one nasty storm! Brain fart............the storm hit us at dusk on SUNDAY night. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
More WINDS!!! | ASA | |||
NE Winds, East Winds, and South Winds | ASA | |||
15 knots of Winds | ASA | |||
More High Winds! | ASA | |||
flukey winds | ASA |