Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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Kuja
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Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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Hundreds rescued from floodwaters in Fla., Ala.

PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - People were plucked off rooftops or climbed into their attics to get away from fast-rising waters when nearly 2 feet of rain fell on the Florida Panhandle and Alabama coast, the latest bout of violent weather that began with tornadoes in the Midwest.

In the Panhandle, roads were chewed up into pieces or wiped out entirely. Cars were submerged and neighborhoods were inundated, making rescues difficult for hundreds of people who called for help when they were caught off guard by the torrential rains in the span of about 24 hours.

In the aftermath, people cruised around on paddleboards. Boats and Humvees zigzagged through the flooded streets to make rescues. About 30,000 people were without power, and one woman died when she drove her car into high water, officials said.

Kyle Schmitz was at home with his 18-month-old son Oliver Tuesday night when heavy rain fell during a 45-minute span in Pensacola. He gathered up his son, his computer and important papers and decided to leave when the waters quickly started to rise.

"I opened the garage and the water immediately flowed in like a wave," he said. "The water was coming up to just below the hood of my truck and I just gassed it."

Schmitz and his son made it out safely. He returned Wednesday to assess the damage at his rented home in the East Hill neighborhood. The water was up to his shins and he feared he would never again live in the home.

Elsewhere, water lingered above mailboxes. Florida Gov. Rick Scott said officials received about 300 calls for rescues and had completed about 210 of those by midmorning. Some people abandoned flooded cars and walked to find help.

"It's gotten to the point where we can't send EMS and fire rescue crews out on some 911 calls because they can't get there," Escambia County spokesman Bill Pearson said. "We've had people whose homes are flooding and they've had to climb up to the attic."

About 22 inches of rain fell in Pensacola - one-third of what falls in an entire year. National Weather Service officials were still sorting out official numbers because equipment that serves Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola lost power during the storm.

Meteorologist Jeffrey Medlin said what they had recorded officially - more than 11 inches - would be the fourth highest total for a calendar day since 1879.

Medlin said flash flood warnings were issued as early as Friday. Still, many people were caught unaware.

Elizabeth Peaden was driving home from her weekly Bunco game Tuesday night when she drove her van through a flooded intersection and got stuck.

"I was scared out of my wits. Water started coming in and I wasn't sure what to do," she said.

Peaden made her way to a nearby American Legion post where she and other stranded travelers spent the night sleeping on tables.

The widespread flooding was the latest wallop from a violent storm system that began in Arkansas and Oklahoma and worked its way South, killing 37 people along the way, including the 67-year-old driver in Pensacola.

Ron Hruska's neighborhood was flooded, but his home was safely on higher ground. Hruska said there were flash flooding warnings on television throughout Tuesday night but that the water came up faster than expected.

"I've never seen it this bad in 12 years here," he said. "It wasn't even this bad after hurricanes."

In Gulf Shores, Ala., where nearly 21 inches of rain fell in a day's time, the scene resembled the aftermath of a hurricane. The intracoastal waterway rose, reaching the canal road linking the town with neighboring Orange Beach.

There, at Sportsman Marina, employee J.J. Andrews couldn't believe what she saw out the window.

"We've got water up in our parking lots," she said. "Our docks are under water. It's worse than during Hurricane Ivan, is what they're saying. It's crazy."

The 2004 hurricane dumped 3 to 7 inches of rain along the Florida Panhandle.

In Baldwin County, Ala., crews started rescues before midnight Tuesday, said Mitchell Sims, emergency management director.

"As soon as we get a water rescue team in here, they're sent back out," he said. "We're rescuing people from cars, from rooftops, from all over the place.

"I think we're going to be dealing with this for days. I don't know where the water's going to go. Everything is saturated."

But there were reports of water already receding in Pensacola.

Over the past four days, storms slammed Arkansas' northern Little Rock suburbs and the Mississippi cities of Louisville and Tupelo. Arkansas had 15 deaths after a tornado blasted through Sunday, and Mississippi had 12 deaths from Monday's storms.

Authorities in Louisville searched until dark Tuesday for a missing 8-year-old boy. A large tornado killed his parents and destroyed their home. Though searchers didn't rule out finding the boy alive, officials described it as a recovery process.

On Wednesday, Louisville officials said they were shifting priorities from response to cleanup. They expected volunteers to stream into the town to lend a hand.

"Today is the day we start putting Louisville back together," said Buddy King, county emergency management director.
There are pics at the source. Roads got torn up and houses wrecked.
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Broomstick
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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I've been feeling slightly guilty for feeling so relieved that my area has been north of all the bad weather - except I'm really happy we're not getting severe weather up here.

I remember what it was like in 2008 we my town was hit by a tornado and we had extensive flooding the area. This sounds very, very much worse and if I recall the bad weather isn't over yet, there's a couple more days of it on the way.
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.

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Wicked Pilot
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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I wanted to fly back home to Pensacola today but was told by friends in the area not to even try, the place is shut down and seriously fucked up in some places. I'm being told that the roof of my apartment leaked water all over my lving room, but luckily none of my property was damaged. More importantly everyone I know down there is accounted for.

The highway in the photos, the one that collapsed with the two vehicles at the bottom, I used to drive that rather often. It was a beautiful drive. Was at least.
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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Wicked Pilot wrote:I wanted to fly back home to Pensacola today but was told by friends in the area not to even try, the place is shut down and seriously fucked up in some places. I'm being told that the roof of my apartment leaked water all over my lving room, but luckily none of my property was damaged. More importantly everyone I know down there is accounted for.

The highway in the photos, the one that collapsed with the two vehicles at the bottom, I used to drive that rather often. It was a beautiful drive. Was at least.
I spent the first six years of my life in Pensacola plus A school. Man my old home town is on a nice one a decade get wreaked plan it seems.

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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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Wicked Pilot wrote:I wanted to fly back home to Pensacola today but was told by friends in the area not to even try, the place is shut down and seriously fucked up in some places. I'm being told that the roof of my apartment leaked water all over my lving room, but luckily none of my property was damaged. More importantly everyone I know down there is accounted for.
If those friends can throw some cheap plastic dropcloths over what's left of what's in your old apartment it will help prevent further damage to the apartment contents. If you're spending a lot of time away from a home base (and, of course you do, you're a pilot) covering things in waterproof dropcloths keeps off the dust and guards against leaking roofs you can't do a damn thing about because you're a bajillion miles away. Spread it over electronics, beds, couches, bookcases, etc. when you plan an extended absence, roll it up and store it when you get back.

When part of the roof had a tree through it in 2008, and during another episode of weather damage on the roof, we used this to protect household contents until solid repairs could be made. Saved my bookcases, it did. It's inexpensive, you can cut it down to size if you need to, and it gets the job done.

We still use it to cover things like printers when we're not using them. Keeps the dust out, as well as down feathers and stray parrots who are waaaaay too curious about stuff.
A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. Leonard Nimoy.

Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.

If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy

Sam Vimes Theory of Economic Injustice
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Wicked Pilot
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by Wicked Pilot »

Apparently water spilled through the ceiling fan and onto the coffee table. It wasn't anything that couldn't be easily wiped up. I have a quick trip down this weekend to start packing stuff up, then in two weeks I go back, load all my stuff on a truck and bring it up to Chicago. Thus officially ending my almost five year tenure in the panhandle.
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by Sea Skimmer »

Five inches of rain where I work near Phily. The building doesn't like over about an inch and a half of rain rapidly. Fun shitty day that caused.
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Elheru Aran
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by Elheru Aran »

I got the tail end of this up here in Atlanta. Nothing too impressive, to be quite honest. Heavy wind was the worst of it, and some guy got a tree dropped on him. That was about it.

It was worse over in Arkansas and Alabama, though. Tornadoes and such.
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

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Sea Skimmer wrote:Five inches of rain where I work near Phily. The building doesn't like over about an inch and a half of rain rapidly. Fun shitty day that caused.
It was record rainfall in and around the city. The small town on the other side of the Schuylkill from where I live had over 6.5 inches. I saw close to that on my rain gauge but didn't believe it until I saw the official numbers on Thursday.
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by cosmicalstorm »

Rereading A Bridge Of Years while listening to these yearly storm news from America is haunting. Here comes The Storm Zone
http://www.amazon.com/Bridge-Years-Robe ... B009WIX1FM
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by Sea Skimmer »

FSTargetDrone wrote:
It was record rainfall in and around the city. The small town on the other side of the Schuylkill from where I live had over 6.5 inches. I saw close to that on my rain gauge but didn't believe it until I saw the official numbers on Thursday.
Record for the date only though, and considering the records don't go back very far I wouldn't read very far into that. IIRC the absolute record for Phily airport is over 8 inches in one day, most of it in a couple hours during one of those super intensive storms we had last summer.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
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Re: Mother Nature suckerpunches the south

Post by FSTargetDrone »

Sea Skimmer wrote:Record for the date only though, and considering the records don't go back very far I wouldn't read very far into that. IIRC the absolute record for Phily airport is over 8 inches in one day, most of it in a couple hours during one of those super intensive storms we had last summer.
Yeah, that's true. That one last summer, that was a monster. Last year I was in a place built on a slab but had no issues with water encroaching inside, but this time around, in this place with a basement, water in the basement! And in the finished side, of course, despite 2 sump pumps that were busy all afternoon and night. If we had lost power, it would have been worse.
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