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Gadget Gal

In Uncategorized on May 21, 2009 at 11:49 pm
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“Gadget Gal” in the subject field. You can also snail mail Janis Fontaine at Gadget Gal, Florida Home, P.O. Box 24700, West Palm Beach, FL 33415
The 5-in-1 Emergency Radio and Spotlight
See some of the best products we found during 2005.

Gadget Gal

Have a gadget idea? E-mail pbfeatures@pbost.com and put “Gadget Gal” in the subject field. You can also snail mail Janis Fontaine at Gadget Gal, Florida Home, P.O. Box 24700, West Palm Beach, FL 33415.

See the latest gadgets

2006 reviews archive

If you forget the keys, Tag Alert won't let you get far before sounding an alarm

Forget about being forgetful!

Losing things like your keys, wallet or cellphone is a double hassle: you’re not only frustrated at losing them, but you also waste lots of time trying to find them. Attach Tag Alert, called a “bodyguard” for your valuables, and an alarm will sound if you start to walk away without them. Tag to your valuable items and set the monitor to one of its two range settings, either short (30 feet) or long (100 feet), and clip the monitor to your jacket, belt or key ring or slip it into your pocket or purse. Tag Alert will respond with a strong audio alarm to let you know you have been separated from your belongings. Tag Alert runs on CR2016 batteries (included) in the tags and a CR2032 battery (included) in the monitor. Tag Alert can even discriminate between your tags and the tags of someone else and it will not interfere with other wireless products. An LED blinks every few seconds to indicate the tag is tracking. Tag Alert retails for under $40. Buy it online at sharperimage.com (search for item RP701). — Janis Fontaine

Brightfeet Lighted Slippers light the way in the dark

Night lights for your feet

Walking around in the dark is a great way to stub those toes! Next time the power goes out, put on your Brightfeet Lighted Slippers: They’re night lights for your feet! A light sensor makes the lights come on only in darkened conditions, saving battery life. (The slippers are powered by two replaceable lithium batteries that are included in each slipper.) Weight sensors alert the LED in each slipper to activate. The light is angled upward for the best projection of light, about 20 to 25 feet in front of you. After removing the slipper, a built-in timer delays LED shut-off to allow time to see your way safely back to bed. The slippers have comfortable, non-skid soles. They come in beige, black, navy, pink, camouflage and a bright multi-colored stripe. Brightfeet retail for about $40. Purchase them online at BrightFeetSlippers.com or try JCPenney stores. — Janis Fontaine

DeciGuard AB earplug with Built In Antimicrobial Protection

Seeking silent nights?

I can’t hear you. And that’s a good thing! Low-tech solutions, especially inexpensive ones, should not be underestimated. Disposable foam earplugs have saved many a marriage where one partner snores, and they can be a godsend when the winds begin to howl. When you’re dealing with so much stress, the last thing you need is to spend a sleepless night. They will also help drown out the sound of your neighbor’s generator, or, if you need to evacuate to a shelter, block out the noise of felow inhabitants. A portable CD player with headphones can also help if you can’t sleep. Headphones and some soothing music can calm your nerves. Because infection is a concern after a storm, consider the DeciGuard AB earplug with Built In Antimicrobial Protection (pictured). Dirt and grime are one thing; mold is another. These earplugs not only effectively reduce noise, but they can help protect against the growth of bacteria, molds and fungi. You can purchase earplugs at your local drugstore or by calling Western Safety Products at (206) 264-0808 or searching for the product name on the Internet. They’re cheap, but sometimes you have to buy a whole box. If you do, hand them out to your neighbors! — Janis Fontaine

The Energizer Energi To Go is a lightweight charger for your cellphone

Phone home

With this gadget, you’ll never be caught in the storm with dead cellphone batteries. And your teenager who failed to call in will never be able to use the excuse that his cellphone died. With the Energizer Energi To Go, two AA lithium batteries and this lightweight charger are all you need to charge your cellphone (and who doesn’t have AA batteries in their hurricane supply box?). According to Energizer.com, it charges the phone about as quickly as a wall charger. “That means on many phones you can make a call within 30 seconds.” A dead phone takes about two hours to fully charge, and the gadget works on most phones. It’s only about $20 and available at Target, Home Depot and Best Buy and online. (That’s cheap enough for your busy student to carry in his backpack!) Energizer recommends lithium batteries for better performance (three times faster, according to the Web site), but alkaline batteries will work. — Janis Fontaine

Bodum's Acrylic Thermal Travel Coffee Press just needs hot water

Caffeine-free? Not me!

There was one universal complaint during the power outages that followed the hurricanes: How can you make a decent cup of coffee without electricity? There are a few ways around this, but none better than the coffee press. Bodum makes a travel coffee press/tumbler with grip, all in one. This transparent travel press makes fresh coffee or tea; all you need is hot water. Add ground coffee or fresh tea leaves, press and enjoy. The travel press makes 16 ounces of your favorite coffee — enough to share with your grouchy neighbor — and the all-in-one tumbler is insulated. The Bodum Acrylic Thermal Travel Coffee Press retails for about $15 and is available at Target or online at www.bodumusa.com. Need a bigger pot? A six-cup family-size press is available for about $40. — Janis Fontaine

A carbon monoxide detector, such as the First Alert Tabletop detector, is essential for detecting deadly fumes in the home

Stop a silent killer

Generators are quickly becoming common in South Florida, but they carry a risk with them: Deadly carbon monoxide fumes may be sneaking into your house from your generator — or your neighbor’s. To prevent poisoning, every home should have a battery-operated carbon monoxide detector. Carbon monoxide is odorless, and if your shutters are up, you may not know that your neighbor has placed his generator too close to your property line and that the fumes are poisoning your air supply. For less than $30 at Wal-Mart and other retailers, you can get a First Alert Tabletop Carbon Monoxide Detector that runs on a 9-volt alkaline battery. Because it sits on a table top or shelf, no installation is required. — Janis Fontaine

Kidde fire extinguishers are available for about $50 online and at various stores

Fire extinguishers

You should already have a fire extinguisher at home, but if you don’t, this is the perfect time to invest in one or to buy another. Most suitable models sell for less than $50, and you can save if you buy more than one. After a storm, fire rescue is swamped with calls and may not be able to answer your cry for help immediately. Take charge by learning the correct way to use your fire extinguisher so you can catch the fire early. A rule of thumb: If the fire is bigger than you are, it’s too big to put out with an extinguisher. Memorize the acronym for using an extinguisher: It’s “PASS,” which stands for “pull, aim, squeeze, sweep.” Keep the fire extinguisher handy so you don’t have to hunt for it, but never next to the stove. Consider two extinguishers: one in the kitchen and one in the garage. Teach everyone in your family how to use it. Make sure it’s not too big for you to handle . The suggested type and size of fire extinguisher for home use is the dry chemical extinguisher. Each extinguisher has an alphabetical rating that tells what kind of fire it works on. You want an ABC rating, one that can work on paper, grease, flammable liquids and electrical fires. The fire extinguisher also has a numerical rating that tells how big a fire it can handle. The higher the number, the more power. It should also have a Underwriters Laboratories (UL.com) or Factory Mutual (FMglobal.com) approval rating. Kidde fire extinguishers have 3A40BC ratings and are available for about $50 online and at Home Depot, Lowe’s, Target, Walgreens, Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club. For more information on fire extinguisher use, click here.Janis Fontaine

Aqua Blox has a shelf life of five years, while bottled water lasts just six months

Aqua Blox

Charles Schooley, president of Aqua Blox in West Palm Beach, has a better idea for storing water. And while it won’t work for everyone, Schooley admits, for some, he says, Aqua Blox is the perfect solution. “Bottled water sits, and the minerals that remain are food for bacteria,” Schooley said. “Bottled water isn’t bad, but it doesn’t last.” Aqua Blox does. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the shelf life for bottled water is about six months. Aqua Blox’s shelf life is five years — great for emergency personal and first responders. Aqua Blox looks like your typical juice box. Each Blox contains about 8 1/2 ounces of bacteria-free water, which Schooley says is the highest grade of water you can get. The seven-layer container is airtight and hermetically sealed, and won’t let sunlight or contaminants back in. The Blox can be frozen, and the water is pure enough to use to cleanse wounds. The boxes are convenient to store and easy to dispense, and, when strict water rationing is an issue, Schooley says, Aqua Blox containers help prevent waste. Schooley says you can stop by the storefront off Jog Road just north of Okeechobee Boulevard (the address: 2253 Vista Parkway, Suite 12) in West Palm Beach and buy a case of 27 boxes for about $10. You can also have three cases delivered to your home or office for about $50, including two-day UPS delivery. For more information, call (866) 500-2782. — Janis Fontaine

The Slapshot Lawn Rake will come in handy after a storm — and is easier on your back

It scoots! It scores!

The Slapshot Lawn Rake uses an ergonomic design adapted from a hockey stick to lessen the stress on arms, back and shoulders usually caused by the use of a traditional rake. And when you’re cleaning up after a storm, you need work smarter, not harder. Dr. Scott Augustine, founder of Augustine Biomedical+Design, says the rake “gets the job done faster, with more power and less exertion” because it uses your stronger core muscles. The Slapshot Lawn Rake also has a unique tine design. Traditional tines are pointed to scrape the ground. They quickly clog with leaves and can damage your plantings. The Slapshot design has a rounded tine that Augustine says “significantly reduces the occurrence of clogging.” The Slapshot Lawn Rake retails for $14.95 plus shipping and handling. Order at www.SlapShot LawnTools.com or by calling (866) 484-3450. — Janis Fontaine

Wearing headlamps makes it easier to handle chores in the dark after a storm

Give yourself a hand!

Headlamps are great for giving you two hands in the dark, whether you’re filling the generator or making a peanut butter sandwich. Headlamps come in many different styles and prices, but expect to pay $10 to $70, depending on the features. Some headlamps convert to standard flashlights, and most use batteries. If you’re looking for a headlamp that is light, choose one that takes AA batteries, but if you’re looking for super-bright light, choose one that takes C batteries. Most lamps have adjustable straps for comfort, and some headlamps can fit over the top of your hat, rather than on the skin of the forehead. You can find headlamps at Target or Wal-Mart. Try one on to see if it’s comfortable. Is there any padding to make it easier to wear? Are the straps easily adjustable? Does it feel too light or too heavy? Is it easy to turn on and off? Is it waterproof? L.L. Bean also offers 13 styles of headlamps on its Web site: www. llbean.com. Or call (800) 441-5713. — Janis Fontaine

The Candlelier Deluxe Kit includes a padded carrying case, and candles

The Candlelier

Experts advise residents to never use candles in the home following a storm, because of the risk of fire. An exception to this rule might be the Candlelier, an alternative to flashlights, unprotected candles or propane lanterns. It uses candles — one, two or three, depending on how much light you need — that are neatly enclosed in the aluminum body, and the wind-resistant glass shield gives off soft, easy-on-the-eyes light. A side reflector can increase the power of the lantern for reading or writing, so the kids can do homework. The lantern has a spring-loaded candle tube that keeps the flame height constant, while a small viewing window shows how much candle remains. For 2006, UCO is offering a Candlelier Deluxe Kit that includes the lantern in the brushed aluminum finish, a padded carrying case, and six candles, retailing for under $46 from Amazon.com.Janis Fontaine

Unbelievable Saw

See? Saw!

After-the-hurricane cleanup is a tough job, but the Unbelievable Saw might make it a bit easier. The saw is a hand-held, flexible, lightweight saw that can cut through a 3-inch tree limb in about 15 seconds. The benefit to this product is that it’s lightweight (only 5 ounces) and easier to handle. Because of its design, it can be thrown over a high branch when you need to cut a branch above your head, and it’s great for tight areas. The saw has bi-directional cutting teeth so it cuts in both directions and it’s made of heat-treated steel and coated for rust resistance. When not in use, it gets stored away in its own plastic pouch. When it needs sharpening — which the manufacturer says is rare — a normal flat file will do the job. It can be used by one or two people at a time. The saw retails for under $23. Purchase online at www.unbelievable-saw.com or call (877) 388-9474. — Janis Fontaine

USLegal Forms.com offers state-specific packages for organizing your legal papers

Important paperwork

In the aftermath of Katrina, many families discovered that they had not created the important papers — power of attorney, wills and such — that they needed. Creating a life documents file can help organize your legal affairs. USLegalForms.com has a free guide. In addition, the site’s Florida Life Documents Planning Package includes a will, power of attorney, living will, health care proxy, and worksheets to help you with your planning. The package retails for $59.95 for download, or $69.95 by mail. Find a location at home where you know documents will be secure, yet readily accessible. A personal home safe is best. You can also keep copies in a rented safe deposit box. If you have an attorney, make sure he or she has also a copy of your life documents file. And send a copy of the documents to a friend out of state as a backup plan. — Janis Fontaine

Eton's Multi-Purpose Radio FR300

Hand-crank radios

Reporter Walter S. Mossberg of The Wall Street Journal tested hand-crank radios last September. “We found the $50 Multi-Purpose Radio FR300 by Eton Corp. at Hammacher Schlemmer and liked its multifaceted functionality,” he writes. Its features include AM/FM/weather-band radio, a flashlight and cellphone charger. Use the crank to recharge the device or use batteries. “Eton says that two minutes of cranking should suffice for an hour of radio play time, but we got 35 minutes out of a 30-second crank, which is even better than that estimate,” Mossberg writes. For about $10 more, Eton offers the FR400, which is waterproof. Order the radios online (www.hammacher.com; click on “electronics,” then “shortwave radios”) or by phone at (800) 321-1484. — Janis Fontaine

 Economy First Aid Kit

First-aid kits

A well-stocked first-aid kit is critical, especially during the aftermath, when cleanup begins. Purchase a kit online, like the ones offered by LifeKit, using guidelines by the Department of Homeland Security (see www.ready.gov/america/getakit/firstaidkit.html) or make your own. Here’s what it recommends: several pair of latex or other sterile gloves, sterile dressings to stop bleeding, a cleansing agent or soap and antibiotic towelettes to disinfect, antibiotic ointment, burn ointment, adhesive bandages in a variety of sizes, and eyewash solution, a thermometer (especially if you have kids). They also recommend tweezers, scissors and petroleum jelly. The Economy First Aid Kit shown is available for under $50 at www.lifekit.com (click on “Shop Online” and “First Aid”) online, or by calling, toll-free, (888) 767-0050. — Janis Fontaine

On Duty 4-in-1 tool

The 4-in-1 tool

Sometimes simple is better. Every well-stocked emergency kit should contain an emergency tool of some kind, and this tool is small enough — and cheap enough — to carry in the car and in your evacuation kit, wherever you need it. This tool can be used to turn off gas and water or as a pry bar to open doors and can be used to dig through debris after the storm. Designed and tested by professional firefighters, the tool is made of a strong, heat-treated alloy that won’t cause sparks or rust. The On Duty 4-in-1 tool is available online from a variety of companies including at www.iprepare.com or by calling (877) 874-8492. It retails for about $18.— Janis Fontaine

Coleman Hot Water on Demand

Heat things up!

With all the other things to worry about after a hurricane, food poisoning and a clean fork shouldn’t have to be on the list. If you’re worried that your dishes and silverware aren’t clean enough to eat off of, you might like the Coleman Hot Water on Demand, a portable hot water heater that uses propane to heat up to 40 gallons of water. The pump is powered by a rechargeable battery. So when you’re finished with that meal that you cooked on your propane stove, you can wash the dishes in hot water. The water heater retails for about $180. Accessories available include a spray adapter (for a quick hot shower) and a carry bag. Call (800) 835-3278. Web: www.coleman.com.Janis Fontaine

Whistler PI-3000W 3000W Power Inverter

A ‘current’ obsession

Now we need gadgets for our gadgets! A power inverter converts one kind of current — your car’s battery power — to another kind of current — a plug for your other gadgets. Hook the power inverter to your car’s battery to charge your cell phone or any other device you need to plug in to recharge. Power inverters come in a variety of sizes and price tags. Radio Shack offers a 60-watt DC-to-AC power inverter, Model 22-144, which is ideal for recharging any device that draws 60 watts or less of continuous AC power, for about $30. If you need super-power, consider the Whistler PI-3000W 3000W Power Inverter that can run bigger appliances like audio/video devices (including your kids’ PlayStation) and laptop computers. This device retails for just under $400 and is available at Radio Shack at RadioShack.com or by phone at (800) 843-7422. — Janis Fontaine

My Home Inventory

My Home Inventory

We have more belongings than ever today. From the kids’ Xboxes to hubby’s baseball card collection, in a crisis, how do you keep track of it all? With My Home Inventory, you may not have to worry so much. The software program helps keep track of your belongings and may even help when it’s time to file an insurance claim. The software can easily import your existing data from Excel or another compatible application or you can start from scratch. Find, sort and view your belongings, complete with stored digital pictures. Track where your belongings are so you can easily find them. This is especially helpful if you keep some of your stuff in a storage facility. Print insurance reports, inventory summary reports and identification labels. All the data can be downloaded onto a CD or stored on a flash drive that you can keep with you or store in a safe deposit box. Never get caught without an inventory of your priceless stuff again. The program retails for $24.95 and is available at My-HomeInventory.com. Flash drives are available beginning at about $20 and up for 256MB. — Janis Fontaine

Oregon Scientific emergency weather radio

Oregon Scientific emergency weather radio

The Oregon Scientific Public Alert Portable Emergency Weather Radio is lightweight, durable and easily transportable. Model #WR103NX can be powered by 3 AA 1.5V alkaline batteries (not included) or an AC adapter (included), and comes with a plastic desktop cradle and a belt clip. It features SAME (Specific Area Message Encoding) technology, allowing you to localize emergency broadcasts and monitor alerts from six local counties. It also receives continuous National Weather Service weather and forecast information. The weather radio features an LCD display screen, backlighting for low-light or night viewing, and it’s equipped with a digital clock and daily alarm. In stand-by mode, it monitors three levels of alert — advisory, watch and warning — and automatically sounds an alarm. Its range is about 40 miles. This is ideal if you have to evacuate because it’s water and shock resistant. It retails for about $39.95 and is available by calling (800) 414-8655, or on the Web at: www.weatherconnect.com (click on “weather radios”). — Janis Fontaine

XPower PowerSource 1800

XPower PowerSource 1800

Power to the people. That’s the mantra of XPower. The XPower PowerSource 1800 is the solution for more demanding power needs. It can run a refrigerator and freezer, sump pump and home alarm system. When a power outage occurs, it automatically switches to backup power from its internal battery, so the devices connected to it won’t sense the power outage. When grid power returns, the XPower PowerSource 1800 switches the devices back to utility power and automatically recharges its battery so it’s ready for when the next outage occurs. It retails for $499.99. The 1800 can be found at most Best Buy and Costco stores or can be ordered online at Amazon.com, Northerntool.com, Outpost.com, and QVC.com. For more information on the product, check out http://www.preparedwithpower.com/backup/products.aspJanis Fontaine

Generator-powered water heater

Generator-powered water heater

After the hurricanes, a hot shower topped many lists of most-missed comforts. While most portable generators have difficulty powering whole-house water heaters, even small generators can easily handle this 6-gallon water heater. Designed to mount on the wall or a floor, the Italian-made water heater will heat water up to 145º F. for a quickie sponge bath. To use the heater for showering, an additional adapter is required, but available at most hardware stores. $229.95 from www.hurricanesupplies.org.
Barbara Marshall

fan

Fans of Lila’s fan

Ask a Local Storm Team member Lila Young’s 10-inch battery-powered fan caught the eye of lots of readers — so Lila hit the pavement to help you locate her favorite fan. The 02 Cool fan, model number 1053, is a two-speed fan that can be hung up or placed on a flat surface. The fan should operate up to 72 hours on eight D batteries and also has an AC adapter. The fans retail for about $20. Young said the fan is available at local Bed, Bath & Beyond stores. A manager told Young that there were 300 on order. Last year, Young said, the stores took names for the waiting list and called folks when the fans came in. They’re also available at CVS, Walgreens, Winn-Dixie, Publix, Kmart, Target and other retailers. For more information, call (800) 200-COOL (2665) or visit www.O2-Cool.com.Janis Fontaine

Delux LED Everlite lamp

The sun’s light – at night

Give this light three hours in the sun, and it will give you 12 hours of solar-powered light. Even better, its thermally cool LED lamp won’t lure mosquitoes, moths and the other flying insects that make those hurricane-dark nights all the more miserable. A sensor in the Everlite spotlight turns the lamp on at dusk and off at dawn. Adapters are available that will use solar power to charge cellphones and other small electronic devices. The Delux LED Everlite lamp is widely available on the Web for around $80. — Barbara Marshall

Voltaic Backpack

Portable Power Pack

Never feel powerless again with this backpack that uses solar power to recharge small electronics. Equipped with three solar panels and a battery pack to store its sun-generated power, the Voltaic Backpack generates up to 4 watts of power to recharge cellphones, cameras, PDAs, electronic games and iPods, but not laptops. It could also come in handy on boats or camping trips. It comes with 11 adapters to fit most devices. It’s $239 from www.voltaicsystems.com.Barbara Marshall

15.

The 4-in-1 Car Emergency Tool and Flashlight has flashing lights that serve as distress signals

4-in-1 tool and flashlight

The 4-in-1 Emergency Flashlight is much more than a flashlight. It’s also a distress signal and potentially life-saving rescue tool.

The device includes a seat-belt cutter and a hammer to break a car windshield or window in the event of an accident. This is especially important in our area because of all the canals.

Nine flashing LEDs on the sides serve as a distress signal, and a white bulb on the top is the flashlight.

The device is waterproof and uses two AA batteries. Price is $14.95.

On the Web: http://safetybright.com


Archive of 2007 season


The Tracker Coffee Maker

Fire up morning cup of coffee in the car

Morning is always better after a good cup of coffee. And there’s no reason to do without even after a hurricane.

The Tracker 111-910 10-cup 12-volt Coffee Maker makes up to 10 cups, enough for you to invite the neighbors over.

The auto drip stops when the pot is removed, and it shuts off automatically when brewing is finished.

It uses standard filters and, here’s the best news: Your car’s battery can be your power source. It comes with a 6-foot power cord with heavy-duty plug. Price: $38.99

Get it online at www.rvmarine.com or call (888) 815-3579.

The Forever Flashlight, which needs no batteries, produces five minutes of light after you shake it for 30 seconds

A whole lot of shakin’ going on with Forever Flashlight

A flashlight with no batteries and no bulbs – that never needs replacing?

The Forever Flashlight uses Faraday’s Principle of Induction and a bright LED to produce light without batteries.

Shake it for about 30 seconds to recharge a capacitor and it will then provide about five minutes of light. As the light is shaken, a magnet passes through a metal coil generating electricity.

During prolonged use it can be shaken for 10 to 15 seconds every two or three minutes. You probably don’t want this as your primary backup light, but it’s great for the car because it requires no maintenance.

The bright LED will last for thousands of hours, and it’s visible for up to 1 mile. The light retails for about $25 from www.thinkgeek.com or by phone at (888) GEEKSTUFF. The light comes in three sizes, and it’s waterproof.

The Cold and Dry Ice Bag

A tidy way to keep things cool

The Cold and Dry Ice Bag, a reusable ice bag for coolers, keeps food cool without making it wet and soggy.

The manufacturer says this heavy-duty bag lasts longer than plastic bags and is easy to clean.

The bag can hold up to 32 pounds of ice, about four standard size bags of ice. Because it’s expandable, it can fit into many different size coolers.

The bag retails for $15.95, which includes a 21-by-16-inch plastic bag with nozzle and carrying strap.

Visit www.intromarkstore.com. Click on “Cold & Dry Ice Bag” under the “Sports & Leisure” label.

BloodSTOP gauze may protect injuries from infection and reduce the potential for scarring

BloodSTOP can be a valuable addition to your first-aid kit

A well-stocked first-aid kit is a critical part of your hurricane supplies.

A new product that stops bleeding, previously only available to doctors and veterinarians, is available to consumers.

BloodSTOP is an all-natural, hemostatic gauze that is commonly used in a wide variety of settings, including home first-aid kits, on school athletic fields, veterinary and dental offices, and even on the battlefield.

According to its manufacturer, when it comes into contact with blood, BloodSTOP hemostatic gauze speeds coagulation and expands to a gel that adheres to the surface and applies pressure as it seals the wound.

Made from natural cellulose, this hypoallergenic gauze is intended to protect injuries from infection and reduce the potential for scarring.

BloodSTOP is also water-soluble and washes off without causing additional trauma to the wound area.

A box of 10 individually wrapped sterile packets retails for $14.99 and is available at www.lifescienceplus.com or by calling (877) 587-5433.

The MyLight LED Clip Light will attach to practically anything

Let there be My Light!

The MyLight LED Clip Light, a mini-clamp lamp that fits in your palm, pumps out a beam bright enough to make you squint, never burns out, and attaches to practically anything with a wide-opening rubberized clip.

This light functions as a book light, but other uses include use as a keyboard light for your laptop or a map reading light in the car. It’s also attachable to a shelf or hat or tent, toolbox or music stand.

It’s useful for lighting up hard-to-see spots like sock drawers, tackle boxes, and the tangle of wires behind your desk or home entertainment center.

The My Light retails for $9.95. Buy it online at www.mylight.com or call (800) 776-6364. According to the Web site, My Light is available at Sharper Image and Toys R Us.

The  MiraCool Terry Lined Ranger Hat #963

Ranger hat keeps you cool

Here’s a cool way to keep cool, post-hurricane, when 100 percent humidity feels like a 100-pound wet blanket.

The MiraCool Terry Lined Ranger Hat #963 ($14.99) has channels at the top that hold water-activated MiraCool crystals. Soak the hat in water and the crystals stay plump and hydrated for up to two full days. The crystals retain the coolness of the water and work in combination with the evaporation process against the skin to keep the wearer cool.

The extra-wide brim keeps sun and heat off the head, face, eyes, ears and even neck. Four large grommets enhance air flow and evaporation and a cotton terry inner lining provides extra comfort and perspiration absorption. When worn wet, the hat delivers effective cooling to the top of the head. Worn dry, it can absorb buckets of sweat. Comes in medium, large and extra-large sizes, in navy or khaki. They also offer headbands, bandanas and visors. Order at stage1online.com/miracool/ or call (407) 349-2040.

Bausch & Lomb's eye wash/cup provides a safe method of flushing foreign bodies out of the eye

Add eye wash to first aid kit

Emergency first aid kits should contain eye wash and a cup, like this Bausch & Lomb Collyrium Eye Wash/Cup.

Eyewash is the best and safest way to flush foreign bodies and soothe and cleanse your eye. And with a price tag just over $5, it’s a great investment. Most pharmacies carry eye washes like this one. To order online, go to www.medco-school.com.

Another crippling discomfort is the blister. Whether on hands or feet, keeping it clean and protected is critical, and let’s face it, a regular Band-Aid just won’t do it. Try the Band-Aid Liquid Bandage. The no sting formula dries quickly and forms a clear, flexible, breathable seal that keeps out water, dirt and germs to help prevent infection. Find it at your pharmacy.

The lightweight EL-5 Deluxe EverLite LED Lamp will recharge by pointing the solar panel to the sun

Sun powers 24-hour lamp

As adorable as it was to see my son reading by candlelight during the last hurricane, it’s not something I want to see again.

Instead, try the EL-5 Deluxe EverLite LED Lamp. White LEDs light up your activities after dark, and the bright, thermally-cool light does not attract moths or flying insects at night.

It’s lightweight, waterproof, and recharges when you point the solar panel in the general direction of the sun and plug the panel’s cord into the base of the LED lamp.

The lamp should operate for 24 hours or more from its fully-charged battery, or give 12 hours of output light from three hours of full sun or up to 10 hours of overcast sky.

It turns off when you fold the lamp for storing, and the light sensor automatically turns lamp on at dusk and turns it off at dawn without a timer.

The lamp retails for about $100. Order it toll-free at (800) 589-5560, or online at kingsolar.com/catalog/mfg/everlite/975065.html

The Ezy Flare will alert other drivers and the authorites if your car breaks down or you get a flat tire on the road if the lights are out following a hurricane

A ‘Flare’ for safety

One thing that amazed me after the hurricanes was how pitch black it was outside without the street lights. So what would happen if your car broke down or you got a flat tire? How would anyone see you?

Easy. With the Ezy Flare ($24.99). Ezy Flare’s pulsating LED red and amber lights can be seen from about 8,000 feet away and have 12 hours of operating time. And you don’t have to worry about water damage. And here’s another excellent use: Place Ezy Flare in your home’s window to alert neighbors or emergency officials that you need help. A commercial version that can be seen in the daytime will be released soon.

Buy it by phone at (800) 397-0688 or online at www.hurricanesupplies.org

Lighted glasses from Panther help you see after a storm

Hats off to first Ask a Local winner

Diane Soja of Delray Beach gets an Ask a Local T-shirt for her suggestion of the lighted ball cap, like one from Panther. The caps “make reading and barbecuing a hands-free pleasure. You can find them at sporting good/camping stores and online.” Thanks, Diane. Some retail for $19.99 plus $5 shipping.

Not a hat person? How about lighted glasses? Panther offers lighted frames ($17.99) or lighted safety glasses ($22.99 and $19.99). Visit http://www. panthervision.com or call (847) 783-5900.

MIOX's Water Purifier will still function even if stored for a long period of time

Pure water – and no aftertaste

The MIOX Water Purifier, which looks a lot like a big pen, can purify 50 gallons of water using a teaspoon of common rock salt. It uses two 3-volt lithium batteries to convert a brine solution to a mixed-oxidant solution via electrolysis.

This solution “purifies without iodine, kills viruses, bacteria, including E. coli and Giardia,” and takes just 15 minutes. It can also kill Cryptosporidium, a particularly nasty bug, in four hours.

Advantages of the “pen” are that it’s easily portable and can be used away from the water source, at the consumer’s convenience, and requires less than a minute to generate the disinfectant.

The disinfectant solution does not leave an aftertaste at standard doses, unlike chlorine or iodine tablets. Another important feature of using simple salt as the disinfectant source is that salt has an infinite shelf life, so the purifier will still function even if stored without use for a long period of time. It weighs only 3.5 ounces, and is shock-proof and freeze-proof — not that that’ll be an issue!

Kits include a package of salt, battery set, water test strips, and full instructions.

“The purifier also comes with a purity indicator strip, which guarantees that the water is safe to drink after the appropriate waiting period,” according to the manufacturer. “The purifier has passed the EPA Purifier Protocol and Standard, achieving more than 10 times the level of disinfect ion than required for normal waters.”

The price is $129.95 online from www.survivalschool.com. Non-Internet users can call in their order at (888) 886-5592.

NSF's refrigerator thermometer is just $6.10 online

Thermometer tests food safety

Check the temperature and wait five to eight hours for an accurate reading. If the temperature is not 0 to 2 degrees, adjust the freezer temperature control, and check again after five to eight hours. If the refrigerator reads above 40 degrees, it’s not cold enough. Watch the gauges throughout the power outage. If the refrigerator is still 40 degrees and the freezer is 0 degrees or below, the food is safe.

We found a 25HP Refrigerator/Freezer/Dry Storage Thermometer by NSF for just $6.10 online at tech instrument.com. From the home page, search for Freezer Thermometer. Color zones on the dial indicate safe ranges.

You can spend more than $100 on a digital device that keeps an ongoing record of the temperature, but this low-tech version is fine for most people.

Don’t forget to cook all foods thoroughly. And remember Food Editor Jan Norris’ mantra: When in doubt, throw it out.

Sentry's Fire-Safe Waterproof Advanced Security File retails for less than $100

Keep key items safe in a storm

You know all those documents you’ve been meaning to secure in your safe deposit box? During the height of pre-hurricane madness the last thing you need is another errand.

Store those Saving Bonds, that car title, and your mother’s diamond earrings in a personal safe like this one from Sentry.

Model H4100, which retails for less than $100, offers: “Protection from fire and water is yours. A continuous 360-degree jamb and waterproof seal completely insulate the interior from the threat of water invasion. A full-time latch seals the unit even when it is unlocked,” according to the manufacturer.

This safe locks with a key, but other keyless models are available. Have important documents or photos stored on a memory stick or CD? The safe has Intertek (ETL) Verified half-hour fire protection up to 1,550 degrees. Storage capacity is 7 cubic feet. The safe weighs about 42 pounds. Safes are available at Home Depot and Wal-Mart or online at www.sentrysafe.com.

Radio Shack's Bedside Weatheradio Alarm Clock will alert you to storm changes with an audible tone

Getting sleepy? Keep Weatheradio nearby

So, you have a television that runs on batteries to keep up with the hurricane, so why would you need a weather radio? Two reasons: First, they are designed to receive the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Weather Radio service’s broadcast of weather status and forecasts around the clock, and they are designed to respond to the FCC’s Emergency Alert System (which has replaced the older Emergency Broadcast System). The alert signals sent by the NOAA Weather Radio service set off an audible alarm to attract your attention, something your television can’t do if it’s turned off.

This dual-purpose Weatheradio Alarm Clock is handy to have on the nightstand for monitoring nighttime storms.

It receives all seven NOAA Weather Radio channels to provide you with current conditions and forecasts. The radio has digital tuning with auto channel-scan, which enables you to monitor several channels. The radio is always on and ready to alert you with an audible tone and status light. Of course, when the power goes out, it runs on four AA back-up batteries.

This Bedside Weatheradio Alarm Clock (Model: 12-260) retails at Radio Shack for about $30. Visit www.radioshack.com.

Hurricane Products' stove is small enough to bring along if you must evacuate

Stove great for side dishes

Having a hot meal when a hurricane strikes can really boost morale. The grill is great, but what about heating all the side dishes?

The Double Burner Cast Iron Propane Gas Stove (manufactured by Hurricane Products; part number: 63-5200; product ID: 15-0114) retails online at www.instawares.com for about $180.

The heavy-duty wall cast connection has dual 35,00 BTU burners, and the model has been designed for portability, so if you do have to evacuate, you could take it with you.

And it’s big enough and tough enough to handle the most demanding activities, like your hungry family.

Don’t have Internet access? Call Instawares toll-free Monday through Friday at (800) 892-3622.

Colored Lightsticks are easy to use and last for at least 12 hours

Light doubles as a life-saver

The Gadget Gal loves a bargain, especially one that gives a big bang for a few bucks. We found two on National Survival Supply’s web site at www.survivalsupplys.com. Or call (877) 244-9329.

The 3-in-1 Auto Emergency LED Flash Light has a built-in seat-belt cutter and a window punch for breaking glass should you need to escape your car through the window. It uses three AAA batteries and comes with a carrying pouch. The best part? It’s just under $11. Buy a few and keep them in every glove compartment.

Lightsticks. Folks last year praised these self-contained emergency light sticks. Just bend and snap for at least 12 hours of emergency lighting. These Lightsticks are used by the U.S. Military and Homeland Security and have a guaranteed four-year shelf-life. They’re safe for kids to use and might even make hurricanes less stressful! Each Lightstick is individually wrapped. Available in green or yellow. And the price is right. Just a tad over $1 each.

This $225 Life-Safer Pak is handy when you don't have power

Hurricane Pak is a Life-Saver

Maybe your idea of hurricane preparation is getting someone else to do it for you. If so, consider coughing up $225 for The Life-Safer Pak, “a compact rolling cooler equipped with items needed to safely endure power outages.”

Inside the rolling cooler you’ll find: a signal horn, AM/FM radio, document protector, portable television, plastic tarp, a 2-speed fan, duct tape, butane stove, 2 portable fluorescent lamps, first-aid kit, bug repellent wipes, fire extinguisher, tool kit, trail mix, can opener, spotlight, a mini-corded phone, disposable camera, and a freezer-pack. Batteries and butane canister for stove are not included with your shipment, but essential to completing your Life-Safer Pak.

Puchase the Life-Safer Pak online at www.life-saferpak.com. Or call (954) 288-1102. The Life-Safer Pak will be shipped via Fed Ex Ground in about 1 to 5 days.

This barrel available from QuakeKare.com can hold 55 gallons of water. At an estimated use of a gallon a day per person, the barrel would hold enough water for a family of five for about 10 days

Roll out the barrel for water

We’re obsessed with water. Can’t help it. We all read The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner in high school.

So how do you secure extra water storage if you don’t want to use the bathtub? (After all, you might want to take a bath, even if the water is cold.)

Get a water barrel for the patio. This barrel available from QuakeKare.com can hold 55 gallons of water.

At an estimated usage of a gallon a day per person, the barrel would hold enough water for a family of five for about 10 days.

Water is easily stored for five years when used with water preserver concentrate.

The high molecular weight polyethtlene is an FDA-approved resin and is a cost-effective way to store the precious beverage.

The barrel is available online for $42.95 (go to www.quakecare.com). They also offer a siphon pump, the easiest way to get water out, for $13.95.

A GPS navigation system could help you find a place to stay following a hurricane

GPS system invaluable after a storm

For many people, storm warnings are the same as evacuation warnings.

One lesson we learned from Katrina, where traffic out of the city stood still for hours, is that you have to plan ahead, even if you’re evacuating.

Here are three critical evacuation supplies:

Get a GPS for your car. Any time you’re traveling through unfamiliar areas, a GPS navigation system will tell you where you are and where you’re going.

You can find an alternate route, find your way back to civilization if you get lost, or maybe even find a place to bed down for the night.

The one pictured above, the TomTom 1N00.181 ONE Portable GPS Vehicle Navigation System, is available for $299.95 from www.gpscheap.com

Can’t afford a GPS? Go low-tech and get map and a compass to keep a map in your glove box. It’s also a great backup in case your GPS system lets you down. Have a map for everywhere you’re planning to go. And think about the routes you’d take before you’re packing the car to leave.

Shoes are just as important. Wear shoes that you could in for walk miles in hot, sticky, muddy weather. Never drive barefoot.

The WaterB.O.B. allows you to store up to 100 gallons of fresh drinking water in a food-grade plastic bladder

Need more water storage? Just ask B.O.B.

Filling up the bathtub with water before a storm sounds like a great idea, but no matter how clean your tub is, most of us wouldn’t want to drink water out of it.

The WaterB.O.B. turns any standard bathtub into an emergency water reserve, storing up to 100 gallons of fresh drinking water in a food-grade plastic bladder.

When the storm warnings start, lay the WaterB.O.B. in your bathtub, hook it up to the faucet and fill to capacity.

A siphon pump is included to easily dispense the water into jugs or pitchers. The WaterB.O.B. meets FDA guidelines, so you have plenty of water for your entire family for drinking and cooking, washing and flushing.

Buy the WaterB.O.B. online for $22.95 at www.waterbob.com, or call (800) 209-9804

Disaster News

In Uncategorized on June 10, 2009 at 12:09 am

Massive Storms Cause Blizzard Conditions, 17 Deaths At least 17 deaths have been blamed on a gigantic storm that stretched across the Midwest and New England, bringing howling winds and freezing temperatures, and dumping more than a foot of snow in 12 states. Although winter is still 11 days away, the massive storm left blizzard conditions, snowdrifts and subzero wind chills in its wake. "This storm certainly brought winter to the northern part of the United States," said Jack Hales of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's storm prediction center. The storm moved through 46 of the 50 states. Nearly 20 inches of snow fell in Wisconsin, and 16 inches in Iowa. Nebraska received 10.5 inches, the most snow that state has seen in December in 50 years. Related La. Gov. declares state of emergency ahead of Ida By BECKY BOHRER (AP) – 18 minutes ago NEW ORLEANS — Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Sunday as the Gulf Coast braced for the arrival of Hurricane Ida, which was making its way across the Gulf of Mexico as a Category 2 storm. A hurricane watch was in effect from southeastern Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle, meaning hurricane conditions were possible in the next day and a half. New Orleans was not included in the watch area. The emergency declaration is a precaution that frees up state resources for any emergency situations. The National Guard and state agencies have been put on high alert so personnel and vehicles are available if needed. Coastal stretches of southeast Louisiana, particularly areas outside levee protection, are the main concern. Forecasts indicate those areas could see winds, rains and high tides that could create localized flooding. Officials in Florida, Mississippi and Alabama were also keeping a close eye on the storm's track, though no emergency declarations or other measures had yet been issued. Forecasters at the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Ida's winds are now near 100 mph (160 kph), and Ida could get stronger later Sunday. The hurricane was moving to the northwest near 10 mph (17 kph), and Ida was expected to pick up steam as it moved over open waters in the Gulf of Mexico. The center of the storm was located 95 miles (155 km) west-northwest of the western tip of Cuba and about 510 miles (815 km) south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River. Ida was expected to reach the Gulf coast by Tuesday, said Jack Beven, a hurricane specialist at the center. It will likely interact with a weakening cold front over open seas and will most likely be a tropical storm or a low-level hurricane when it gets there, Beven said. Parts of the Yucatan Peninsula remained under a hurricane warning, and a tropical storm warning was in place for the western tip of Cuba with heavy rains expected. Earlier Sunday, Ida's wind and rain whipped palm trees in the Mexican resort city of Cancun. Fishermen tied their boats down, though tourists seemed to regard Ida as only a minor setback. "I figure probably in a couple hours we'll be stuck inside," said Julie Randolph, 40, a social worker from Ormond Beach, Fla., who braved the rain to jog along the near-empty beach. As winds picked up and intermittent rains intensified Sunday morning, restaurants and nightclubs near the waterfront began covering their windows with large pieces of plywood. Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The center of Hurricane Ida, a Category 2 storm, is moving into the southern Gulf of Mexico, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said Sunday. Earlier in the day, the NHC said a hurricane watch has been issued from Grand Isle, Louisiana to Mexico Beach, Florida and that a variety of hurricane watches and warnings have also been issued for Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. At 20000 GMT, the center of Ida was located about 95 miles west-northwest of the western tip of cuba and about 510 miles south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River. The storm is currently moving to the northwest, although a turn to the north is expected by Tuesday. It is currently packing sustained winds near 100 mph, with stronger gusts. The storm is traveling at nearly 10 mph, although an increase in forward speed is expected within the next 24 hours. Fox News reports on its Web site that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal on Sunday declared a state of emergency ahead of the storm's expected arrival Monday evening or early Tuesday. Web site: http.//www/nhc.noaa.gov atl_overview ida Tropical Storm IDA Storm Archive ...IDA TURNS TO THE NORTH-NORTHWEST... 7:00 PM EST Sat Nov 7 Location: 19.5°N 84.4°W Max sustained: 70 mph Moving: NNW at 10 mph Min pressure: 990 mb ...RICK STILL A CATEGORY FIVE HURRICANE...
8:00 AM PDT Sun Oct 18 Location: 15.8°N 108.3°W Max sustained: 175 mph Moving: WNW at 14 mph Min pressure: 914 mb ...EXTREMELY DANGEROUS HURRICANE RICK CONTINUING TO STRENGTHEN.. 8:00 AM PDT Sat Oct 17 Location: 14.2°N 103.0°W Max sustained: 145 mph Moving: WNW at 12 mph Min pressure: 938 mb  [Image of 5-day forecast and coastal areas under a warning or a watch] HOCT7 Oct 7th 2009 Tropical Update “Tropical Storm Henri holding on for now” The quiet hurricane season had just about lulled me to sleep but our 2nd tropical storm of the week was classified yesterday as the wave east of the I slands was suddenly upgraded to Tropical Storm Henri. As I mentioned in yesterday’s column there was an impressive convective explosion yesterday morning that continued through the day and the NHC saw enough data to warrant an upgrade. They also mentioned the potential short life of Henri. henri1 Henri is currently under an area of around 20-25 kt shear and this is negatively impacting the storm but as of now not shearing it apart. I attached the latest visible image and it appears that the center is on the northeast edge of the convection this morning. Most global models show the storm dissipating in about 2 days as shear increases from the north and northeast with a strong upper level high to the northwest of the storm. This is probably the most likely scenario but it is also possible Henri holds together and then by late this weekend and early next week, it moves south of the upper ridge over the Bahamas and has lower shear and an opportunity to strengthen. While I am not bullish on Henri, I do think we have to watch it because a turn to the west or west-southwest looks likely by Friday and thus IF, Henri is still a tropical system it would threaten the Bahamas, Cuba, and possibly the Florida Straits down the road. More About: Henri Herni LOS ANGELES, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. state of California has been put on high alert for possible tsunami, authorities said on Wednesday. A tsunami advisory has been issued for the Southern California coast because of a magnitude-8.0 earthquake in the South Pacific near American Samoa. An inundation of 1 foot to 1.5 feet was expected to hit Los Angeles County and could last at least two hours, according to Curt Kaplan of the National Weather Service. The U.S. Coast Guard warned the public to move out of the water, off the beach and out of harbors and marinas. Mandatory evacuations have not been ordered. Tsunamis are potentially dangerous for several hours after initial arrival. Currents may be hazardous to swimmers, boats and coastal structures and may continue for several hours after the arrival of the initial wave, according to Lt. j.g. Tyler A. Stutin of the U.S. Coast Guard. "The Coast Guard strongly encourages waterfront users to take extra precautions in preparation for the possibility of a surge, to include securing vessel mooring arrangements and possible sources of pollution," according to a statement from the agency. Los Angeles Port Police informed terminal operators about the advisory, but operators were not being told to shut down operations. A tsunami advisory means that a tsunami capable of producing strong currents or dangerous waves, said Phillip Sanfield of the Port of Los Angeles. The magnitude-8.0 earthquake struck on Tuesday in the Pacific Ocean and triggered a tsunami that leveled at least one Samoan village. The National Weather Service issued a tsunami advisory for the California coast, stretching from the Mexican border to the Oregon/Washington border. "A minor tsunami may be recorded in some areas of the coast which could produce dangerous currents and surges in harbors and bays," according to the National Weather Service. "Coastal residents are advised to stay out of the waters, off the beach and away from harbors and marinas. Wave height and currents are amplified by irregular shoreline and are difficult to predict," said the Service. Some agencies said they would close beaches and evacuate marinas, while lifeguards at beaches kept a watchful eye. Editor: Mu Xuequan Related Stories American Samoa Footage taken of the destruction two_atl 18 Sept 15
FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC...CARIBBEAN SEA AND THE GULF OF MEXICO...

1. SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ASSOCIATED WITH THE REMNANTS OF FRED
LOCATED ABOUT 1020 MILES EAST OF THE NORTHERN LEEWARD ISLANDS REMAIN
DISORGANIZED.  ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS COULD BECOME MARGINALLY
CONDUCIVE FOR RE-DEVELOPMENT...AND THERE IS A LOW CHANCE...LESS
THAN 30 PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE DURING
THE NEXT 48 HOURS. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THIS SYSTEM CAN BE
FOUND IN HIGH SEAS FORECASTS ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER
SERVICE...UNDER AWIPS HEADER NFDHSFAT1 AND WMO HEADER FZNT01 KWBC.

2. A TROPICAL WAVE LOCATED A COUPLE HUNDRED MILES WEST OF THE CAPE
VERDE ISLANDS IS PRODUCING AN AREA OF DISORGANIZED SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS.  DEVELOPMENT...IF ANY...OF THIS SYSTEM IS EXPECTED
TO BE SLOW TO OCCUR.  THERE IS A LOW CHANCE...LESS THAN 30
PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE DURING THE
NEXT 48 HOURS.

3. A LARGE AREA OF DISORGANIZED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS EXTEND FROM
THE SOUTHEASTERN BAHAMAS NORTHEASTWARD TO NEAR BERMUDA.  THIS
ACTIVITY IS ASSOCIATED WITH WEAK LOW PRESSURE AREA ALONG A FRONTAL
SYSTEM.  UPPER-LEVEL WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN UNFAVORABLE FOR
SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENT...AND THERE IS A LOW CHANCE...LESS THAN 30
PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL OR SUBTROPICAL CYCLONE
DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.

ELSEWHERE...TROPICAL CYCLONE FORMATION IS NOT EXPECTED DURING THE
NEXT 48 HOURS.

Hurricane Fred losing

steam

way out in the Atlantic

TAMPA - As forecasters expected, Hurricane Fred continued losing steam today but remains a Category 2 storm, still far in the Atlantic Ocean. The season's sixth named storm is about 740 miles west of the Cape Verde Islands and heading northwest at about 7 mph. Winds have dropped from the peak 120 mph of Wednesday to less than 100 mph , and it never hit the 125-mph power forecasters expected. The storm should slow to a crawl and meander the next couple days, forecasters said. Today marks the statistical peak of hurricane season. Fred, only the third storm to reach Category 3 or higher so far east of North America, should make a turn to the north and slow later today, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm would be moving between an area of high pressure over the Cape Verde Islands and low pressure to the west. Forecasters expect Fred to weaken over the next couple days as steering winds diminish and the storm more or less drifts before making another shift to the northwest by the start of next week. The storm is moving over cooler ocean water and running into winds high in the atmosphere that will disrupt it. In addition, Fred is running into some drier air that would hamper any growth. Forecasters say Fred should drop below hurricane strength by Saturday. It should decay to a mass of bad weather and cease to be a tropical system by Tuesday. By the time it begins a westward path, what remains of Fred should be no more than a weak disturbance, the hurricane center said.

Hurricane Fred in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean has become the second major hurricaneof the Atlantic season, but remains no threat to land. Maximum sustained winds were near 120 mph this morning, making it a Category 3 storm on the Saffir-Simpson Scale, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

National Hurricane Center/NOAA

Fred was centered about 540 miles west of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands and was moving northwest near 13 mph. A turn to the north and decrease in forward speed are expected over the next couple of day Fred intensified to a Category 2 hurricane The tropics are active again.  First is an area of interest off of the Mid Atlantic coast.  That may not get a name, but it does have some tropical features with it, and will lead to flooding and high surf.  This will have a direct impact on us, so please check out the previous post for that complete report.  Overnight, Fred intensified to a hurricane, and this morning jumped to a Category 2 storm with satellite measured winds of 105 mph. This is a healthy storm, with a solid eye wall structure. The image here is from NAVY/NRL using their QUICKSCAT Satellite showing the wind.  The surface circulation is strong around the eye wall, with the strongest convection, or storms on the southern flank feeder band. Hurricane force winds extend 25 miles from the center. Tropical Storm force winds extend 85 miles from the center.  This is not a large storm, and may only have another day or two, until it weakens. See more images and forecasts in the slide show below. The forecast models show the intensity of Bill at Category 2 status, Aden looks much more impressive than the models did last night. It is expected to weaken in a few days, but it may take a while to get there.  This is due to the storm moving north over colder waters, which will inhibit it's ability to sustain itself.  Considering that Fred is already stronger than expected, the conditions are ripe for it to maintain a favorable environment surrounding it. This is much closer to Africa than the United States, and should not have an impact on our weather, but we still have that coastal storm that will cause problems.  More on that system can b found here. More images and forecast maps are in the slide show below.

National Hurricane Center Update:
...SUMMARY OF 500 AM AST INFORMATION...
LOCATION...13.2N 31.7W
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...105 MPH
PRESENT MOVEMENT...WEST-NORTHWEST OR 300 DEGREES AT 13 MPH
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...970 MB
Hurriance Fred Images and Forecast Maps
More About: Tropics

at200907_model Fred continuing to strengthen...expected to become a hurricane...

at 1100 am AST...1500 UTC...the center of Tropical Storm Fred was
located near latitude 11.9 north...longitude 28.6 west or about 345
miles...555 km...southwest of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands.
Fred is moving toward the west near 14 mph...22 km/hr.  A gradual
turn toward the west-northwest and northwest with a decrease in
forward speed is expected over the next couple of days.
Satellite images indicate that the maximum sustained winds have
increased to near 65 mph...100 km/hr...with higher gusts.
Some additional strengthening is forecast during the next couple of
days and Fred is expected to become a hurricane by Wednesday.
Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 105 miles...165 km
from the center.
The estimated minimum central pressure is 994 mb...29.35 inches.
...Summary of 1100 am AST information...
location...11.9n 28.6w
maximum sustained winds...65 mph
present movement...west or 275 degrees at 14 mph
minimum central pressure...994 mb
the next advisory will be issued by the National Hurricane Center at
500 PM AST.

Hurricane Jimena has made landfall. As of 8:00 a.m. PDT, Wednesday, September 2, 2009, the center of Hurricane Jimena passed over Cabo San Lazaro Mexico. With maximum sustained winds of 100 miles per hour, Hurricane Jimena measures as a category 2 hurricane. Hurricane Jimena has decreased in strength; however, that weakening doesn’t negate its danger. A hurricane warning is in effect for the Baja California Peninsula from Agua Blanca northward to Punta Abreojos on the west coast and from La Paz northward to Mulege on the east coast. A hurricane warning signifies that sustained winds, measuring between 74 and 119 miles per hour or higher will be associated with the system and will impact the designated area within 24 hours or less. A hurricane warning may remain in effect when the combination of dangerously high water and high waves continues, even if maximum wind speeds decrease. A tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch are in effect for the Baja California Peninsula north of Punta Abreojos to Punta Eugenia on the west coast and north of Punta Abreojos to Punta Eugenia on the west coast and north of Mulege to Bahia San Juan Bautista on the East Coast. A tropical storm warning indicates that sustained winds may range between 39 to 73 miles per hour or between 63 and 118 km per hour. Tropical storm warnings are associated with tropical cyclones and signify the presence of tropical cyclone conditions within the next 36 hours. A hurricane watch signifies that the area affected will experience hurricane conditions within the next 36 hours. A tropical storm watch is in effect for the west coast of Mainland Mexico from Altata northward to Bahia Kino. Those in other regions of mainland Mexico and the Baja California Peninsula should continue to monitor the track, path, and progress of Hurricane Jimena. Hurricane Jimena is traveling at a rate near 13 miles per hour and its speed is expected to decrease within the next 24 to 36 hours. This path will bring the eye of the storm near Southern Baja California Peninsula sometime today, and by Thursday the eye will be located near or above the central Baja California Peninsula. Maximum sustained winds associated with Hurricane Jimena are approximately 100miles per hour, higher wind gusts are within the system. It is expected that the Category 2 hurricane will continue to decrease over the next 24 hours, yet as it moves inland, it is expected to remain a major hurricane. Hurricane force winds extend outward from the center to an area of 35 miles. Tropical storm winds extend to an area of 140 miles. Rain accumulations associated with Hurricane Jimena are expected to measure between 5 and 10 inches. Isolated areas may receive as much as 15 inches. This tremendous amount of rainfall may result in dangerous flash floods and mud slides. The Baja California Peninsula is expected to experience life threatening, dangerous waves with significant coastal flooding. The next forecast will be issued at 2:00 p.m. PT. 9/01/2009 A weaker yet still powerful Hurricane Jimena began lashing the Baja California coastline early Wednesday morning as hurricane force winds began moving ashore. Jimena’s top sustained winds dropped down to 115 mph Tuesday evening (960 mb/ moving NNW 13 mph) and further weakening is expected through Wednesday. While no longer a dangerous category four hurricane just a day earlier, Jimena’s combination of 20 foot surf, storm surge and torrential rains will likely cause damage along the west coast of southern Baja California. Luckily for the more heavily populated tourist areas near Cabo San Lucas, lesser tropical storm force winds, heavy rain and rough surf will likely be the most that Jimena has to offer.  Hurricane force winds remain fairly compact with the storm, extending outward about 40-45 miles and primarily impacting the west side of the southern peninsula and central coast. Jimena is expected to cross the central Baja coastline and drift over the center of the peninsula where land interaction and having the storm center removed from its warm water source of energy will weaken Jimena into a tropical storm within the next 24 hours.  By Friday, Jimena is expected to be a tropical depression or remnant low as the center moves back over the Gulf of California.  Moisture streaming away from the former hurricane will likely increase chances for rain and some thunder from roughly the Coachella Valley and SE California east to western New Mexico. For More Information:  National Hurricane Center

Jimena spinning through Baja California
Latest imagery on Hurricane Jimena

Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times

By Louis Sahagun, Corina Knoll and Joe Mozingo | 9:12 p.m.
Higher humidity and a bit lower temperatures help crews battling the Station fire in the Angeles National Forest. But the northern and southeastern flanks could re-erupt, officials said.

9/01/2009 33832097Erika The 5th named storm of the 2009 Atlantic Hurricane Season has formed. Tropical Storm Erika was located an estimated 390 miles east of the Northern Leeward Islands, with winds near 50 mph, and higher gusts up to 65 mph. Tropical storm force winds extended out 105 miles from the center. Erika was moving west northwest near 9 mph. On this track, the center of Tropical Storm Erika is expected to remain northeast of the Leeward Islands. (Tropical storm watches were issued for the Netherlands Antilles, Antigua, Barbuda, St. Kitts, Nevis and Anguilla as well as the islands of St. Martin and St. Barthelemy.) Over the next few days, Tropical Storm Erika is forecast to strengthen into a strong tropical storm with winds near 70 mph by Thursday afternoon,  thereafter Erika is expected to  weaken as it encounters increased wind shear and drier air to the west. The five-day projection shows Erika could be near the Bahamas by mid-day Sunday.

(NHC- 3 Day Track)

(Intellicast 5 Day Track)

The forecast track and strength of this storm will likely change over the next several days.

August 31, 2009 The National Hurricane Center continues to track an extremely dangerous major hurricane in the Eastern Pacific Basin. Hurricane Jimena is a strong Category 4 hurricane with winds near 150 mph, with higher gusts up to 185 mph and was located less than 340 miles south of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Hurricane force winds extended out 30 miles, with tropical storm force winds extending out 80 miles from the center. Jimena was moving to the northwest near 8 mph and is expected to turn toward the north northwest, with a gradual increase in forward speed over the next day or so. On this forecast track,  Hurricane Jimena will be approaching the southern portion of the Baja California Peninsula on Tuesday.

(Weather Underground graphic- 5 Day Track)                            (NHC graphic-3 Day Track)

Jimena is expected to remain a major hurricane as it approaches the Baja California Peninsula, with only slight weakening expected as it moves over cooler waters. Jimena will likely make landfall as a category 3 or 4 hurricane. A hurricane warning has been issued for the Baja California Peninsula from  Bahia Magdalena southward on the west coast and from San Evaristo southward on the east coast, with a hurricane watch extending north from Bahia Magdalena on the west coast to Punta Abreojos and north of San Evaristo to Mulege on the east coast.

Jimena is expected to produce rainfall amounts of 5-10 inches over the southern half of the Baja California Peninsula and Western Mexico, during the next 2 days, with possible isolated maximum amounts of 15 inches.

In addition, a storm surge along with large battering waves will produce significant coastal flooding along the Baja California Peninsula.

The last major hurricane to directly hit the Baja California Peninsula was Hurricane Kiko on August 27, 1989.

Current Still Satellite Image of Hurricane Jimena (Updates automatically after page refresh)

‘Extremely Dangerous’ Hurricane Jimena Heads for Cabo San Lucas By Brian K. Sullivan and Carlos Manuel Rodriguez Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Hurricane Jimena, an “extremely dangerous” storm, strengthened to near Category 5 status off Mexico’s Baja Peninsula today, prompting a hurricane warning for a resort area and forcing an economic conference to relocate. Hurricane Jimena’s maximum sustained winds rose to almost 240 kilometers (150 miles) per hour, just 9 kph below Category 5, the highest rank on the Saffir-Simpson scale, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center. That was up from 233 kph earlier today. It was located 545 kilometers south of Cabo San Lucas, the resort area at the tip of the peninsula, according to the center’s bulletin issued at about 11 a.m. Los Angeles time. “This may be the strongest hurricane ever to hit the region,” said Jose Gajon, the La Paz-based director of civil protection for the Mexican state of Baja California Sur. He said authorities were evacuating residents of the western Baja town Comondu. “We are not evacuating anyone from the Los Cabos area,” he said. Cabo San Lucas and neighboring Los Cabos are home to a number of resorts and golf courses. Among these is the 375-room Hilton Los Cabos Beach & Golf Resort, which boasts three Jack Nicklaus-designed courses. Telephone calls to the resort today were unanswered. Conference Relocates The storm has forced the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to move its global tax conference, which starts tomorrow, from Los Cabos to Mexico City, said Carlos Popoca, a spokesman for Mexico’s tax service administration. “Jimena is an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane,” according to the U.S. hurricane center’s bulletin. “Preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion.” Continued http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601086&sid=a3ZHG8uAIskU MIAMI, Florida (CNN) — With winds of 135 mph, Hurricane Jimena was approaching Mexico’s Baja California peninsula on Sunday as a Category 4 storm, forecasters said.

A satellite image shows Hurricane Jimena off the coast of Mexico early Sunday evening.

A satellite image shows Hurricane Jimena off the coast of Mexico early Sunday evening.

“There’s a good chance this system could be a Category 5 in the next 24 hours,” said Dave Roberts, a hurricane specialist with the National Hurricane Center. As of midday Sunday, Jimena was located about 285 miles (458 km) south of Cabo Correintes, Mexico, or about 500 miles (804 km) south-southeast of the southern tip of Baja California, Roberts said. The storm is expected to continue in a north-northwest motion and approach the southwestern tip of Baja California sometime early Tuesday, he said. Jimena is the 10th named storm of the Pacific season. “It started out kind of slow for the Pacific,” said Robbie Berg, another specialist at the hurricane center. “But actually August, now we’ve had seven named storms form, and that’s pretty busy for August. We haven’t seen that — I think it’s been a couple decades since we’ve seen that many storms in August.” There’s no reason for people in that area to panic, but they should keep an eye on Jimena, Berg said. “There’s no watches or warnings in effect, but we would like residents and tourists in the area to monitor the progress of the storm,” Berg said. “We do expect it to maintain its major hurricane strength as it heads up into that area.” Tropical Storm Kevin has also emerged in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. However, Berg says it is weak — with winds at 50 mph — and is not expected to pose a serious threat.

Los Angeles Area Interactive Fire Map:

La Cañada Flintridge, Altadena, Glendale, La Crescenta, Pasadena, Acton

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-la-fire-map-html,0,7464337.htmlstory

Firefighters’ goal: Keep the fire within the blue line. The northern flank is nearing the Acton area, prompting evacuations along Highway 14. The fire is two miles from Mt. Wilson, site of communications towers and an observatory. To the southwest, flames are still spreading above the foothills above the 210. La Crescenta and La Cañada Flintridge expands evacuation areas. Map link below

Hurricane Jimena blew into a dangerous Category 4 Hurricane Jimena blew into a dangerous Category 4 storm off Mexico’s Pacific Coast and was on track to buffet resorts on the Baja California peninsula on Tuesday, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said on Sunday. Jimena, a small but powerful hurricane that has intensified quickly since it formed early on Saturday, had winds of near 135 mph (215 kmh) with higher gusts, and further strengthening was expected in the hours ahead. According to the five-step Saffir-Simpson intensity scale, Category 4 hurricanes are “extremely dangerous” and can cause devastating damage if they hit land. Jimena was a safe distance from shore but forecast to gather strength and brush the upscale resort of Los Cabos on Tuesday, when the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development is scheduled to hold a meeting there to discuss tax havens. The weather was sunny with blue skies in southern Baja California on Sunday but the NHC said a hurricane watch may be required for some parts later in the day. “The weather is very nice, it’s not raining, it’s cloudless,” said Ruben Guzman, who works at a boutique surf hotel called Cabo Surf on the edge of Los Cabos. “We haven’t been told we should be worried. These hurricanes often veer away before they hit,” he added. The Baja California peninsula is a sparsely populated strip of desert, mountain ranges and shrublands, but coastal resorts like Los Cabos and La Paz are big vacation spots. The length of the peninsula is popular with U.S. camper van enthusiasts, nature lovers, surfers, sports fishermen and retirees. The civil protection director for Baja California Sur state, Jose Gajon, said storm precautions would be taken around Los Cabos from Sunday evening.

Hurricane JIMENA

Location: 16.3°N 106.3°W Max sustained: 135 mph Moving: NW at 9 mph Min pressure: 948 mb 143214W_NL_sm

8/30/09 LP

FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC...CARIBBEAN SEA AND THE GULF OF MEXICO...

1. CLOUDINESS AND SHOWERS ASSOCIATED WITH A BROAD AREA OF LOW
PRESSURE LOCATED ABOUT 950 MILES EAST OF THE WINDWARD ISLANDS
CONTINUE TO BECOME BETTER ORGANIZED.  THIS SYSTEM COULD BECOME
A TROPICAL DEPRESSION DURING THE NEXT DAY OR SO AS IT MOVES
WEST-NORTHWESTWARD AROUND 15 MPH.  THERE IS A HIGH CHANCE...
GREATER THAN 50 PERCENT...OF TROPICAL CYCLONE FORMATION
IN THIS AREA DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.
INTERESTS IN THE LESSER ANTILLES SHOULD MONITOR THE
PROGRESS OF THIS SYSTEM.

ELSEWHERE...TROPICAL CYCLONE FORMATION IS NOT EXPECTED DURING THE
NEXT 48 HOURS.

8/27/2009 Invest 94

two_atl27

THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER IS ISSUING ADVISORIES ON TROPICAL
STORM DANNY...LOCATED ABOUT 550 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHEAST OF CAPE
HATTERAS NORTH CAROLINA.

1. A TROPICAL WAVE IS LOCATED OVER THE FAR EASTERN ATLANTIC OCEAN ABOUT
350 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHWEST OF THE CAPE VERDE ISLANDS. THE ASSOCIATED
SHOWER ACTIVITY CONTINUES TO SHOW SIGNS OF ORGANIZATION...AND SLOW
DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SYSTEM IS POSSIBLE OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS
AS IT MOVES WESTWARD AT 10 TO 15 MPH. THERE IS A MEDIUM CHANCE...
30 TO 50 PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE
DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.

ELSEWHERE...TROPICAL CYCLONE FORMATION IS NOT EXPECTED DURING THE
NEXT 48 HOURS.

Tropical Storm Danny is

projected to become the

second hurricane of the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season

Tropical Storm Danny, moving slowly through the Atlantic, is expected to rapidly increase in strength and speed as it zooms up along the U.S. East coast in the coming days, according to the latest forecast from the National Hurricane Center. Like its predecessor, Hurricane Bil, Danny is projected to follow a path up the East Coast and toward Nova Scotia, Canada. As Danny reaches hurricane strength, tropical storm-force winds could affect coastal and some inland areas of several states, from the northern tip of South Carolina up through parts of New York and all of New England, according to the latest forecast from the National Hurricane Center. While the chance of tropical-storm force wind readings in most states is small — on the order of 10% – 20% for most U.S. territory in the watch zone — portions of Cape Hatteras in North Carolina, Long Island in New York, Cape Cod in Massachusetts and parts of coastal Maine face up to a 30% to 40% chance of experiencing tropical storm-force winds. There’s even a small chance that Cape Cod could see hurricane-force winds from Danny. For now, the National Hurricane Center is urging residents from the Carolinas through New England to monitor the projected path of Tropical Storm Danny, so that they can be prepared. Check the charts below and see a recap of the 2009 hurricane season to date, as well as forecasts for the rest of the season from the government and university experts.

Tropical Storm Danny – Projected Path

tropical storm danny projected path

Tropical Storm Danny – Wind Potential Forecast

tropical storm danny wind potential forecast

2009 Hurricane Season to Date

Tropical Storm Danny is the fifth named storm in the Atlantic so far in 2009. There has been one hurricane: Bill. Tropical Storm Ignacio, which only recently dissipated into a tropical depression, is the ninth named storm in the Eastern Pacific. There have been four hurricanes: Andres, Carlos, Felicia and Guillermo. Last year, the Atlantic saw 16 named tropical storms — from Arthur on May 30, which killed five and caused $78 million in damages to Belize, to Hurricane Paloma, which formed Nov. 5 and struck Cuba as a Category 4 monster that was the second-most intense hurricane ever recorded in November. All in all, there were eight Atlantic hurricanes and storms caused an estimated $41 billion in damages and left hundreds dead — more than 800 in Haiti alone. The eastern Pacific also saw 16 named storms, seven of them hurricanes, starting with Tropical Storm Alma on May 29 and ending Nov. 5 when Tropical Storm Polo petered out. The 2008 hurricane season produced several record-breaking storms, including Tropical Storm Alma; the easternmost named storm ever to form in the Pacific and Hurricane Bertha, the longest-lived Atlantic tropical storm on record. Four storms were notable — or deadly — enough that the names were retired — Alma, Gustav, Ike and Paloma. Hurricane Gustav caused $4 billion damage in Louisiana and killed 112 people, including 77 in Haiti. Hurricane Ike was the season’s strongest hurricane, and the third-costliest storm (more than $19 billion) to hit the U.S., devastating Galveston, Texas, and causing about 100 deaths in the Caribbean and along the U.S. Gulf Coast. What’s in store for 2009?

2009 Hurricane Forecast

Whether and how global warming will influence hurricane frequency or intensity is still a matter of genuine scientific debate. In recent years, scientists have at least identified several factors — from the extent of rainfall in Africa to the presence or absence of El Nino conditions in the Pacific — that help them predict the intensity of a hurricane season ahead of time. The recent formation of a new El Nino pattern in the eastern Pacific should reduce the number and intensity of Atlantic hurricanes this year. Here’s how the two most prominent forecasters revised their forecasts in early August: The federal government in May had predicted a “near normal” hurricane season for the Atlantic, with a 25% chance of above-normal outbreaks and 25% chance of below-normal outbreaks. Now, it predicts a 50% probability of a near-normal season, a 40% probability of a below-normal season, and just a 10% probability of an above-normal season. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration predicts a 70% chance of:

  • Named storms: 11 (down from 9-14)
  • Hurricanes: 3-6 (down from 4-7)
  • Major hurricanes: 1-2 (down from 1-3)

The other major forecaster in the U.S., Colorado State University, revised down its expectations for the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season once already, and did it again in August:

  • Named storms: 10 (down from 12)
  • Hurricanes: 4 (down from 6)
  • Major hurricanes: 2 (same as previous forecast)

Further, the Colorado forecasters predicted that the probability of a hurricane striking the U.S. coastline is 46% (down from 54%). Forecasters warn that the number of storms, and their intensity is only one key determinant of risk of property damage and loss of life: The biggest factor is who lives in harm’s way, and how well they prepare. Some 35 million U.S. residents live in hurricane-prone regions, and experts urge them to prepare. When those storms do come, they will be given names. Tropical cyclones are given names when they achieve tropical storm strength, with sustained winds of at least 39 mph. Hurricanes are tropical storms that have sustained winds that exceed 74 mph, and major hurricanes have sustained winds that exceed 111 mph. Here are the tropical storm and hurricane names for 2009:

2009 Hurricane and Tropical Storm Names – Atlantic

  1. Tropical Storm Ana – Aug. 11-13
  2. Hurricane Bill (Category 3) – Aug 15-24. Hurricane Bill made landfall on Newfoundland.
  3. Tropical Storm Claudette – Aug. 16-17. Tropical Storm Claudette made landfall on Santa Rosa Island, Flor.
  4. Tropical Storm Danny – Aug 26-
  5. Erika
  6. Fred
  7. Grace
  8. Henri
  9. Ida
  10. Joaquin
  11. Kate
  12. Larry
  13. Mindy
  14. Nicholas
  15. Odette
  16. Peter
  17. Rose
  18. Sam
  19. Teresa
  20. Victor
  21. Wanda

2009 Hurricane and Tropical Storm Names – Eastern North Pacific

Names refer to the highest strength the storm reached, while dates refer to the dates during which the storm retained at least tropical storm strength.

  1. Hurricane Andres (Category 1) – June 21-23
  2. Tropical Storm Blanca – July 6-8
  3. Hurricane Carlos (Category 1) – July 10-16
  4. Tropical Storm Dolores – July 15-16
  5. Tropical Storm Enrique – Aug. 3-7
  6. Hurricane Felicia (Category 4) – Aug. 4-11
  7. Hurricane Guillermo (Category 3) – Aug. 12-19
  8. Tropical Storm Hilda – Aug. 22-23
  9. Tropical Storm Ignacio – Aug. 24-27
  10. Jimena
  11. Kevin
  12. Linda
  13. Marty
  14. Nora
  15. Olaf
  16. Patricia
  17. Rick
  18. Sandra
  19. Terry
  20. Vivian
  21. Waldo
  22. Xina
  23. York
  24. Zelda

8-26-09 MIAMI — Tropical Storm Danny has formed in the open Atlantic off the Bahamas, and forecasters say it could get stronger as it moves toward the U.S. The storm has top winds of 45 mph and is moving to the west-northwest at 18 mph. As of 11 a.m. EDT Wednesday, the storm’s center was about 445 miles (715 kilometers) east of Nassau, Bahamas and about 775 miles (1,250 kilometers) south of Cape Hatteras, N.C. The current forecast has the storm on a path to clip the U.S. East Coast over the weekend, but a storm’s track can be difficult to predict days in advance. People in the Bahamas and the southeastern U.S. are advised to monitor the storm. Meanwhile, far out in the Pacific, Tropical Storm Ignacio has weakened as it moves northwest with top winds of 45 mph. 8/26/2009 One_B

ZCZC MIATWOAT ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
800 AM EDT WED AUG 26 2009

 THE NORTH ATLANTIC,CARIBBEAN SEA AND THE GULF OF MEXICO

1.SATELLITE IMAGERY INDICATES THAT
THE AREA OF DISTURBED WEATHER
CENTERED ABOUT 470 MILES EAST OF
NASSAU IN THE BAHAMAS IS
DEVELOPING A WELL-DEFINED
CIRCULATION.THE SYSTEM
COULD DEVELOP INTO A TROPICAL
DEPRESSION,OR MORE LIKELY A
TROPICAL STORM AT ANY TIME
AS IT MOVES WEST-NORTHWESTWARD
AT ABOUT 15 MPH AND IF CURRENT
TRENDS CONTINUE ADVISORIES WILL BE INITIATED
LATER TODAY.THERE IS A HIGH CHANCE...
GREATER THAN 50 PERCENT.OF TROPICAL
CYCLONE FORMATION DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS
INTERESTS IN THE BAHAMAS SHOULD MONITOR
THE PROGRESS OF THIS SYSTEM. A NOAA
HURRICANE HUNTER AIRCRAFT IS CURRENTLY
ENROUTE TO INVESTIGATE
THIS SYSTEM.

8/24/2009 Tropic View two_atlupd Sun Aug 23,

By Jason Bronis, The Associated Press EDGARTOWN, Massachusetts – Rescue crews were searching Sunday afternoon for three people who were swept into the sea after a large wave, an effect of Hurricane Bill, washed over a crowd watching the surf in Maine. A crowd at Acadia National Park was gathered on some rocks when the wave washed over them. Two other people who were swept into the ocean were recovered. The Coast Guard and search crews are looking for the three others. “This is absolutely the effects of Hurricane Bill” coupled with the effect of high tide, park ranger Sonya Berger said. Bill was being blamed for the death of a 54-year-old swimmer in Florida, who was killed Saturday. Volusia County Beach Patrol Capt. Scott Petersohn said Angel Rosa was unconscious when he washed ashore in rough waves fueled by Bill at New Smyrna Beach along the central Florida coast. He was pronounced dead at a hospital. Lifeguards there also rescued a handful of other swimmers with suspected spinal injuries. Continued: http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/090823/world/tropical_weather_9 State parks spokesman George Gorman says almost 2,000 surfers showed up at Montauk Sunday — the most ever counted there. They enjoyed waves that reached as high as 16 feet. At Jones Beach State Park, high tide brought in so much water that it left behind giant ponds of sea water in the middle of the sand. The pools are two to three feet deep, but lifeguards are asking people to say out of those too, since they’re not being watched by lifeguards. At Jones Beach and other beaches around the area, officials are keeping people out of the water entirely because of strong currents. At Robert Moses State Park in Babylon, even the sand was shut down for part of the day, submerged under several feet of ocean water.

Hurricane Bill 30.2N, 67.0W, 105mph, 954mb, NNW 20

Bill is going through an eyewall replacement cycle this evening and this is likely causing the more ragged look to the storm on satellite imagery and is the reason the winds have diminished to 105mph, making Bill a category 2 hurricane. Bill still has about a 12-24 hour window to intensify tonight and tomorrow as the shear remains weak and he continues to move over warm water. However the trough that is re-curving Bill is going to turn Bill to the north and also increase upper level southwesterly wind shear later tomorrow and this will likely mean some weakening by tomorrow night and Sunday and a transition from a hurricane to an extra-tropical gale.

Bill is going to pass well to the west of Bermuda and it looks like a good 200 miles or so east of coastal New England. However, any shift to the west of the track could bring tropical storm force conditions to Cape Cod and possibly coastal Maine.

The areas that are going to be most adversely affected by Bill are the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia. I have not changed my philosophy much from this morning in that I feel Bill is going to pass very close if not along the Nova Scotian coast. This will bring very strong weather to Halifax and they could possibly see hurricane force wind gusts at least. The storm then could move right across southeastern Newfoundland perhaps making landfall near Grand Bank. The storm will likely be a 90-100mph hurricane as it moves near Nova Scotia and possibly a 75-85mph hurricane or perhaps an extra-tropical cyclone as it hits Newfoundland. People in these Canadian provinces needs to be ready for this storm Sunday and Sunday night.

40-Foot Waves From Hurricane Bill! When Hurricane Bill passed over Buoy #41044 early this morning, he triggered waves nearly waves 38.8 feet high, and winds gusting to 80 knots (note that there were a couple missing observations near the highest wave ob – buoys have trouble measuring high waves, and one wonders what happens to wind gusts if they are in a trough at the time of observation). Here’s what the satellite picture looked like at Bill’s nearest: And here are the graphs from the buoy: The WaveWatch computer forecast model from this morning predicts bill will continue to have waves of 40-44 feet over the next couple days, which could bring waves of over 12 feet to the outer banks of North Carolina and Northeast coast, with heights reaching perhaps over 30 feet as Bill makes landfall on, or closely approaches the coast of Nova Scotia, Canada. Of course, any deviation from the projected track (and we’re still 4 days out here, folks) could bring higher (or lower) waves to the coast. Keep an eye on AccuWeather.com for the latest news on Hurricane Bill Remnants of Ana  should still be watched Although Ana is no longer a tropical storm or depression, its remnants should still be watched, said Irv Watson, science officer for the National Weather Service in Tallahassee. “We had the experience over the weekend that a wave and small low-pressure area came through South Florida and, lo and behold, what does it do when it gets in the Gulf of Mexico?” Watson asked, referring to Tropical Storm Claudette’s surprise organization in about a six-hour period. “That’s the same concern we should have with the remnants of Ana. …This one is coming in the same location.” Right now, Ana’s remnants are showering Jamaica, eastern Cuba and the central Bahamas. “I assume it’s going to be coming across South Florida tonight and will break out into the Gulf of Mexico tomorrow,” Watson said, noting that the Big Bend could see increased chances of showers and thunderstorms Thursday from what he called “just an area of disturbed weather.” According to the National Hurricane Center, the remnants have less than 30 percent chance of reorganizing into a tropical cyclone in the next two days. ‘The key thing is to check over the next several days as the remnants break into the Gulf of Mexico,” Watson said. “Either it’s gonna be nothing or something. Let’s hope it stays a nothing.” 11pm Update 8/17/2009 hurricane_bill(1) According to latest reports from the National Hurricane Center, Hurricane Bill has increased in strength and has become a Category 2 hurricane. As predicted, it was estimated that the storm would continue to increase in strength over the next few days. It is possible that Hurricane Bill will become a major hurricane by Wednesday. With maximum sustained winds of 75 mph this morning, Hurricane Bill has now reached maximum sustained winds of 100 mph. The location of the storm’s center is latitude 15.0 north and longitude 48.3 west, making it approximately 865 miles east of the Lesser Antilles. Moving at speeds of approximately 17 miles per hour, Hurricane Bill is on a west, northwest track and is expected to continue in this pat for the next 24-48 hours. Thought Hurricane Bill has reached maximum sustained winds of 100 miles per hour, it is expected that wind gusts will increase over the next 48 hours as the hurricane system gains strength. Hurricane force winds extend outward from the center of the storm to an area of 30 miles and tropical storm winds extend to a radius of 150 miles from the storm’s center. The next hurricane advisory will be issued tomorrow morning at 5:00 a.m. AST. Published: August 17, 2009 At 1100 am edt… the center of hurricane bill was located near latitude 14.1 north…longitude 45.2 west or about 1080 miles east of the lesser antilles. Bill is moving toward the west-northwest near 16 mph… and this motion is expected to continue for the next couple of days. Maximum sustained winds have increased to near 90 mph… with higher gusts.  Some strengthening is forecast during the next 48 hours… and bill could become a major hurricane by wednesday. Hurricane force winds extend outward up to 30 miles from the center…and tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 145 miles. The estimated minimum central pressure is 977 mb…28.85 inches. The next advisory will be issued by the National Hurricane Center at 500 pm edt. hurricane-bill Hurricane Bill, with sustained winds of 75mph, has formed in the Atlantic and is expected to strengthen into a major hurricane.. Hurricane Bill, the first major hurricane of the season, was centered about 1,100 miles East of the Lesser Antilles earlier this morning and was moving West-Northwest at a speed of about 22mph. Bill is expected to strengthen into a major hurricane over the next 48 hours, according to a specialist with the National Hurricane Center in Florida. The first two months of the hurricane season has had relatively little weather activity. Experts are attributing that lack of bad weather to an unusual warm weather pattern over the Pacific ocean that has been dampening the formation of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico. The tropical depression is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Claudette sometime today koh47n-stormtrack PANAMA CITY — A tropical storm warning has been posted for the Florida Panhandle, including Bay County, after a tropical depression quickly formed early this morning. Visit Hurricane Central to track the storm. The tropical depression is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Claudette sometime today and make landfall within the warned area by late tonight, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami. The warning extends from Escambia County to the Suwanee River and includes Panama City and Panama City Beach. At 4 a.m. CDT today, the center of tropical depression 4 was located 155 miles south-southeast of Apalachicola, moving north-northwest at 16 mph. Maximum sustained winds were near 35 mph, with higher gusts. The storm is forecasted to make landfall with winds near 50 mph, the NHC reported, and anywhere from 3 to 5 inches of rain is possible near the center of the storm, although forecasters note the storm’s compact size will limit the area of maximum impact. Ana_bill In one day, the Atlantic basin became very active with two named storms.  It’s like waiting for popcorn in the microwave. Once the right conditions set in, the popping begins and gets more frequent.  The conditions are right and ripe now, not only for storms to develop, but at least one of these two may become the first hurricane of the season.  Both are tracking towards the northern Caribbean, and could reach Florida or the US east coast.  While Ana would be first, at a week away, there is not guarantee for landfall. Considering an early report that showed how most people are unprepared for hurricane season, early awareness like this is prudent. First up, Tropical Storm Ana. The storm that almost got named on Wednesday, then almost got ripped apart.  This is a bit ragged, but all models show it intensifying to a strong storm, and possibly a hurricane by the time it may reach the Bahamas or Florida on Thursday. For a larger view, storm model tracks and images, see the slide show below. The latest from the National Hurricane Center coming soon:

...SUMMARY OF 500 PM AST INFORMATION...
LOCATION...14.4N 50.0W
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...40 MPH
PRESENT MOVEMENT...WEST OR 270 DEGREES AT 17 MPH
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...1005 MB

Second, and perhaps more important was Tropical Depression #3 – Tropical Storm Bill.  This is following the same path as Ana, but looks much healthier.  It could be looked as it Ana is clearing a path, since the upper level sheering winds will be less of a hindrance.  The only wrinkle may be how strong Ana gets.  That could churn up colder, deep water and affect the progress of Bill.  Basically, the two are connected, but not identical. The models do show it as a stronger Category 1 or 2 hurricane and approaching the Bahamas and South Florida.  For a larger view, storm model tracks and images, see the slide show below. Latest National Hurricane Statement coming soon:

...SUMMARY OF 500 PM AST INFORMATION...
LOCATION...11.3N 35.2W
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...40 MPH
PRESENT MOVEMENT...WEST OR 265 DEGREES AT 16 MPH
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...1004 MB
For more info: Use the interactive tropical map from Stormpulse
Tropical Storm Ana and Bill images and forecasts

africa(10) Here is the list of 2009 storm names from the National Weather Service, “Ana, Bill, Claudette, Danny, Erika, Fred, Grace, Henri, Ida, Joaquin, Kate, Larry, Mindy, Nicholas, Odette, Peter, Rose, Sam, Teresa, Victor, and Wanda.” August 15, 2009 While previous hurricane seasons conjured midsummer threats, 2009 has been quiet so far for Indian River County residents. But emergency officials said they don’t want residents lulled into a false sense of security. “Hurricane Andrew was a late August storm,” said Indian River County Emergency Management Planner Etta LoPresti. “It doesn’t matter if it’s been a quiet season. Just one storm can make things catastrophic.” Residents learned many lessons from Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne from September 2004 and Tropical Storm Fay one year ago. “What we learned in 2004 was three days of supplies is probably the minimum you want,” LoPresti said. “You may need to prepare for more days without power and have enough food, gas, cash, water and batteries to get you through more than three.” The flooding and tornadoes set off by Tropical Storm Fay also were an eye opener, LoPresti said. “It’s never ‘;just’ a tropical storm,” said LoPresti, who wants residents not to downplay the impact of storms that aren’t rated as hurricanes. Emergency Management Coordinator Brian Nolan said he wants residents to look to the county for information on roads, shelters and other local needs when a storm is forecast for the area. “We’re going to process the information from the professional meteorologists and tell the public what it means to them,” Nolan said.

Invest 90/TD #3 at 11am

Invest 90 is looking pretty good to me this morning, the system’s low level center looks to be under the deepest convection as of now, and I would be greatly surprised if this was not upgraded to Tropical Depression #3 at 11am and Tropical Storm Bill by 5 or 11pm today. In fact it does look like this will be upgraded to a 35mp tropical depression at 11am. The system looks to be moving into a more favorable environment for strengthening and I expect a slow intensification over the next few days and I think this is a hurricane by Monday night and possibly a major hurricane by Tuesday night and Wednesday. Several intensity guidance models show this scenario occurring.

As far as the track, we continue to see most of the models zeroing in on the northern Islands and especially the Virgin Islands by around Wednesday to Thursday. WE also continue to see the ECMWF model taking the storm well to the northwest and recurving the storm out to sea. In fact the Canadian model has also jumped on in showing this solution as well. In examining the GFS and ECMWF models we have a trough currently racing across the north Atlantic that the ECMWF model uses to to tug TD #3 a little to the north over the next few days and slow the system down a bit. At 8pm on Monday, the ECMWF model has TD #3 at 14.8N, 42.9W, while the 6z GFS has the system at 13N, 48.3W. So the GFS is quicker and further south than the ECMWF model over the next 3 days. This is key because the models form a weakness in the ridge just east of Bermuda by the early to middle part of next week. And if TD #3 (Bill) is as far north and east as the ECMWF shows there is a good chance that the storm will get picked up by this weakness and turned NW and significantly increase the chance of an early re-curve. If the storm stays further south, this weakness will induce a more WNW motion and thus increase the risk to the Islands. The system is apparently jogging WSW this morning and is around 11.4N, 33.8W. It APPEARS that the ECMWF may be already off, as its 24 hour forecast position is 10N, 32.5 W. The GFS on the other hand is around 10.5N, 34.3 W. The difference is even more pronounced at 8pm Sunday, as the ECMWF has the system around 12.4N, 37.4W, and the GFS has the system around 11.6N, 40.3 W. As of now it seems like the quicker GFS version seems more realistic. This doesnt mean the re-curve scenario wont happen, but it seems like in the early stages, which will be crucial, the GFS has a better handle on the system.

So what does all this mean. As of now, I still favor the further south solution that take TD #3, eventually Bill towards the northern Islands and Virgin Islands and likely as a category 2 or 3 hurricane. Beyond this, Florida, the Gulf, or the southeast coast could be threatened. I dont trust the last couple of runs of the GFS model in this time range because the model merges Bill with another tropical system behind it, which doesnt seem likely, and with the ECMWF showing the re-curve scenario which I disagree with, I dont think we have a longer range model with a good clue yet.

The synoptic situation continues to argue for a track to the west-northwest but with a trough coming in to the Great Lakes, a weakening of the western flank of the ridge and thus an eventual turn to the northwest and maybe north and northeast. So does this happen in the central or eastern Gulf? Florida? Or the southeast coast? I cant answer that yet, but I will say that Florida certainly is the highest threat area for this now. Adding to the complication is that Ana in front of the system is certainly going to have an affect on the system, and a stronger Ana may increase the chance of a recurve. So stay tuned plenty to follow. If you live in the northern Islands, especially the Virgin Islands, I would continue to prepare for a hurricane strike by mid week.

The first Tropical Storm of the Atlantic Hurricane season has formed off the west coast of Africa. The National Hurricane Center is now tracking Tropical Storm Ana as it makes its way across the Atlantic. South Florida is in the five-day cone, so now is the time to make your tropical weather preparations. At 5:00 a.m., the center of Tropical Storm Ana was located near latitude 14.6 north, longitude 46.8 west, or about 1010 miles east of the Leeward Islands. The storm has an estimated minimum central pressure of 1005 mb, or 29.68 inches. Maximum sustained winds are near 40 miles per hour with tropical storm force winds extending out up to 70 miles from the center. Ana is moving toward the west near 16 miles per hour and forecasters expect Ana to continue on this general motion for the next few days. Ana is also expected to pick up speed and could be approaching the Leeward Islands on Monday. The CBS4 storm team is monitoring the storm and will have more about Tropical Storm Ana all day on CBS4 and CBS4.com. anna track 8/15/2009 The Global Weather pattern appears to be plotting to bring a large scale weather event to the eastern seaboard during the weekend of August 22-25.  During the past several days there has been some signs of coupling between the extratropics and tropics. My intention is to discuss how global relationships can influence the weather. Tropical Depression #2 was declared a remnant low yesterday after it lost big after tangling with King TUTT.  A strong amplification of Madden Julian Oscillation phase 1 has created a situation that the almost dead storm system now exists in a well ventlated region east of the dry air.  Thunderstorms firing along the line between dry and moist air are now able to work into the storm circulation and regenerate it.

MJO Aug 13 2009

The Madden-Julian Oscillation Chart on the left shows the Friday Aug 14 position.  Notice how dry air is receding from the remants of Tropical Depression #2 and how baroclinic forces (contrast) is firing up convection which may restart the storm.

Regenerating_TD2

The Global Wind Oscillation (GWO) attempts to integrate the tropics (MJO) and extratropics by plotting Atmospheric Angular Momentumn (AAM) in terms of amplitude and tendency.  This can be useful because if the MJO phase is known AND also the AAM state then the big picture of what the atmosphere is trying to accomplish can be seen.  Sound complicated?  Honestly, it is easier than you think! This AAM chart shows the north and south progation of momentum which originated in the tropics in late May and early June.  At that time strong blocking (greens and blues) served as a means of destroying summer for those along the northern US  east of the Great Divide and Canada.  As the summer progressed the added energy of the tropics has nullified much of the blocking.  NOW the little green spot at the equator is indicative of the pattern that is favoring storm development right now.  Therefore a reversal of sorts has taken place. Now let’s see the big picture.  This Global Wind oscillation chart shows how the atmosphere has gained momentum during the summer while the tight circles show the repetitious weather pattern which has morphed into its August version. Now it appears to be attempting to break away from the spiral by erasing momentum from the atmpsphere.  Therefore we can expect the Phase 8 position to drop into phase 1. In a similar fashion this MJO chart is very consistent with overall quiet tropics (until now) and has now moved out of its weak zone and amplifying into a phase which slows the tropics, allowing storm systems to amplify and progress further west. Now the final piece of the puzzle is the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) which has been negative most of August but generated two bursts of westerly winds  (drop into negative teens).  Those features allow some semblance of timing to be attempted.  In the past I have observed a 15 day lag between the observation of an SOI dip and the progression of a weather pattern or coming of a storm.  The second of 2 bursts will coincide with the weekend of the 22-23  which is when I am expecting a large scale storm to make a run at our coast! Strom

8/14/2009 The Tallahassee Democrat is looking for citizen journalists to help blog, tweet and shoot photos and videos in the event of a tropical storm, hurricane or other severe-weather event. Residents in Tallahassee and throughout the Big Bend area are encouraged to join the effort to ensure maximum coverage throughout the area. If you are interested in helping, please contact Digital Communities Editor Julia Thompson at jlthompson@tallahassee.com or (850) 599-2199. atl_overview444444 As of 12:30am Saturday, August 15 the National Hurricane Center is monitoring one Tropical Depression and three locations for potential tropical depression development between now and Monday morning. A new area of disturbed weather has developed today in the northeast Gulf of Mexico just off Apalachicola and Tampa, Florida.  This are has deep showers and thunderstorms that have sustained over the past 12 hours.  National Weather Service offices have determined there is a trough of low pressure located in the area however significant development has not yet occurred.  The National Hurricane Center is monitoring the area for additional development over the next day or so.  Stay tuned to KBMT 12 Storm Team for additional information on this area. The NHC chances for the area west of Florida in the Gulf of Mexico developing into a Tropical Depression by Sunday evening:  30% A tropical wave stretching from western Puerto Rico to Cuba and the Southeastern Bahamas is encountering unfavorable conditions in the upper atmosphere however low level circulation is now evident on satellite images of the region.  As the wave moves to the west and northwest it is forecast to encounter slightly more favorable conditions for potential development and, for this reason in addition to its proximity to the continental U.S., the National Hurricane Center is monitoring this area for potential development between now and Sunday. The NHC chances for the area southeast of Florida developing into a Tropical Depression by Sunday evening: 30% Tropical Depression #2 has reformed late Friday and continues to build new thunderstorms near the center of circulation.  The five day cone forecast on TD#2 develops it into a Tropical Storm and takes it north of Puerto Rico and through the Bahamas to just east of Miami within five days. The tropical wave moving into the central Atlantic, behind Tropical Depression #2 continues to show strong development including sea surface rotation.  Overall thunderstorm activity has been occurring since it left the coast of Africa with minor fluctuations.  The National Hurricane Center is closely monitoring this area for potential development. The NHC chances for the area just to the east of former TD#2 developing into a Tropical Depression by Sunday evening: Greater than 50% Trp3 8/14/2009 MIAMI — Forecasters say Tropical Storm Guillermo is getting stronger but not quite a hurricane as it moves farther out into the Pacific. Guillermo’s maximum sustained winds increased to near 70 mph Thursday. The storm is moving west near 15 mph. It’s centered about 1,025 miles west-southwest of the southern tip of Mexico’s Baja California peninsula. Forecasters expect Guillermo to become a hurricane by Friday, but it is far from land. It is then expected to weaken as it moves over cooler waters. Forecasters keeping an eye on TD #2 8/13/2009 Jay Vise Reporting

Officials with the National Hurricane Center say that Tropical Depression #2 continues a general westward movement in the open Atlantic, with maximum sustained winds of 30 miles per hour.Channel 4 meteorologist Laura Buchtel says that while the system is not yet a tropical storm, it still bears watching.”As it goes over the next couple of days, the model tracks may change…right now expected to stay into the Atlantic,” she said.She says the future direction of the storm has a lot to do with whether it intensifies in the next couple of days.”We’ll have to see if it strengthens, it may turn more northward; if it stays a depression, it could just move through with showers across the Caribbean,” Buchtel said. 1329397The Hurricane Center says “only a few showers and thunderstorms are associated with the depression…And if this trend continues, the system could decay to a remnant low pressure area later today.” Forecasters are also keeping an eye on a tropical wave to the east of TD2, which the Hurricane Center has given a “high” probability of becoming a depression within the next 48 hours. For complete coverage of the tropics all hurricane season, be sure to check out WWL’s Hurricane Central by clicking on the following link:

The tropical depression moving through the Atlantic Ocean is heading toward tropical storm status, but is not quite there yet.

The circulating cluster of thunderstorms is producing winds of about 35 miles per hour, just four miles per hour short of tropical storm strength. The system is now predicted to become Tropical Storm Ana sometime this evening or tomorrow morning. The storm will encounter wind shear, an obstacle that likely will prevent it from reaching hurricane strength. Another strong tropical wave that formed off the coast of Africa this morning is also showing a 30 to 50 percent chance of strengthening into a tropical depression. If it does, it will be the third depression of the season. Forecasters expect it to develop slowly.

Tropical Depression 2 nears storm strength td-2 8-12-09_m August 12, 2009 Tropical Depression 2 as of 5 a.m. EDT was located at 14.6 north and 32.4 west, or about 535 miles west of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands. Maximum sustained winds remain near 35 mph with higher gusts. The system is moving to the west at 12 mph and may strengthen enough to become a tropical storm later Wednesday. When tropical storm status is reached, it will be named Ana. However, any intensification over the next several days should continue to be slow as there is currently a good deal of dry air and Saharan dust in front of this depression and sea surface temperatures are marginal along the projected path. In addition, an elongated trough just northwest of the depression is helping to increase the upper-level wind shear over the eastern Atlantic. If the depression moves far enough to the north, this would also prevent it from strengthening much. 081109_two_atl6565 Well, it’s about doggone time!!! Finally, arriving late on the scene this season, we have a tropical depression. Yes, folks, that Cape Verde wave that I spoke of yesterday has earned Tropical Depression status. Join me in welcoming Tropical Depression 2 to the stage… Tropical Depression 2?!?, you ask?! Yes, folks, we actually had a pre-season blip, that stole away the 1st depression status. It didn’t ever amount to anything, so you might have forgotten about it.You might be noticing those two other areas of interest, one in the Windward Islands, and the other between our tropical depression and that wave… neither have much of a shot at development, but I find it funny that we went from nada… to kaboom, just like that. Tropical Depression 2 is forecast to become our first named storm of the 2009 Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season. That would make Tropical Storm Ana (pronounced Uh-nah). It doesn’t look like they expect her to become anything much more than a fish, but Bermuda should keep a close watch on the storm, as it creeps across the Atlantic, making the long track from Africa to this neck of the woods.

AS USUAL THERE IS CONSIDERABLE UNCERTAINTY AS TO THE STRENGTH OF THIS SYSTEM LATER IN THE FORECAST PERIOD. IF THE CYCLONE MOVES FARTHER NORTH THAN ANTICIPATED (ABOVE) IT WILL PROBABLY ENCOUNTER STRONGER SHEAR AND NOT INTENSIFY AS MUCH AS FORECAST. ON THE OTHER HAND IF THE SYSTEM MOVES FARTHER SOUTH THAN EXPECTED LATE IN THE PERIOD…IT WILL PROBABLY BECOME STRONGER THAN ANTICIPATED HERE.

I will keep you posted…

Big Island, Maui County Under Storm, Flood Watches

HONOLULU — Felicia on Sunday morning weakened to a tropical storm, but remained on course for Hawaii forecasters said.Tropical Storm Felicia has sustained winds of 70 mph, traveling west at about 15 mph. The storm is 595 miles east of Hilo as of 5 a.m.

Felicia

Satellite images shows Tropical Storm Felicia breaking up as it approaches the Hawaiian Islands.

The National Weather Service issued a tropical storm watch and flash flood watch for the Big Island and Maui County as Tropical Storm Felicia approaches.There is also a tropical storm warning for the waters around all of the Hawaiian Islands.The entire state is under a flood advisory from Monday through Wednesday.Oahu could also see significant rainfall and strong winds, forecasters said.KITV 4 meteorologist Justin Fujioka said the storm is projected to be a tropical depression or less when it reaches the Hawaiian Islands late Monday. However, he wants residents to remember that even a tropical depression can bring heavy rains, winds and flooding.Hawaii officials stress that residents should be prepared. They asked that people keep up with the news on Felicia.While Felicia is forecasted to decrease in strength, hurricanes in general are unpredictable. Stay with KITV, KITV.com and Oceanic Cable digital channel 126 for updates on the storm. HURRICANE FELICIA ADVISORY NUMBER 12 NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL EP08-06-2009 800 AM PDT THU AUG 06 2009 …FELICIA MAINTAINING STRENGTH BUT EXPECTED TO WEAKEN LATER TODAY… AT 800 AM PDT…1500 UTC…THE CENTER OF HURRICANE FELICIA WAS LOCATED NEAR LATITUDE 16.0 NORTH…LONGITUDE 131.9 WEST OR ABOUT 1510 MILES…2430 KM…WEST-SOUTHWEST OF THE SOUTHERN TIP OF BAJA CALIFORNIA AND ABOUT 1545 MILES…2490 KM…EAST OF HILO HAWAII. FELICIA IS MOVING TOWARD THE NORTHWEST NEAR 10 MPH…17 KM/HR…AND A GRADUAL TURN TO THE WEST-NORTHWEST IS EXPECTED OVER THE NEXT 48 HOURS. MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS REMAIN NEAR 140 MPH…220 KM/HR…WITH HIGHER GUSTS. FELICIA IS A CATEGORY FOUR HURRICANE ON THE SAFFIR-SIMPSON HURRICANE SCALE. SLOW WEAKENING IS FORECAST DURING THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS AS FELICIA MOVES OVER COOLER WATERS. HURRICANE FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 40 MILES…65 KM…FROM THE CENTER…AND TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 155 MILES…250 KM. THE ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE IS 937 MB…27.67 INCHES. …SUMMARY OF 800 AM PDT INFORMATION… LOCATION…16.0N 131.9W MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS…140 MPH PRESENT MOVEMENT…NORTHWEST OR 305 DEGREES AT 10 MPH MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE…937 MB THE NEXT ADVISORY WILL BE ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER AT 200 PM PDT.

Hurricane Felicia now a category 4, heading for Hawaii

The National Weather Service has just issued its 10th advisory on Hurricane Felicia, heading towards the Hawaii Islands:

THE CENTER OF HURRICANE FELICIA WAS LOCATED NEAR LATITUDE 14.9 NORTH…LONGITUDE 130.5 WEST OR ABOUT 1455 MILES…2340 KM…WEST-SOUTHWEST OF THE SOUTHERN TIP OF BAJA CALIFORNIA. FELICIA IS MOVING TOWARD THE WEST-NORTHWEST NEAR 12 MPH…19 KM/HR. A GENERAL MOTION TOWARD THE NORTHWEST IS FORECAST DURING THE NEXT DAY OR TWO. MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS HAVE INCREASED TO NEAR NEAR 140 MPH… 220 KM/HR…WITH HIGHER GUSTS. THIS MAKES FELICIA A CATEGORY FOUR HURRICANE ON THE SAFFIR-SIMPSON HURRICANE SCALE. FELICIA IS LIKELY NEAR PEAK INTENSITY…AND WEAKENING IS EXPECTED DURING THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. HURRICANE FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 40 MILES…65 KM…FROM THE CENTER…AND TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 140 MILES…220 KM. ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE IS 937 MB…27.67 INCHES. …SUMMARY OF 800 PM PDT INFORMATION… LOCATION…14.9N 130.5W MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS…140 MPH PRESENT MOVEMENT…WEST-NORTHWEST OR 300 DEGREES AT 12 MPH MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE…937 MB THE NEXT ADVISORY WILL BE ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER AT 200 AM PDT.

In a discussion released in conjunction with the update, forecasters explain why they are expecting the storm to weaken over the course of the next few days. According to the discussion:

A LITTLE ADDITIONAL STRENGTHENING IS POSSIBLE TONIGHT BEFORE FELICIA MOVES OVER DECREASING SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES. AFTER THAT…THE CYCLONE SHOULD STEADILY WEAKEN THROUGH 72 HR AS THE SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES ALONG THE FORECAST TRACK COOL TO NEAR 24C. THE INTENSITY FORECAST IS SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN AFTER 72 HR…AS THE FORECAST TRACK CALLS FOR THE CYCLONE TO MOVE OVER INCREASING SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURES. HOWEVER…BASED ON THE THE LARGE-SCALE MODELS AGREEING WELL IN FORECASTING FELICIA TO SHEAR APART DURING THAT TIME…THE INTENSITY FORECAST CALLS FOR CONTINUED WEAKENING AFTER 72 HR.

Coastal Watches/Warnings and 5-Day Track Forecast Cone Update: August 05, 2009 Hurricane Felicia is continuing to gain strength far out in the Pacific. Felicia’s maximum sustained winds have increased to near 125 mph, making it a Category 3 storm and a major hurricane. Felicia is centered a little over 1700 miles from Hilo moving northwest at 10 mph. Within the next 12 hours Felicia is expected to reach Category 4 status, before passing over cooler waters and slowly weakening as it approaches the Hawaiian Islands as a tropical storm. The Big Island and Maui County are now well within the cone of error. The National Weather Service says it’s still too early to determine what kind of weather this system will bring to the state. But are asking the public to be prudent and prepare. Taking the cone of error into consideration, at this point there is a 5% chance of direct impact in Hilo Sunday night into early Monday morning. Now is a good time to think about what you actually would do if a storm did impact the state. Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Enrique over the Pacific has maximum sustained winds near 50 mph. It is expected to weaken and dissipate in the next 36 hours. Enrique is centered about over 2,099 east of Hilo and is moving northwest at 10 mph. Enrique is not expected to affect the weather in our islands. Melvin Kaku, director for the Department of Emergency Management says, “Due to the unpredictability of hurricanes and tropical storms all residents should closely monitor Felicia and Enrique through the weekend and take the time now to discuss hurricane preparedness actions and disaster preparedness plans”. 8-05-2009 Felicia Strengthens Into Hurricane in Pacific 8/04/2009 MIAMI — Tropical Storm Enrique has formed in the Pacific, becoming the fifth named storm of the eastern north Pacific hurricane season. Also, a new tropical depression formed farther west in the Pacific. 376091main_EnriqueTD8E-large_20090804_full-550x399 The National Hurricane Center says Tropical Storm Enrique has maximum sustained winds near 40 mph and is expected to strengthen. Enrique is centered about 715 miles south-southwest of the southern tip of Mexico’s Baja California peninsula and is moving west-northwest near 14 mph. Meanwhile the tropical depression has maximum sustained winds near 35 mph and is expected to strengthen to a tropical storm. The depression is centered about 1,135 miles southwest of Baja California. 8/3/2009 MIAMI – The National Hurricane Center says a tropical depression has formed in the Eastern Pacific and is expected to intensify into a tropical storm within a day. Forecasters say the depression is the seventh of the 2009 Eastern Pacific hurricane season. Its maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph with higher gusts. Around 2 p.m. EDT Monday, the depression was centered about 705 miles south-southwest of the southern tip of Baja, Calif.

Here is the Tropical Update for Saturday, August 1, 2009.

First the good news is that two entire months of the 2009 Hurricane Season have come and gone without anything.  There have been no Tropical Depressions, tropical storms or hurricanes during this years season.  However, in the pre-season there was one Tropical Depression that formed and dissipated in the Atlantic Ocean. Here is a list of current tropical waves in the Atlantic basin: 1 = is currently located in the western Caribbean Sea with virtually no thunderstorm activity associated with it over water.  However, part of the wave interacting with the land surface has kicked up a large amount of land based showers and thunderstorms.  No development is forecast with this Tropical Wave in the next 48 hours.  It is likely to move over Central America and then out into the Pacific Ocean. 2 = is currently located just east of the Windward and Leeward Islands between 50W and 60W.  This wave does not have a large amount of thunderstorm activity associate with it however satellite imagery does indicate minimal rotation at the sea surface.  General weather conditions around this wave are not favorable for the development of any tropical identity over the next 48 hours. 3 = is located just to the west of the Cape Verde Islands off the coast of Africa.  This wave also has minimal thunderstorm activity associated with it and is not forecast to develop into a tropical identity due the dry Saharan air following behind it.

Posted on Thursday, 07.30.09

Hurricane season’s been a breeze, but don’t breathe easy yet

As hurricane seasons go, 2009 has been perfect. Two months in — a third of the way through — and the tropics have spun out zero tropical storms, zero hurricanes and one piffle of a depression that melted harmlessly in the North Atlantic. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if that were a harbinger of months to come? No such luck. “Yes, it seems slow compared to the last couple of years, but this is nothing out of the ordinary,” said Dennis Feltgen, spokesman for the National Hurricane Center in West Miami-Dade County. Many a hurricane season has started slowly, only to accelerate right about now. In 2004, for instance, the first named storm didn’t pop up until the last day of July. “That was the same year that had Charlie, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne,” Feltgen said. “We ended up with 15 named storms.” Think back to 1992, when the first tropical storm formed Aug. 17. In a week’s time, it morphed into Hurricane Andrew and steamrolled across South Miami-Dade as the last Category 5 storm to hit the United States. With nothing on the horizon for the next few days, this year will fall short of the typical June-July production of one to two named storms. Nothing has even come close to whipping up into tropical storm strength, said Richard Pasch, a forecaster at the hurricane center. “The waves have been very unimpressive,” he said. But the tropics historically heat up in August and peak in September before slowly cooling down by season’s end on Nov. 30. In May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued its annual long-range forecast, predicting a near-normal 2009 season with nine to 14 named storms and four to seven hurricanes. The agency will issue a revised forecast on Aug. 6 with one significant new influence to factor in: El Niño. Last week, scientists pronounced that climate condition, marked by warming waters in the tropical Pacific Ocean, officially in place and possibly growing stronger in coming months. Gerry Bell, NOAA’s lead seasonal hurricane forecaster, wouldn’t say how or if El Niño might change the agency’s updated outlook. But the weather pattern frequently tends to tamp down the tropics — both storm numbers and intensity. The condition, for instance, tends to increase wind shear aloft, Bell said. “That wind just blows developing tropical systems apart.” But he cautioned that other conditions that have produced hectic hurricane seasons over the last decade remain unchanged, including warm ocean temperatures in the Atlantic and Caribbean and favorable wind patterns off Africa, where midseason storms often first take shape as tropical waves. “El Niño isn’t the only factor in the game,” he said. And even if 2009 does prove to be a welcome lull, history also shows that South Florida remains the headpin in Hurricane Alley. There is no forecasting where storms that will invariably form will hit. “Hurricanes strike in El Niño years,” Bell said. “They strike in active years. They strike in weak years.” http://www.miamiherald.com/news/broward/story/1163420.html Jul 29, 2009 at 8:24 AM CDT

Tropics The Tropics are quiet and no tropical storm formation is expected today, however there are two tropical waves we are monitoring. Youth Groups REACH Out to Help Sunday, July 26, 2009 More than 150 High Schools volunteer their time to repair homes for those in need. HURRICANE — More than 150 high school students from across the country are in town, hoping to make a difference. The REACH Workcamp will be in Hurricane this week. Campers will be living in classrooms at Hurricane High School. Students participating are members of church youth groups across the country. The groups goal is to make homes safer, dryer and warmer by doing basic repairs for people who aren’t able to do them on their own. “The reward that you get out of it at the end of the week when you see the residents’ faces is better than anything you could ever buy,” said volunteer Becca Vitale. Contractors volunteer their time to help campers with their projects. To learn more just click on the link below. REACH Workcamp http://www.reachwc.org Weak tropical wave to bring rain Tuesday, July 21, 2009 A weak tropical wave located near Cuba is likely to bring additional showers and thunderstorms to the Southwest Florida region Wednesday and Thursday

Although the storms may increase rainfall in the area, they are so disorganized that they are unlikely to gather together to become a tropical cyclone, meteorologists predict. “If it has a chance of developing it probably is going to do it after it moves past Florida,” said Anthony Reyes, meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Ruskin. A second tropical wave west of the Lesser Antilles is much stronger, producing numerous thunderstorms and gale-force winds. If the storm system stays together it could reach Florida by this weekend, but it still has to pass through the Caribbean Islands. “It has to pass Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Cuba,” Reyes said. “Then we’ll see what potentially will happen in our area.” The wave formed off the coast of Africa late last week and has slowly gained strength. Strong winds in the upper atmosphere are likely to keep the wave from gaining enough strength to circulate into a tropical storm. The National Hurricane Center gives both tropical waves a less than 30 percent chance of forming into a tropical depression within the next 48 hours. satellite(11)

July 20, 2009

Tropical wave in Atlantic not likely a concern for area

MIAMI — The National Weather Service in Miami reports that the tropical wave the service has been tracking since Saturday is no more of a threat today, and no more likely to become a tropical cyclone anytime soon. “Essentially it really hasn’t changed very much,” said Robert Molleda, a meteorologist with the NWS. The service reported Sunday that the wave, then located about 600 miles east of the Windward Islands, had less than a 30 percent chance of becoming a cyclone; that estimate has not changed. “More than likely the system will not develop,” Molleda said. According to the most recent data from the service’s storm tracker, the wave is now about 200 to 300 miles from the Windward Islands, and Molleda said the wave would likely pass further into the Caribbean by tomorrow, posing little to no threat to Southwest Florida. “We’re really not looking at this as any kind of concern for our area,” said Molleda, who said that most tropical waves “just stay as tropical waves.” The island chain known as the Windward Islands is made up of the southern half of the Lesser Antilles, and includes Barbados, Granada, Trinidad and Tobago and several other land masses of varying size. The northernmost island in the chain, Martinique, is more than 1,400 miles from Miami and more than 1,500 miles from Naples. July 19, 2009 Atlantic tropical wave becomes better organized Shower and thunderstorm activity associated with a tropical wave about 600 miles east of the Windward Islands has become better organized during the past several hours, according to the National Hurricane Center. While environmental conditions are currently favorable for some development of this system, upper-level winds are expected to become less favorable tonight. The chance of the wave developing into a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours is less than 30 percent.

Tropical Update (July 14th 2009)
“Deep Atlantic waves are worth watching”

Well as we head into mid July we have to start watching the area of the Atlantic between the Caribbean Islands and Africa. Bertha formed in this area in a similar time last year. This morning we have two tropical waves of interest in this region. The 1st is around 12N and 35W this morning. I have attached a satellite image below. This feature on satellite appears to have a broad cyclonic turning to it. We have not had a quickscat pass on this feature since yesterday evening. Yesterday the image I attached below did not show any clear cyclonic turning to the low level wind field. So this cyclonic turning may be in the mid levels. The convection is ok but not overly impressive. The wave is in an area of light shear currently, there is some anticyclonic shear ahead of it, but most models seem to keep the system from being torn apart by shear, so we will have to wait and see if this shear hangs around longer than the models indicate. satellite(10) 1indshear(12) 2indquickscat 3ind Global models show little to no significant development of this system the next several days as it moves across the Atlantic towards the Leeward Islands. So I am not anticipating any rapid development of this system, but with the shear relatively low and the fact this seems to be a rather well defined wave, it is something to watch, and I cannot rule out development. The 2nd system just emerged from Africa. The NHC has not declared this a wave yet but a look at a Hovmoller series shows this wave was well defined as it moved across west Africa. More often than not these waves come off of Africa looking impressive and then quickly lose their convection in the Atlantic. So we will have to wait and see how this looks 24 hours from now. Most global models do maintain this wave across the Atlantic but show little to no significant development. Like with the first wave we must watch it, but I do not expect any rapid development. africa(5) 4ind

Tropical Storm Carlos getting stronger in Pacific
July 11, 2009

MIAMI (AP) — Tropical Storm Carlos is getting stronger as it swirls far off Mexico’s Pacific coast. The storm’s maximum sustained winds have increased to near 65 mph and the National Hurricane Center in Miami says the storm is expected to become a hurricane sometime Saturday or Sunday. As of 11 a.m. EDT Saturday, Carlos was centered about 970 miles south-southwest of the southern tip of Mexico’s Baja California peninsula. The storm is moving west near 10 mph on a path taking it farther out to sea. Tropical Storm Carlos forms far off Mexico coast July 10, 2009 MEXICO CITY — Tropical Storm Carlos formed far off Mexico’s Pacific coast Friday and is expected to reach hurricane strength in the next few days as it moves further out to sea. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Carlos — which had been a depression — now had maximum sustained winds near 40 mph (65 kph) and was expected to continue moving west for the next few days. At 2 p.m. PDT (2100 GMT), the storm was about 910 miles (1,465 kilometers) south-southwest of the tip of the Baja California peninsula. It was moving west at about 14 mph (22 kph), out to sea. Tropical depression forms in Pacific Ocean MIAMI July 10, 2009 (AP) MEXICO CITY (AP) — A tropical depression formed Friday far off Mexico’s Pacific coast and is expected to strengthen while moving farther out to sea. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said the depression had winds of about 35 mph (55 kph) and is likely to become a tropical storm by Saturday and possibly a hurricane by next week. At 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT), the depression was located about 885 miles (1,425 kilometers) south-southwest of the tip of the Baja California peninsula. It was moving west at about 12 mph (19 kph), out to sea. http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=8048576 Hurricane Season Will Peak In Mid August HURRICANE SEASON PEAKS LATER THIS SUMMER The first Hurricane generally occurs in the tropical Atlantic around August 14th according to Dennis Feltkin with the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida.  He told WHKP News that the peak of hurricane season is from mid August to the end of October, and statistically the peak day is September 10th. Feltkin said that a near average season is expected for 2009, and that is what has happened so far.  He said there has been one tropical depression so far this season, and there have also been tropical wayves, but conditions have not been right for any further development. http://www.whkp.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3228 NEW TYPE OF EL NIno COULD MEAN MORE HURRICANES  MAKE LANDFALL

El Niño years typically result in fewer hurricanes forming in the Atlantic Ocean. But a new study suggests that the form of El Niño may be changing potentially causing not only a greater number of hurricanes than in average years, but also a greater chance of hurricanes making landfall, according to climatologists at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The study appears in the July 3, 2009, edition of the journal Science. “Normally, El Niño results in diminished hurricanes in the Atlantic, but this new type is resulting in a greater number of hurricanes with greater frequency and more potential to make landfall,” said Peter Webster, professor at Georgia Tech’s School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. That’s because this new type of El Niño, known as El Niño Modoki (from the Japanese meaning “similar, but different”), forms in the Central Pacific, rather than the Eastern Pacific as the typical El Niño event does. Warming in the Central Pacific is associated with a higher storm frequency and a greater potential for making landfall along the Gulf coast and the coast of Central America. Even though the oceanic circulation pattern of warm water known as El Niño forms in the Pacific, it affects the circulation patterns across the globe, changing the number of hurricanes in the Atlantic. This regular type of El Niño (from the Spanish meaning “little boy” or “Christ child”) is more difficult to forecast, with predictions of the December circulation pattern not coming until May. At first glance, that may seem like plenty of time. However, the summer before El Niño occurs, the storm patterns change, meaning that predictions of El Niño come only one month before the start of hurricane season in June. But El Niño Modoki follows a different prediction pattern. “This new type of El Niño is more predictable,” said Webster. “We’re not sure why, but this could mean that we get greater warning of hurricanes, probably by a number of months.” As to why the form of El Niño is changing to El Niño Modoki, that’s not entirely clear yet, said Webster. “This could be part of a natural oscillation of El Niño,” he said. “Or it could be El Niño’s response to a warming atmosphere. There are hints that the trade winds of the Pacific have become weaker with time and this may lead to the warming occurring further to the west. We need more data before we know for sure.” In the study, Webster, along with Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Chair Judy Curry and research scientist Hye-Mi Kim used satellite data along with historical tropical storm records and climate models. The research team is currently looking at La Niña, the cooling of the surface waters in the Eastern and Central Pacific. “In the past, La Niña has been associated with a greater than average number of North Atlantic hurricanes and La Niña seems to be changing its structure as well,” said Webster. “We’re vitally interested in understanding why El Niño–La Niña has changed. To determine this we need to run a series of numerical experiments with climate models.” Source: Georgia Institute of Technology June free of Atlantic tropical storms, hurricanes Of the six months that comprise Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season, June is statistically the “quietest” month – the one least likely to have tropical storm activity in the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and / or Gulf of Mexico.  June 2009 gave credence to this statistical truth as the month featured no tropical depressions, tropical storms, or hurricanes.  Factors that likely led to the truly quiet June include:

  • still low sea surface temperatures.
  • elevated levels of atmospheric wind shear in the key June tropical storm formation zones (western Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico).
  • a general lack of tropical disturbances in the key June tropical storm formation zones (western Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico).

Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season officially runs from June 1 to November 30.  North Carolina’s peak hurricane season is essentially the middle 50% of the broader season (July 15 to October 15).  Nearly every tropical storm or hurricane to make landfall in the Tarheel State did so between mid July and mid October. How to help prevent and recognize swine flu

Andres Loses Strength, Moves Away from Mexico’s Pacific Coast

MEXICO CITY – After a few hours as a minimal hurricane, Tropical Storm Andres is weakening and moving away from Mexico’s Pacific coast, the National Meteorological Service, or SMN, said Wednesday. The SMN said in its latest report that the national coasts are no longer under a state of alert due to the storm’s path and dwindling strength. At 1200 GMT, Andres was located 205 kilometers (127 miles) southwest of the tourist resort of Puerto Vallarta and moving toward the northwest at 15 kph (9.3 mph) with sustained winds of 90 kph (56 mph). http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=337893&CategoryId=14091 June 23, 2009, 1:16PM

Tropical Storm Andres brushes Mexico; 1 killedACAPULCO, Mexico — Tropical Storm Andres flooded homes and knocked down trees along Mexico’s Pacific coast, killing at least one person as it headed toward a likely hurricane-force scrape with land on Tuesday.Mexico issued a hurricane warning for the strip of coast from just south of Manzanillo to near Puerto Vallarta. To the south, the storm dumped heavy rains on Acapulco, where flooding forced about 200 people to evacuate their homes on Monday.A fisherman drowned when choppy currents overturned his boat in a lagoon Monday in Tecpan de Galeana, between Acapulco and Zihuatanejo, a state police report said. The sun peeked through cloudy skies in Acapulco on Tuesday, but the government closed all schools.Andres sped up as it headed on a course to graze the port city of Manzanillo at hurricane strength late Tuesday, then push along shore past towns such as Barra de Navidad that are home to some American and Canadian expatriates.Rain poured down on Manzanillo, where authorities opened 14 shelters.The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Andres could bring coastal storm surge as much as 3 feet (nearly 1 meter) above normal while dumping as much as 8 inches (200 millimeters) of rain in a few spots.The storm was centered about 55 miles (85 kilometers) south-southeast of Manzanillo at 11 a.m. PDT (2 p.m. EDT; 1700 GMT) Tuesday, and it had sustained winds near 70 mph (110 kph), with higher gusts.Tropical storm force winds extended out 70 miles (110 kilometers) from the center in some directions.It was moving toward the northwest near 12 mph (19 kph). The storm’s winds were expected to build to 75 mph (120 kph), just over the minimum for a hurricane, by late Tuesday.The forecast track showed it then weakening as it continues northwest along the coastline before veering west into the open Pacific and just south of the Los Cabos resorts at the tip of the Baja California peninsula Thursday morning.

Late Sunday, Andres became the first named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season, which began May 15 and ends Nov. 30.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/latinamerica/6493538.html

ANDRES
Tropical Storm Andres strengthening
ACAPULCO, Mexico — A strengthening Tropical Storm Andres roared toward Mexico’s Pacific coast Monday, prompting emergency preparations for a storm that forecasters predicted would become the season’s first hurricane. Forecasters said Andres was likely to brush the coast at hurricane strength around the port city of Manzanillo by Tuesday. The forecast track showed its center later pushing up the coast near picturesque towns such as Barra de Navidad that are home to some American and Canadian expatriates. At Barra de Navidad, northwest of Manzanillo, Agapito Garcia Martinez, security manager at the Grand Bay Hotel-Isla Navidad Resort said hotel staff were preparing to carry out storm preparations like taking in beach furniture and protecting hotel windows, but had not yet been advised by authorities to so. Weather was still sunny despite stronger-than-usual winds, Garcia Martinez said, noting that guests were still checking in normally to the hotel. But tomorrow, when Andres draws closer, might be a different story, he noted. “Tomorrow, we expect to have a lot of water,” Garcia Martinez said. Mexico issued a hurricane warning for the Pacific coast from Cabo Corrientes to Punto San Telmo. A hurricane warning was in effect further south, from San Telmo to the port of Lazaro Cardenas. Still further south on the coast, the Acapulco city government prepared 120 shelters and warned residents to stay indoors, especially some 15,000 people in 20 zones most at risk for flooding. Heavy rains late Sunday downed a few trees in the resort city. Late Sunday night, Andres became the first named storm of the Eastern Pacific hurricane season, which began May 15 and ends November 30 and is typically busiest between July and September. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Andres was centered about 225 miles (360 kilometers) south-southeast of Manzanillo at 5 p.m. PDT (8 p.m. EDT; 0000 GMT) Monday, and it had sustained winds near 60 mph (95 kph), with higher gusts. It was moving toward the northwest near 6 mph (9 kph). But the storm’s winds are expected to build to as much as 75 mph (120 kph) by late Tuesday or Wednesday. The forecast track showed it brushing the central Mexican coast on Tuesday before weakening and bending toward the west a little short of the Los Cabos resorts at the tip of the Baja California Peninsula Thursday night or Friday. It has been 40 years since it took so long for a named storm to develop in the Eastern Pacific. “Normally that season gets under way somewhat earlier,” said Richard Pasch, a senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida. “But it’s not necessarily an indication that it’ll be a quiet year in that basin. We’ve seen some years starting late and become quite active. We’re just going to have to wait and see on that.” Federal forecasters have predicted a near-normal or below-normal season, with the possibility for 13 to 18 named storms, including six to 10 hurricanes. Rains unrelated to the tropical storm resulted in the death of six people and left four others missing in the northern border state of Chihuahua, after a van plunged into a rain-swollen river. The state civil defense office said Monday that the bodies of two men, two women and two children — all passengers in the van — were recovered, but four passengers remain missing. The accident occurred Sunday in the city of Cuauhtemoc. http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/top/all/6492586.html MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico has lifted some tropical storm warnings Friday as the first tropical depression of the Pacific hurricane season became less clearly organized as it neared land. The National Hurricane Center in Miami said the depression was centered about 70 miles (110 kilometers) south-southwest of the coastal city of Mazatlan at 2 p.m. PDT (5 p.m. EDT; 2100 GMT). Maximum sustained winds remain near 35 mph (55 kph). Forecasters say the depression was likely to dissipate after touching the Pacific coast late Friday. The depression was moving toward the north at about 9 mph (15 kph). Mexican authorities lifted a tropical storm warning for the Islas Marias, a group of islands housing a prison facility about 85 miles (135 kilometers) off the Pacific coast, and were expected to end the tropical storm watch for the Pacific coast from Topolobampo south to El Roblito.

Thu Jun 18, 11:00 am ETMIAMI – The first tropical depression of the Pacific hurricane season has formed off the coast of Mexico.
The National Hurricane Center in Miami said that as of 8 a.m. PDT Thursday, the center of the tropical depression was about 370 miles south-southwest of the Mexican city of Mazatlan. The depression’s maximum sustained winds are near 30 mph. Forecasters say it could strengthen to a tropical storm before nearing the Mexican coast by Friday night or Saturday. The depression was moving toward the north at about 9 mph and was expected to turn gradually north-northeast late Friday. Mexican authorities have issued a tropical storm watch for the Pacific coast from Topolobampo south to El Roblito and for Las Islas Marias. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090618/ap_on_re_us/tropical_weather Digital switch also signals end to analog hurricane warnings

MIAMI — The city’s Office of Emergency Management has this simple advice for how to deal with the digital television switch during hurricane season: Get a radio.”We’re recommending that residents invest in battery-powered radios as opposed to TVs for the simple fact that radios are less expensive and they don’t have to go through the learning curve with the TV,” said Jamie Hernandez, department spokesman.Hernandez said emergency-operations officials are concerned that many local residents, because they have cable or satellite television, might not have factored last Friday’s deadline for the switch to digital into their hurricane-preparation plans.Traditional battery-powered televisions probably are configured to receive only analog signals. Converter boxes can be used for some portable models, but those will need additional battery packs.Edie Herman of the Federal Communications Commission said many of the older antennas with those portable televisions are often difficult to attach to the digital converters.”It’s kind of a jury-rigged thing,” she said.A handful of portable TVs that receive digital signals have been on the market for the past few years, but prices are $110 or more.Though it won’t help users in a power loss, newer-model digital televisions are also able to receive digital transmissions, should cable or satellite service go out.”There are a lot of terms that refer to digital, like integrated digital television or digital television or HDTV. You can use those right over the air,” Herman said.She recommends getting out the instruction booklet now and figuring out how to switch off the cable or satellite service and turn on the digital tuner. Usually, it’s also the same input menu where users would switch to a DVD or sound system.

“I think the most important thing is to be prepared,” Herman said. “It’s not like the old days, where if you were far away, you would get a fuzzy signal. With digital, you either get a signal or you don’t.” http://dispatch.com/live/content/business/stories/2009/06/15/mct_digital_backup_0615.ART_ART_06-15-09_A9_MFE5ULB.html?sid=101 Mom leaves kids in car at Arden Fair Mall On Sunday, a mother left her two boys – ages 3 and 7 – inside an SUV while shopping at Arden Fair Mall. This is shocking, but what could be more shocking is that she wasn’t even even cited. According a KCRA report, mall security received a report at 6:27 p.m. on Sunday, June 7, that a female left her children in the car and then entered the mall. The report went on to say that mall security and Sacramento Police were able to get to the car within minutes of the initial call. They were able to find the mother’s cell phone number and proceeded to call her and left a voice mail message. The officers waited 10 minutes before the mother, carrying a shopping bag a Cinnabon, finally arrived. Konrad Von Schoech of the Sacramento Police Department told KCRA that the mother, whose identity is being withheld, was not arrested because “the officer who went out there to investigate this incident did not note any conditions present that would cause the children any significant risk to their health or safety.” Other news reports say that the mother left the windows down and the car keys with the seven-year-old boy. Under California law, it is unlawful for children 6 years old and younger to be left inside a vehicle without being supervised by someone who is at least 12 years of age. According to Safe Kids, USA, about 36 kids die from hyperthermia, known as heat stroke or sunstroke, each year. Being left in the car during hot weather is among the leading causes of death for young kids when dealing with vehicle incidences. The group also report that a child’s body temperature isn’t regulated like an adults and can actually get warmer three to five times faster. So if you are thinking about leaving your kids in the car while going shopping, consider this, in about 10 minutes the temperature inside the cabin of your car can be 20 degrees hotter than the temperature outside the car. By 30 minutes, the temperature can rise to 34 degrees hotter http://www.examiner.com/x-9035-Sacramento-Parenting-Examiner~y2009m6d9-Mom-leaves-kids-in-car-at-Arden-Fair-Mall

Severe storms hit South Florida on Saturday afternoon and meteorologist warn floods and damage are likely. ”It’s going to be wet this afternoon and some storms could be strong or even close to severe,” said Barry Baxter, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Miami. Those storms, which could pack hail and winds, are expected to follow similar paths of yesterday’s showers. On Friday, afternoon downpours dumped more than nine inches over Miami Beach in only five hours, causing flooding, power outages and massive traffic jams during rush hour. At Miami International Airport, a little more than an inch of rain fell; at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International about a ½ an inch. The South Florida storm hit at the height of Friday’s rush hour, accompanied with hail the size of ping pong balls, wicked lightning strikes, crashing thunder and winds topping 60 mph. Just six months after a $500 million renovation, The Fontainebleau was left with an eight-foot hole in its lobby ceiling and ankle-deep water in its night club. ”It was literally like a waterfall, coming in from the ceiling,” said Amy Kates of Rochester, N.Y., who is staying at the Fontainebleau while her husband attends an orthopedic conference there. Kates said the hotel staff had blocked off the area under the ceiling leak, and were pushing the water off the lobby’s bow-tie tile floor and out the front door. “Then the ceiling caved in.” Next door, the Eden Roc closed after losing power, sending its guests to other hotels in the Marriott chain. Mark Pavlat was one of those displaced guests. Standing in a line of roughly 50 people outside the darkened hotel, the chemical salesman from Long Island described the evacuation as a minor bump in a harrowing day. Earlier, he was among 70 sales people on a pair of chartered catamarans sailing the waters off Key Biscayne as the storm approached. ”We noticed you couldn’t see Miami anymore,” Pavlat said. “Then . . . we saw two waterspouts.” The captain loaded lowered the sails, while a passenger rang a ship’s bell and asked for quiet. ”Someone started saying a prayer,” Pavlat said. ‘ `Dear Lord, please protect us all.’ ” Anxiety aboard the catamarans grew when the boats couldn’t make it back to the marina. ”There were people on their cellphones making calls to loved ones,” Pavlat said. But the catamarans did make it safely back and no one was injured. The wet weather clogged traffic on the causeways connecting Miami and Miami Beach. Eastbound lanes of the MacArthur Causeway were shut down to allow drainage and FPL crews to work on electrical lines. The Venetian was impassable east of the eastern drawbridge. Cars were at a standstill for hours. Northbound drivers on Biscayne Boulevard reported that the entire right lane next to the Omni was axle-deep in water. Travelers trying to get in and out of Miami International and Hollywood-Fort Lauderdale airports also endured flight delays. A Lightning bolt landed struck near a 737 plane parked at the Fort Lauderdale -Hollywood International airport. The hailstorm is not particularly unusual, said National Weather Service meteorologist Robert Molleda, who notes that South Florida typically sees heavy rainstorms with hail a few times a year. Friday’s storm comes just five days into the 2009 hurricane season. The wind also grew fierce in some parts of the region. Winds topping 60 mph whipped through Hollywood. No damage was reported. Florida Power & Light reported that more than 15,000 customers in Miami-Dade County were without power Friday night, and more than 1,300 customers in Broward County. FPL spokesperson Mayco Villafaña said the large number of lightning strikes in Central Miami-Dade caused most of the power outages. FPL crews were working into the night to restore power and the outages had been restored Saturday morning. Tina Salafatinos lives on Lincoln Road and was in the midst of the torrential rain on Friday afternoon. From her fifth-story apartment, she witnessed pedestrians with trash bags tied around each of their feet, and a submerged cars lining the streets. ”I did not expect this flooding. I looked out my window and it took me by surprise,” Salafatinos said. “I’ll be swimming to work [Saturday] evening if it’s still like this.” At least one resourceful resident had another method to get around: a kayak was seen paddling down West Avenue. Despite the scare during his outing on the bay, Pavlat didn’t seem too fazed. ”We love Miami,” he said. “This was just a freak of nature.” http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking-news/story/1084607.html

Hurricane Info

In Uncategorized on May 21, 2009 at 11:18 pm

Weather & Hurricanes4

2009 Hurricane Names

Ana
Bill
Claudette
Danny
Erika
Fred
Grace
Henri
Ida
Joaquin
Kate
Larry
Mindy
Nicholas
Odette
Peter
Rose
Sam
Teresa
Victor
Wanda

Hurricane tracking map

“511″ Statewide Service

By calling one number, 511, motorists everywhere in the state can find out about construction updates, lane closures, traffic incidents, severe weather reports and Amber Alerts for child abductions.  For more information about this new statewide service, please click on:

YOUR FAMILY DISASTER PLAN:

Where will your family be when disaster strikes? They could be anywhere—at work, at school or in the car. How will you find each other? Will you know if your children are safe?

Disaster can strike quickly and without warning. It can force you to evacuate your neighborhood or confine you to your home. What would you do if basic services—water, gas, electricity or telephones—were cut off? Local officials and relief workers will be on the scene after a disaster, but they cannot reach everyone right away.

Families can—and do—cope with disaster by preparing in advance and working together as a team. Follow the steps listed in this brochure to create your family’s disaster plan. Knowing what to do is your best protection and your responsibility.

1. Find Out What Could Happen to You. Contact your local emergency management or civil defense office and American Red Cross chapter—be prepared to take notes:

  • Ask what types of disasters are most likely to happen. Request information on how to prepare for each.
  • Learn about your community’s warning signals: what they sound like and what you should do when you hear them.
  • Ask about animal care after disaster. Animals may not be allowed inside emergency shelters due to health regulations.
  • Find out how to help seniors or disabled persons, if needed.
  • Next, find out about the disaster plans at your workplace, your children’s school or daycare center and other places where your family spends time.

2. Create a Disaster Plan

Meet with your family and discuss why you need to prepare for disaster. Explain the dangers of fire, severe weather and earthquakes to children. Plan to share responsibilities and work together as a team.

  • Discuss the types of disasters that are most likely to happen. Explain what to do in each case.
  • Pick two places to meet:
    • Right outside your home in case of a sudden emergency, like a fire.
    • Outside your neighborhood in case you can’t return home. Everyone must know the address and phone number.
  • Ask an out-of-state friend to be your “family contact.” After a disaster, it’s often easier to call long distance. Other family members should call this person and tell them where they are. Everyone must know your contact’s phone number.
  • Discuss what to do in an evacuation. Plan how to take care of your pets.

3. Complete This Checklist

  • Post emergency telephone numbers by phones (fire, police, ambulance, etc.).
  • Teach children how and when to call 911 or your local Emergency Medical Services number for emergency help.
  • Show each family member how and when to turn off the water, gas and electricity at the main switches.
  • Check if you have adequate insurance coverage.
  • Teach each family member how to use the fire extinguisher (ABC type), and show them where it’s kept.
  • Install smoke detectors on each level of your home, especially near bedrooms.
  • Conduct a home hazard hunt.
  • Stock emergency supplies and assemble a Disaster Supplies Kit.
  • Take a Red Cross first aid and CPR class.
  • Determine the best escape routes from your home. Find two ways out of each room.
  • Find the safe spots in your home for each type of disaster.

4. Practice and Maintain Your Plan

  • Quiz your kids every six months so they remember what to do.
  • Conduct fire and emergency evacuation drills.
  • Replace stored water every three months and stored food every six months.
  • Test and recharge your fire extinguisher(s) according to manufacturer’s instructions.
  • Test your smoke detectors monthly and change the batteries at least once a year

Emergency Supplies

Keep enough supplies in your home to meet your needs for at least three days. Assemble a Disaster Supplies Kit with items you may need in an evacuation. Store these supplies in sturdy, easy-to-carry containers such as backpacks, duffel bags or covered trash containers.

Include

  • A three-day supply of water (one gallon per person per day) and food that won’t spoil.
  • One change of clothing and footwear per person, and one blanket or sleeping bag per person.
  • A first aid kit that includes your family’s prescription medications.
  • Emergency tools including a battery-powered radio, flashlight and plenty of extra batteries.
  • An extra set of car keys and a credit card, cash or traveler’s checks.
  • Sanitation supplies.
  • Special items for infants, seniors or disabled family members.
  • An extra pair of glasses. Keep important family documents in a waterproof container. Keep a smaller kit in the trunk of your car.


Utilities

Locate the main electric fuse box, water service main and natural gas main. Learn how and when to turn these utilities off. Teach all responsible family members. Keep necessary tools near gas and water shut-off valves. Remember, turn off the utilities only if you suspect the lines are damaged or if you are instructed to do so. If you turn the gas off, you will need a professional to turn it back on.


Home Hazard Hunt

During a disaster, ordinary objects in your home can cause injury or damage. Anything that can move, fall, break or cause a fire is a home hazard. For example, a hot water heater or a bookshelf can fall. Inspect your home at least once a year and fix potential hazards. Contact your local fire department to learn about home fire hazards.

Evacuation

Evacuate immediately if told to do so:

  • Listen to your battery-powered radio and follow the instructions of local emergency officials.
  • Wear protective clothing and sturdy shoes.
  • Take your Disaster Supplies Kit.
  • Lock your home.
  • Use travel routes specified by local authorities—don’t use shortcuts because certain areas may be impassable or dangerous.

If you’re sure you have time:

  • Shut off water, gas and electricity before leaving, if instructed to do so.
  • Post a note telling others when you left and where you are going.
  • Make arrangements for your pets.

Neighbors Helping Neighbors

Working with neighbors can save lives and property. Meet with your neighbors to plan how the neighborhood could work together after a disaster until help arrives. If you’re a member of a neighborhood organization, such as a home association or crime watch group, introduce disaster preparedness as a new activity. Know your neighbors’ special skills (e.g., medical, technical) and consider how you could help neighbors who have special needs, such as disabled persons and seniors. Make plans for child care in case parents can’t get home.

If Disaster Strikes

Remain calm and patient

Put your plan into action.

Check for Injuries

Give first aid and get help for seriously injured people.

Listen to Your Battery-Powered Radio for News and Instructions

Evacuate, if advised to do so. Wear protective clothing and sturdy shoes.

Check for Damage in Your Home

  • Use flashlights—do not light matches or turn on electrical switches if you suspect damage.
  • Check for fires, fire hazards and other household hazards.
  • Sniff for gas leaks, starting at the water heater. If you smell gas or suspect a leak, turn off the main gas valve, open windows, and get everyone outside quickly.
  • Shut off any other damaged utilities.
  • Clean up spilled medicines, bleaches, gasoline and other flammable
Hurricane kit •Flashlights and extra bulbs
• Clock (wind-up or battery-operated)
• Battery-operated radio
• Extra batteries
• Toilet paper
• Matches (Look in camping stores for waterproof matches)
• Scissors
• Plastic garbage bags
• An inexpensive rabbit-ears television antenna to use when cable goes out
• Working fire extinguisher
• Clean change of clothes, rain gear, sturdy swamp boots you would not mind throwing away
• Fully charged battery-operated lanterns. Don’t use candles and kerosene lanterns. They are fire hazards.
• Map of the area
• List of phone numbers
• Copy of insurance policy


Emergency managers seem to have their own language when talking about hurricanes. Use this glossary of terms to better understand the storm language.

ADVISORY — A message from the National Hurricane Center in Miami giving warning information with details on tropical cyclone location, intensity, movement and precautions that should be taken. The advisory will contain a resume of all warnings in effect

EMERGENCY ALERT SYSTEM (EAS) — A system designed to permit government officials to issue up-to-date and continuous emergency information and instructions to the public in case of a threatened or actual emergency. It is replacing the Emergency Broadcast System.

EMERGENCY PUBLIC SHELTER — Generally a public school or other such structure designated by county or city officials as a place of refuge. A volunteer group such as the American Red Cross or Salvation Army usually manages a shelter.

EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER (EOC) — A State, county or city emergency facility that serves as a central location for the coordination and control of all emergency preparedness and response disaster activities.

EYE — The center of a tropical storm or hurricane characterized by a roughly circular area of light winds and rain-free skies and the lowest pressure. An eye will usually develop when the maximum sustained wind speeds exceed 78 mph. It can range in size from as small as 5 miles to up to 60 miles (20-50 km) but the average size is 20 miles. In general, when the eye begins to shrink in size, the storm is intensifying.

EYE WALL — An organized band of convection surrounding the eye, or center, of a tropical cyclone. It contains cumulonimbus clouds (A cloud type that is dense and vertically developed. It is heavy and dense with a flat base and a high, fluffy outline, and can be tall enough to occupy middle as well as low latitudes.), and the severest thunderstorms, heaviest precipitation and strongest winds.

FEEDER BANDS — In weather forecaster terminology its the lines or bands of thunderstorms that spiral into and around the center of a tropical system. Also known as outer convective bands, a typical hurricane may have three or more of these bands. They occur in advance of the main rain shield and are usually 40 to 80 miles apart. In thunderstorm development, they are the lines or bands of low-level clouds that move or feed into the updraft region of a thunderstorm.

FLOOD WARNING — The expected severity of flooding (minor, moderate or major) as well as where and when the flooding will begin.

HURRICANE: — A tropical cyclone in the Northern Hemisphere with sustained winds of at least 74 mph (64 knots) or greater in the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico or the eastern North Pacific Ocean. These winds blow in a large spiral around a relatively calm center of extremely low pressure known as the eye. Around the rim of the eye, winds may gust to more than 200 miles per hour. Hurricanes draw their energy from the warm surface water of the tropics and latent heat of condensation, which explains why hurricanes dissipate rapidly once they move over cold water or large land masses.

HURRICANE ADVISORY — Notice issued by the National Hurricane Center, numbered consecutively for each storm, describing the present and forecasted position and intensity. Advisories are issued at six-hour intervals at midnight, 6 a.m., noon and 6 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time.

HURRICANE EYE LANDFALL — When the eye, or physical center of the hurricane, reaches the coastline from the hurricane’s approach over water.

HURRICANE HUNTERS — The 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron of the U.S. Air Force Reserve, based out of Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Miss. As a part of the 403rd Air Wing, the crew flies Lockheed WC-130 aircraft into tropical storms and hurricanes to gather meteorological data for the National Hurricane Center.

HURRICANE PATH OR TRACK — Line of movement (propagation) of the eye through an area.

HURRICANE SEASON — The portion of the year having a relatively high incidence of hurricanes. The hurricane season in the Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.

HURRICANE WARNING — A warning added to a hurricane advisory that sustained winds of 74 mph (64 knots) or higher associated with a hurricane are expected in a specified coastal area within 24 hours or less. A hurricane warning can remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and exceptionally high waves continue, even though winds may be less than hurricane force. A warning is used to inform the public and marine interests of the storm’s location, intensity and movement. The National Hurricane Center chooses a distance of approximately 300 miles.

HURRICANE WATCH — An announcement added to a hurricane advisory that hurricane conditions pose a possible threat to a specified coastal area within 36 hours. A watch is used to inform the public and marine interests of the storm’s location, intensity and movement.

LANDFALL — The term used to describe where the hurricane eye actually passes over land, usually used to describe the continental States rather than islands in the Caribbean.

NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER (NHC) — A Branch of the Tropical Prediction Center under the National Weather Service, it is responsible for tracking and forecasting tropical cyclones over the North Atlantic, Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and the Eastern Pacific.

NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION (NOAA) — An Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce, it is the parent organization of the National Weather Service. It promotes global environmental stewardship, emphasizing atmospheric and marine resources.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE (NWS) — A primary office of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, it is responsible for all aspects of observing and forecasting atmospheric conditions and their consequences, including severe weather and flood warnings.

NOAA WEATHER RADIO — A 24-hour continuous broadcast of existing and forecasted weather conditions operated and broadcast by the local field offices of the National Weather Service.

NORTH ATLANTIC BASIN (SOMETIMES CALLED THE ATLANTIC BASIN) — The Atlantic Ocean north of the equator, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.

RADAR (RADIO DETECTION AND RANGING) — An electronic instrument using ultra high-frequency radio waves to detect distant objects and measure their range by how they scatter or reflect radio energy. Precipitation and clouds are detected by measuring the strength of the electromagnetic signal reflected back. Doppler radar and NEXRAD are examples

SAFFIR-SIMPSON DAMAGE-POTENTIAL SCALE — A scale, developed in the early 1970s by Herbert Saffir, a consulting engineer, and Robert Simpson, then Director of the National Hurricane Center, to measure the intensity of a hurricane from 1 to 5. The scale categorizes potential damage based on barometric pressure, wind speeds and storm surge.

SHELTER PERIOD — The period in which people are forced to evacuate their homes. This time may vary from several hours to a couple of days depending upon the severity of the hurricane.

STATE OF EMERGENCY — A declaration made by the Chief Elected Official of a state, county or city government which entails a heightened level of activation and mobilization of staff to protect property and lives.

STORM SURGE — An abnormal rise in sea level accompanying a hurricane or other intense storm, and whose height is the difference between the observed level of the sea surface and the level that would have occurred in the absence of the cyclone. Storm surge is usually estimated by subtracting the normal or astronomic high tide from the observed storm tide. Note: waves on top of the storm surge will create an even greater high-water mark.

STORM TIDE — The actual level of seawater resulting from the astronomic tide combined with the storm surge. If the storm comes ashore during astronomical low tide, the surge will be decreased by the amount of the low tide. If the storm makes landfall during astronomical high tide, the surge will be that much higher.

SWATH — The width of the path of the hurricane. Usually this path area is about 125 miles wide with 75 miles to the right of the eye and 50 miles to the left of the eye.

TROPICAL DEPRESSION (TD) — A tropical cyclone in which the maximum sustained surface winds (1 minute average) are 38 miles per hour (33 knots) or less. Characteristically having one or more closed isobars (Lines drawn on a weather map indicating regions of equal pressure. When the lines are close together, this indicates a rapid change in air pressure, accompanied by strong winds.), it may form slowly from a tropical disturbance or an easterly wave, which has continued to organize. At this point, it gets a cyclone number, starting with “TD01″ at the beginning of each storm season.

TROPICAL DISTURBANCE — A discrete system of clouds, showers and thunderstorms (organized convection). Generally are 100 to 300 miles in diameter, originate in the tropics or subtropics, and maintain their identity for 24 hours or more. Approximately 100 of these types of events occur annually during hurricane season.

TROPICAL STORM (TS) — A tropical cyclone in which the maximum sustained surface wind speed (1 minute average) is within the range of 39 to 73 mph (34 to 63 knots). At this point, the system is given a name to identify and track it. In the Atlantic/Caribbean/Gulf of Mexico basin, the names start with “A” each season.

TROPICAL STORM WATCH — An announcement issued by the National Hurricane Center for specific areas that a tropical storm or a forecast of tropical storm conditions poses a possible threat to coastal areas generally within 36 hours. A tropical storm watch normally should not be issued if the system is forecast to attain hurricane strength.

TROPICAL STORM WARNING — A warning issued by the National Hurricane Center for tropical storm conditions including possible sustained winds within the range 39 to 73 mph (34 to 63 knots) which are expected in a specified coastal area within 24 hours or less.

SAFETY TIPS.

Portable Generator Safety

Portable generators are useful when temporary or remote electric power is needed, but they can be hazardous. The primary hazards to avoid when using them are carbon monoxide poisoning, electric shock or electrocution, and fire.

The United States Fire Administration (USFA) would like you to know that there are simple steps you can take to prevent the loss of life and property resulting from improper use of portable generators.

To Avoid Carbon Monoxide Hazards:

  • Always use generators outdoors, away from doors, windows and vents.
  • NEVER use generators in homes, garages, basements, crawl spaces, or other enclosed or partially enclosed areas, even with ventilation.
  • Follow manufacturer’s instructions.
  • Install battery-operated or plug-in (with battery backup) carbon monoxide (CO) alarms in your home, following manufacturer’s instructions.
  • Test CO alarms often and replace batteries when needed.

To Avoid Electrical Hazards:

  • Keep the generator dry. Operate on a dry surface under an open, canopy- like structure.
  • Dry your hands before touching the generator.
  • Plug appliances directly into generator or use a heavy-duty outdoor- rated extension cord. Make sure en tire extension cord is free of cuts or tears and the plug has all 3 prongs, especially a grounding pin.
  • NEVER plug the generator into a wall outlet. This practice, known as backfeeding, can cause an electrocution risk to utility workers and others served by the same utility transformer.
  • If necessary to connect generator to house wiring to power appliances, have a qualified electrician install appropriate equipment. Or, your utility company may be able to install an appropriate transfer switch

To Avoid Fire Hazards:

  • Before refueling the generator, turn it off and let it cool. Fuel spilled on hot engine parts could ignite.
  • Always store fuel outside of living areas in properly labeled, non-glass containers.
  • Store fuel away from any fuel-burning appliance.

Downed Power lines


If power lines are lying on the ground or dangling near the ground, do not touch the lines. Notify your utility company as soon as possible that the lines have been damaged, or that the power lines are down.

Do not attempt to move or repair the power lines.
Do not drive through standing water if downed power lines are in the water. If a power line falls across your car while you are driving, continue to drive away from the line. If the engine stalls, do not turn off the ignition. Stay in your car and wait for emergency personnel. Do not allow anyone other than emergency personnel to approach your vehicle. Animals
Wild or stray domestic animals can pose a danger during or after the passage of a hurricane. Remember, most animals are disoriented and displaced, too. Do not corner an animal. If an animal must be removed, contact your local animal control authorities.

If you are bitten by any animal, seek immediate medical attention. If you are bitten by a snake, first try to accurately identify the type of snake so that, if poisonous, the correct anti-venom can be administered. Do not cut the wound or attempt to suck the venom out.
Certain animals may carry rabies. Although the virus is rare, care should be taken to avoid contact with stray animals and rodents. Health departments can provide information on the types of animals that carry rabies in your area. Rats may also be a problem during and after a hurricane. Take care to secure all food supplies, and remove any animal carcasses in the vicinity by contacting your local animal control authorities. Drowning

Although hurricane winds can cause an enormous amount of damage, wind is not the biggest killer in such a storm. Nine of every ten hurricane fatalities are drowning associated with swiftly moving waters. People who enter moving water with their cars, or who get on boats on lakes or bays when a hurricane strikes the area are at grave risk of drowning, regardless of their ability to swim. Even very shallow water that is moving swiftly can be deadly. Cars or other vehicles do not provide adequate protection. Cars can be swept away or may break down in moving water. Be alert and follow hazard warnings on roadways or those broadcasts by the media. Police and public works departments should be contacted for up-to-date information regarding safe roadways.

Chemical Hazards

Be aware of potential chemical hazards you may encounter when returning to your home, especially if the hurricane is accompanied by flooding. Floodwaters and high winds may have moved or buried hazardous chemical containers of solvents or other industrial chemicals. Contact your local fire department about inspecting and removing hazardous chemical containers. Avoid inhaling chemical fumes.

If any propane tanks (whether 20-lb. tanks from a gas grill or household propane tanks) are discovered, do not attempt to move them yourself. These represent a very real danger of fire or explosion, and if any are found, the fire department, police, or your State Fire Marshal’s office should be contacted immediately.
Car batteries, while flooded, may still contain an electrical charge and should be removed with extreme caution by using insulated gloves. Avoid coming in contact with any acid that may have spilled from a damaged car battery.

Different Types of Disasters and Hazards

Apply for F.E.M.A Assistance

Apply online through the new Disaster Assistance site for consolidated disaster information

When You Need to Evacuate Your Home, decide on a specific place to go.

  • The Protected House of a friend outside of the evacuation zone, a secure motel or hotel within the county or as a last resort a public shelter.
  • Do Not Stay in Any Structure without good shutters or properly designed and installed hurricane protection.
  • Do Not Count on Driving North on the Turnpike or I-95. They will be jammed with slow moving traffic.
  • Do Not Count on Going to the airport and flying out. If the airport has not already closed, there is a high likelihood that any remaining flights will be full or cancelled.
  • Plan on Staying in South Florida.

AMERICAN RED CROSS

Regional Hurricane Shelters

Lyons Creek Middle School

4333 Sol Press Boulevard
Coconut Creek, FL 33073

Coral Glades High School

2700 Sportsplex Drive
Coral Springs, FL 33065

Monarch High School

5050 Wiles Road
Coconut Creek, FL 33073

Pompano Beach Institute of International Studies High School

1400 N.E. 6th Street
Pompano Beach, FL 33060

Park Lakes Elementary School

3925 N. State Road 7
Lauderdale Lakes, FL 33319

Rock Island Elementary/Arthur Ashe Middle School

1701 N.W. 23rd Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311

Plantation Elementary School

651 N.W. 42nd Avenue
Plantation, FL 33317

Fox Trail Elementary School

1250 S. Nob Hill Road
Davie, FL 33324

Falcon Cove Middle School

4251 Bonaventure Boulevard
Weston, FL 33332

Silver Trail Middle School

18300 Sheridan Street
Pembroke Pines, FL 33331

New Renaissance Middle School

10701 Miramar Boulevard
Miramar, FL 33025

Watkins Elementary School

3520 S.W. 52nd Avenue
Pembroke Park, FL 33023

Broward County
Hurricane Evacuation Map & Red Cross Shelters [pdf - 76 kb]

Palm Beach County Shelters [pdf - 496 kb]

Pets and Disaster
Red Cross disaster shelters cannot accept pets because of states’ health and safety regulations and other considerations. Service animals who assist people with disabilities are the only animals allowed in Red Cross shelters. It may be difficult, if not impossible, to find shelter for your animals in the midst of a disaster, so plan ahead. DO NOT WAIT UNTIL DISASTER STRIKES TO DO YOUR RESEARCH.

If you evacuate your home, DO NOT LEAVE YOUR PETS BEHIND! Pets most likely cannot survive on their own; and if by some remote chance they do, you may not be able to find them when you return.

* The best option is to get a friend or relative outside the evacuation area to take your pets, and preferably you, too. If that’s not possible, try locating a pet friendly motel or one that waives animal prohibitions during evacuations.
* Prepare a list of boarding facilities and veterinarians who could shelter animals in an emergency; include 24-hour phone numbers.
* You may not be home when the evacuation order comes; find out if a trusted neighbor would be willing to take your pets and meet you at a prearranged location.

WHAT IS PET FRIENDLY EVACUATION SHELTERING?
Pet-friendly evacuation sheltering can be planned and executed in a multitude of ways. In some communities, the human evacuation shelter is within the same room, facility, or campus as accommodations for pets. This allows the animals’ owners to have a large role in caring for the pet. In other communities, the human shelter and pet shelter may be in separate locations. In this case, evacuees are told where to bring their pets, while they will be staying at a shelter for people.

If you will need to go to a pet friendly shelter during an evacuation, make sure you have the following items ready to go for your pet: a leash and collar, a crate, a two-week supply of food and water, your pets’ vaccination records, medications, and written instructions for feeding and administering medication. If your favorite four-legged friend is feline, be sure you bring kitty-litter and an appropriate container, too.

The Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards Act (PETS Act) of 2006 requires local and state emergency preparedness authorities to include in their evacuation plans how they will accommodate household pets and service animals in the event of a major disaster. Local and state authorities must submit these plans in order to qualify for grants from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

Currently, not all communities offer pet friendly emergency/evacuation shelters.

TO FIND OUT IF THERE IS A PET FRIENDLY SHELTER IN YOUR AREA, CALL YOUR COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OFFICE OR LOCAL ANIMAL SHELTER

Hurricane Bearing Down On South Florida

A SEVERE STORM WILL DISRUPT YOUR DAILY ROUTINE: BE PATIENT!

  • Patience is your greatest attribute in this situation.
  • Use Extreme Caution. There may be dangerous situations all around you!
  • If Your House is Damaged, move carefully to get out.
  • Avoid Driving! Stay Put! Emergency Vehicles are trying to respond, and debris and road blockage is making their job very difficult and dangerous. If you get into trouble on the roadway, then you make the situation all the more difficult and dangerous.
  • When You Must Drive, Remember you must stop at intersections with stop lights out and treat them as a 4-way stop! Use extreme caution!
  • Do Not Drink the Tap Water until officials have announced it’s safe.
  • Listen to Local Radio News Reports for updates on the situation in your area
RESTORING ELECTRICAL SERVICE

Again, Patience is your greatest attribute here. Repair crews work to restore power to the facilities that serve the greatest number of affected customers first. Crews focus on facilities that provide essential services to your community, such as hospitals, police, fire stations and television or radio stations. Once major repairs have been made, work begins to restore smaller groups and individual customers. Priorities are not established by where your home is located geographically, your payment history or how often you call.

GENERATORS

A portable generator can help restore your life to normal during emergencies, but its safe use requires care and planning. The following tips—and a thorough reading of the generator’s instructions—can help avoid dangerous situations.

  • Always Run Portable Generators Outside the House. Never run generators inside your home, or in a garage, and keep them away from open windows—including your neighbors—so that deadly exhaust from your generator does not enter your home!
  • Never Attempt to Connect a Generator Directly to Your Home’s Wiring. Power from the generator will “back feed” into utility lines with the potential to severely injure you, a neighbor or a utility crew working to restore service. Instead, plug appliances directly into the generator’s outlet.
  • Shock at Outlet
  • Use a Heavy-Duty Extension Cord rated for outdoor use to place the generator safely outdoors.
  • Follow the Manufacturer’s Recommendations for grounding the generator.
  • Be Considerate of Your Neighbors! Generators generate noise in addition to electricity. Before you decide to run your generator throughout the night, remember your neighbors need their sleep too!

Garbage Can and Bags

RESUMPTION OF SOLID WASTE SERVICES
  • Don’t Place Any Debris near any powerline equipment, poles, transformers, downed electrical wiring, water meters or storm drains.

Secret Agent With Spy Camera

FILING A CLAIM
  • Notify Your Agent as soon as possible. Give an address and a phone number where you can be reached if you have vacated your home.
  • Present Your Photos and Inventory to help your adjuster assess the damage.
  • Be Patient. Cases are expedited based on severity or hardship.

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