Hurricane Ike Already Overwhelming Galveston Island–UPDATING UNTIL I START LIVE BLOGGING TONIGHT 6 CST

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Like I told you peeps before, I’m north of Houston. So far, sunshine and breeziness. Galveston succumbs to the surging gulf as I write this. (Here’s a link for the webcams.) Here is what an Exxon-Mobile insider wrote me (they have their own forecasting methods and they have to be accurate because of their rigs):

Now, the forecasters say to expect 25+ mph sustained winds beginning today @ 1403 CDT, and lasting for 27 hours, 8 minutes.

Of that time, we can expect 39+ mph sustained winds beginning at 1909 CDT, and lasting 17 hours, 32 minutes.

Also, of that time, we can expect 58+ mph sustained winds beginning late tonight @ 2308 CDT, and lasting for 9 hours, 26 minutes

This category is new — 74+ mph sustained winds beginning tomorrow early @ 0127 CDT, and lasting for 2 hours, 43 minutes

The expected highest sustained winds are forecasted to be about 81 mph., with gusts up to 118 mph.

Lastly, the eye of the storm is expected to pass within 20 miles of our zip code tomorrow morning @ 0600 CDT

Please note: This forecast is specifically for the zip code 77381. That is in The Woodlands, Texas. And that is as of an hour ago. So, it is constantly adjusting. As I learn more, I will share it.

The Woodlands and areas north of Houston will have to deal with wind damage and spin-off tornadoes.

Here is my concerns going forward:

1. Too many people. I am alarmed that more of Houston hasn’t evacuated and it’s not because of the storm itself, which will be bad enough. It’s because of the aftermath. Without power, people will be hot. Without power, people can’t cook. Without water, stores can’t be open. People will be stuck in their homes while crews try to clean up the mess.

2. Complacency. I noted this before. People just aren’t taking this storm seriously and I don’t get it. It’s massive. It is directly hitting the fourth largest city in the United States. New Orleans is the fraction of Houston’s size. So, the people left have been kinda lax. I hope they are well-provisioned. I’m not sure they’ve taken enough care.

3. Trauma fatigue. Houston has been in the helping position for a long time. Now, they’re going to need help. People are weary. I’ve said this before. But a lot of energy has been expended here over the past couple of years helping others in their time of need. People are worn out. This is not good. I include myself in this. A person cannot stay hyper alert forever. So, alarmingly, I’m still seeing Galveston residents finally waking up and leaving. Finally.

Far too many people are staying in low lying areas of Houston. What in the hell? People need to get out. They’re not doing it. They don’t want to drive. They don’t want to go anywhere. They’re tired. Well, I fear too many people are going to be dead tired before this is all over.

I don’t know if it’s the newsmedia or the city leadership or what, but there doesn’t seem to be enough urgency about this storm. I don’t get it. The media seems to be smitten with New Orleans and every other American city can just suffer, I guess. What the hell?

New Orleans has the historic French Quarter. That’s all well and good. Houston is full of people. Lots of them; nearly six million of them. In addition, Houston refines America’s oil. You know those distasteful things called refineries that Californians don’t want? Well, they get their gas from Texas. Everyone should be concerned about the safety of oil rigs and refineries. If they haven’t been, they will be soon.

Brendan Loy has a lot more. As the storm comes up, I’ll be live blogging it. Most of the night. Right now, I think I’m going to take nap, so I can stay up late. The wind is starting to blow and the sky is cloudy. Nothing big yet. The dogs are still outside and not freaking out. They usually go crazy when bad weather comes.

You can follow me at Twitter, too. I’ll update there. That’s easier. Short and sweet tweets! As long as I have power…….friends north of here have a generator. We might be visiting them if the power goes out!

UPDATED: My friend John Little is live blogging the hurricane from downtown Houston. You can also follow his tweets on Twitter here. He is about 20 miles closer to the coast than I am here.

More from Houblog who is in Houston and is boarded up:

No traffic out there. Great time to evacuate, people.

As one reporter pointed out last night, the storm surge is going to arrive tonight in the dark, after power has failed. And as I put it, your current opinion of the foolishness of evacuating is going to be pretty damned cold comfort, when you’re standing in chest deep water, trying to shove granny on the roof in 95mph winds (and waves). Hint: it ain’t happening. You’re toast.

Personally, I’d like to urge the folks in Zones Coastal and A who chose to remain behind to follow these instructions:

Instead of relying o n a “Good Samaritan” policy – the fantasy in New Orleans that everyone would take care of the neighbors – the Virginia rescue workers go door to door. If people resist the plea to leave, Mr. Judkins told The Daily Press in Newport News, rescue workers give them Magic Markers and ask them to write their Social Security numbers o n their body parts so they can be identified.

“It’s cold, but it’s effective,” Mr. Judkins explained.

I hear hammers. Someone else is boarding up. Not like I can look out my window to see who…

EVACUATE NOW! If you are in low lying areas of Houston, if you live in rickety homes anywhere, get out, now. The roads are clear sailing to anywhere you want to go and you can still beat the storm. There is no reason to go down with your house.

Ok, enough preaching. Time for sleeping. I’ll be back in a bit to update. Winds have died down again. It comes in gusts.

Morons.

UPDATE:

Here’s the advisory for The Woodlands, Texas again:
Hurricane Ike Wind Profile for 77382
Issued: 1100 CDT 12 Sep, 2008
Wind profile graph
Expected First Onset and Duration of Sustained Winds
Wind Start Date / Time Duration End Date / Time
25+ mph 12/1126 CDT 30 hours, 15 minutes 13/1741 CDT
39+ mph 12/2029 CDT 17 hours, 32 minutes 13/1401 CDT
58+ mph 13/0058 CDT 8 hours, 36 minutes 13/0935 CDT
74+ mph 13/0401 CDT 0 hours, 54 minutes 13/0456 CDT
Point of Closest Approach of Center:
13/0800 CDT — 4 miles at Azimuth 262.0 degrees (SW)

The eye of the storm will pass 4 MILES from zip code 77382. I’m in zip code 77381 and the eye is predicted to pass directly over here.

There will be sustained winds of 74 mph for an hour tomorrow morning around 5 a.m. At this point, I’m just hoping the kids sleep through it.

My biggest concerns up here are two-fold: flying debris and branches breaking windows due to wind and no power. There’s a good chance we’ll be without power for a couple days. It is 95 degrees here. After the storm and no power, we’ll be in the car and visiting our friends (if they don’t flood) who have a generator. We’re not fair-weather friends. We’re bad weather friends!

Also, for the tools still holding out on Galveston. You do realize that when someone has to rescue your sorry ass you’re putting someone’s son, brother, friend, at risk, right? I just heard on Fox a Galveston commissioner staying on the island with her family. WTH? Downed power, fires, electrocution, there are many ways to die during this thing and drowning is not the least of them.



Ike Cometh–Houston, Texas Beware

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Woodlands, Texas residents are shopping, filling their cars, rumo has it that the schools (CISD Closed 9/12) will be closed [here's the list of closings] tomorrow and traffic is at a stand-still on 242 and I-45. Already. HEB Central Market parked a generator as of 8:30 this morning out back. Lines snake out of every gas station that I passed. People sport the business-like intensity that I’ve come to recognize after a couple storms.

Ike looks like he might be coming “down the pipe”. What that means is that Galveston and then Houston could be in the direct path of a Cat 4 hurricane (if it bumps slightly up).

People are storm weary here and so preparations have been last minute. I think many people, if they were like me, hoped that if they wanted it bad enough, Ike would stay south. Well, that’s not happening. Now the business of putting away stuff that can go airborne, filling propane tanks, making sure there’s enough water, falls to today and everyone is doing the same thing at the same time.

What will happen:

There will be lots of rain. Downtown will flood. Tropical storm Allison came over the area, parked and was exceedingly destructive. Low-lying areas around will flood again.

Trees will go down. You can stay in town, but you might be stuck. This happened to friends. Two huge trees got uprooted during Hurricane Rita and while they had food, gas and provisions, they couldn’t go anywhere because huge trees blocked the streets. Wind will be the major problem where I live That and any tornadoes that spin off. Below is the most concerning graphic for those of us off the coastal areas: wind. We will get over 100 mph winds, if forecasts are right. If you haven’t been in winds that strong, let me assure you, it’s scary shit. Winds at 80 mph are no picnic, either.

Power will go out. Likely, there will be rolling blackouts. The places hardest hit won’t have electricity at all. Some for weeks. I cannot adequately convey how bad that sucks when the temperature is 95 degrees. I just want to note here that people in parts of Baton Rouge STILL do not have electricity after the hurricane a week and a half ago. Misery and stink set in quickly.

People will run out of perishables. I know. You think, I need lots of canned goods and you do. But with rolling blackouts, your fridge’s contents won’t go all bad (have water bottles frozen–you’ll have water and it will keep the fridge cold) and two days into everything, you’re looking at your kids and thinking. Shizen! I want to make them something hot. Like I said, too, don’t assume you won’t have someone who needs your help. You’ll go through food quicker.

After the storm, it will be eerie. No noise. No cars. No people. You’ll be aware, suddenly, of how many people left. Likely, way more people than you thought. So, what occurs to you is, Crap! It’s just me and the criminals. Houston police did a great job during the last storm by all accounts. There was no looting or nefarious behavior. So, that’s good, but Rita was not a direct hit, either. Ike is coming more directly at us and Houston is on the “bad” side of the storm, as of now.

Anyway, it has already begun. I’ll keep you updated. Galveston Island, Brazoria County, and parts of Harris County along the coast are evacuating right now.

Also, Brendan Loy says this:

Regardless of our slight disagreement on that issue, Sullivan makes a couple of other really good points. For one, he writes, “I do think [the double eyewall weirdness] may induce exceptional tornado risk when [Ike] moves inland and begins to disintegrate.” In comments here, he emphasizes this point again: “I think it is time to start talking about tornadoes. That odd core structure could be a killer, at a considerable distance inland.”

Also:

The effects of Ike may not be that concentrated, but they will be very widespread. With the prolonged run of onshore winds on northeast Texas coast, several tidal cycles may back up into the marshlands, just as floodwaters from inland rains try to head seaward. This could result in a prolonged and dramatic immersion of low-lying areas, compounded by wind-driven waves.

Sticking with the storm surge theme, “Ubu Roi” at Houblog makes another good point: “That wide wind field may be keeping the current velocity low, but it also is allowing Ike to build up one hell of a dome of water to ride atop.” Indeed.

In other words, even if Sullivan is right that Ike will never escape its current Category 2 limbo, this hurricane is still going to be a pretty big deal. (And if it does finally “tighten” into a Cat. 3/4, it’ll be an even bigger deal, obviously. In Ubu’s words: “If it tightens up, and the wind speeds up in the next 24-36 hours, it would be even worse than if it were tight now.”)

Here’s what makes me nervous: there has been an odd reticence (myself included) to get hyped up about this storm. There have been so many that have been screeched about in breathless detail that it is easy to get complacent. I think Houstonians may be being complacent about this storm. And there are a lot of Houstonians. Five million people stuck is a hell of a lot of people.

UPDATE:

More from Brendan–

In other words, the best case scenario is that Ike continues to confound expectations, remains a surface-level Category 1 hurricane (which it effectively is right now), and hits Texas with a storm surge of the sort that might ordinarily be generated by a Cat 4-5. Or, to be more precise, without the narrow peak a Cat 4-5 would generate just east of its eye, but with an even broader swath of serious flooding. The worst case scenario is that Ike confounds expectations by tying together its upper and lower circulation, its eyewall gets replaced, and it suddenly strengthens into a truly major hurricane – bringing incredibly destructive winds on top of the storm surge.

Listening to the emergency responders in the Houston metro area, I’m struck that they’re largely focused on the potential for the worst-case scenario. That is, they seem to be worried about shifts in the track and the strength of the winds. It’s now virtually certain that Galveston island will be flooded from the bay-side; and it’s not outside the realm of possibility that the surge will exceed the height of the floodwall, too. You’d think that, after Katrina, they might have figured out that the intensity at landfall matters a whole heck of a lot less than the width of the field and the resultant surge. Perhaps Ike will make them pay attention to the IKE.

I’m still concerned. There aren’t enough people leaving from Houston. During Rita, which came on the heels of Katrina, people were gone by this time. Now, the roads aren’t even that busy. What the heck? It seems like some were caught unaware, or just don’t care.



I Do NOT Like Hurricane Ike–UPDATED

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Here’s the thing: paying attention to the weather is one of my least favorite things to do. So, I don’t do it. Plenty of things to worry about. Rain clouds isn’t one of them. But at the grocery store today, two things got my attention. 1) Almost all the water was sold out. 2) Sarah Palin was on the cover of every tabloid and they all did their damndest to make her look ugly. The water thing got me thinking I should check out the progress of that storm that was supposed to demolish Cuba and fall apart over its mountains. Looks like the hurricane did the former but not the latter.

What’s ugly is the Ike storm track.

As an aside, the picture looks like a human embryo. Look closely. You’ll see. Weird.

Anyway, here’s the track:

Here’s the good news:

Since the last hurricane, Rita, and with the mess that was Katrina, evacuation planning has improved in Houston. So there’s that. We’re far enough inland though, that we probably wouldn’t evacuate. Food, gas, guns. The necessities. I even bought a couple bowie knives, loads of duct tape, a chain saw, water purification tablets, a hand-cranked radio and some other survival stuff last time around. Certain people I won’t mention laughed, but I think it’s just good sense to have those kind of things around just in case.

Even during Rita, which was by no means a terrible storm in this area, electricity was spotty for a week with rolling blackouts here. And we had friends who were without power for nearly a month. In this heat, I can tell you things start to stink pretty damn quickly. And I mean the mold, not the body odor.

Brendan Loy, is not optimistic. I trust Brendan on this. Not only is he a Weather Nerd, he also seems to be rather intuitive about these storms and this is what he’s saying:

This new sense of worry is fueled partly by the track. As I mentioned earlier, the trend toward a landfall in more sparsely populated south Texas or northern Mexico has halted, and now the computer model tracks are inching north — and getting uncomfortably close to the heavily populated, highly vulnerable Houston/Galveston region. In Eric Berger’s words, “if the models were to shift just 50 or so miles up the coast, a landfall at Freeport or just to the northeast would bring the strongest winds to Houston.”

So, back to the store to buy more water. Fuel the vehicles. Blah. Blah. Lots could happen in the next three days, but if I lived on the coast, this wouldn’t be making me happy. It’s not making me happy being inland. And as I recall, Rita seemed to be causing more local consternation but this storm has the potential to be more devastating.

Are Texans dealing with storm fatigue? Maybe.

More at NOAA.

UPDATED:

Beldar, also a Houstonian (who knew?), will be doing this:

I don’t. That doesn’t make me, or those like me, immune from nasty consequences like wind damage, localized flooding, and power outages. But I’m unlikely to be evacuating inland on this one. And as long as I have power and internet access, I’ll probably still be playing whack-a-mole with smears against Sarah Palin.

Me too! What an entertaining way to go through the storm.



A Note On Gustav

Saturday, August 30th, 2008


I live north of Houston, but the pre-hurricane masses were quietly filling up the grocery stores today, as was I. Basically, we’re doing the same thing: filling up the cars, buying extra water. And, one thing I learned from the last two storms: buy more perishables. Yes, you read that right. When the stores were closed for four or five days, I can’t remember now, we were running out of milk and eggs. Partly, it was because we were hosting friends who lived in a mobile home and had to feed them too. It was a surprise, but one we should have planned better for. In any case, it was distressing seeing me go to canned food so quickly. I worried about electricity (and we lost that too). I should have worried about bread and eggs and milk.

Brendan Loy is covering the storm. It will be a doozy. Here’s the latest.

We are in the cone of uncertainty, here. But it is unlikely we’ll get hit. More likely, we’ll have people leaving the New Orleans area looking for some place to stay. Preparations here are already under way, but people are tired–not tired of helping people. Just tired. On the upside, there are a lot of NO transplants now. Hopefully, many people from the area will have someone to go to now and not need the government.

Inevitably, questions will be asked about the folly of living in New Orleans in particular and on the gulf generally. I think living there is fine, but people shouldn’t expect to be insured there–well, or they should expect crazy premiums. And don’t expect the government to bail you out. Ditto, those perched on mountains known for mud slides.

We need to pray for these areas and the people affected. It has been a long hard slog these last three years for those who have endured it. It is absolutely disheartening seeing the storms coming. And another one right behind Gustav too. Here comes Hanna. Ugh.



Texas Grand Jury Indicts Three From Polygamist Group

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints case has been a mess from the beginning. And yes, the government raiding on flimsy evidence was troubling. With that being said, something rotten is going on with this polygamist group. The case is ongoing:

The grand jury returned the indictments after meeting for more than seven hours and hearing from at least eight witnesses, including seven young sect women and Willie Jessop, a spokesman for the group.

Standing outside the courthouse after appearing before the grand jury, Jessop called the testimony “a very painful process.” He said the group would mount a vigorous defense for all those charged.

A source close to the group said prosecutors were getting no help from any of the members called as witnesses.

To every question asked, the source said, “everybody is taking the Fifth.”

That legal strategy — refusing to answer questions so as to not incriminate oneself — was also being used by girls, the possible victims, who testified today and at previous two proceedings, the source said.

The tactic was infuriating prosecutors, stated the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because grand jury proceedings are supposed to be secret.

The charges handed down today may not be the last against members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Documents seized during a raid on the group’s Yearning for Zion Ranch last spring and introduced as part of a separate custody hearing link 10 men to unions with minor girls. Last month’s indictment did not include those men.

These guys are pedophiles. Their wives are enablers. Their children are brainwashed. Ugh. Let this crap happen in some third world Muslim nation (it’s vile enough there), but not in America. I hope the prosecutors have enough solid evidence that the girls don’t need to testify. They won’t get the truth from the girls. They are programmed to serve the men. And what if the men don’t get convicted? The girls have the pleasure of spending their lives in subservience to these guys.

Cross-posted at RightWingNews.com



Just Like The Movies

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

I don’t know what the details are about this story, but I read it and thought, dang! Don’t mess in Texas:

A man holding a woman hostage in a north Harris County trailer was fatally shot by Harris County sheriff’s deputies Wednesday evening.

Deputies were called to the 1400 block of Aldine Mail Route about 5:45 p.m. and found the man holding the woman at gunpoint, said Harris County sheriff’s Lt. John Denholm. The man was shot after pointing the weapon at deputies, he said.

The woman was not injured and the incident remains under investigation.

Save the taxpayers the trouble of a trial. Glad the police have good aim.

Cross-posted at RightWingNews.com



Texas: A Model For The Country (Really!)–Updated

Monday, July 21st, 2008

I remember when I moved to Texas from New York (upstate, mind you, but still, The People’s Republic of New York) and just breathing an ideological sigh of relief. Even the Democrats campaigned on cutting taxes in Texas.

One news item demonstrated the different world that is Texas: A crazy woman in a car, driving erratically, and causing general mayhem on Houston’s clogged highways, prompted a police chase. Finally, they shut down a section of the road, cornered her, and she plowed her car, purposefully, into those yellow barrels filled with sand that stop you from dying if you hit that corner going off the exit ramp. She flung the door open, came rampaging out of her car wielding a butcher knife and charged toward the officers who had her surrounded. She was stopped by more than one bullet. Stopped dead. Well, that was shocking enough, but what followed reinforced that I was not in New York anymore. First, the news people who reported it treated it with the tone of “ah well, these things happen”. Second, the “investigation” took all of two days. Third, there was no public outcry over excessive force. Holy cow! In New York, the police officer would still be in jail for murder. Texas is different.

So, a lot of beltway insiders who I met and loved to a person (except for John Fund who is a turd, but that’s another story) came to Austin for the Americans For Prosperity/RightOnline conference. Here is the reaction of Robert Bluey, who I managed to not meet this weekend (ugh! too many fantastic people, too little time):

Leaving the Beltway can do wonders for you. Being in Texas the past couple of days for Americans for Prosperity’s Right Online conference was a refreshing experience. Some random thoughts about the trip:

• Texas conservatives are awesome. I came away from the conference feeling a lot better about the state of conservatism after watching these grassroots activists in action. The nearly 500 attendees were positive, upbeat and excited to get engaged online. I can’t say they are enthusiastic about the state of the Republican Party and GOP politicians, but they are certainly engaged on our core issues. Kudos to Erik Telford of AFP, who got his share of positive press from the Washington Post, New York Times and Wall Street Journal.

Emily Zanotti of the Sam Adams Alliance a conservative-libertarian think tank in Chicago came away with this impression of Texas:

Okay, I was told Texas was like a “whole ‘nother country” but to be honest, I never believed it until Thursday night, walking into a barbecue joint called Rudy’s, which appeared to have been converted out of the kind of abandoned gas station popularized by Hitchcock movies. On the wall in the outdoor seating area was a giant mural — a big oval — with the words “Real People Eat Meat” circling a lovely Texas scene: cattle marching headon toward slaughter proudly brandishing the Texas flag. Now, I’m not a full-time vegetarian and I’m only a half-assed PETA member, but let me tell you, suddenly, I felt very, very alone.

Buck up, Cowgirl! The alternative is much, much worse. I mean, imagine the world full of full-assed PETA members and dedicated vegetarians. The lack of protein makes ‘em weird. You said so yourself:

Also, while we managed to extract ourselves from the event unscathed and totally undetected [editor's note: a group of conservatives inadvertently crashed a Nutroots party at a 6th street bar], several lefties intent on disrupting Michelle Malkin’s speech were captured and released back into the wild before they ever reached the convention hall doors. Heh. And it didn’t appear the conference people were even checking nametags.

Texas is indeed a whole ‘nother country and a place the rest of America might want to visit, too, if for no other reason to get a stiff drink of what freedom tastes like again. We have relatives in New York and Michigan and Illinois and they don’t even know they’ve been boiled like fat frogs in the socialist soup that forms the basis for living in those states.

Up north and inside the beltway, they give so much money to the government that they don’t even realize how their freedom is inhibited. Without money, people are constrained. When the money is given to the government, not only are people deprived of economic choices, but more rules are imposed by the very ones taxpayers are giving their money, too. Nice, huh? Kinda like paying your mom and dad to restrict your curfew.

What works for Texas (low taxes, high individual freedoms which means that the government butts out) would be a great, simple model for America. In fact, I think that if John McCain campaigned on those two issues alone, he’d win. And if he really believed it, he’d put policies in place that would make America a better place. Too many “ifs”.

UPDATE:

Oh yeah! And if the rest of the country had politicians like Michael Williams, the Democrats would never have power again. What an incredible “rising star“. I could have listened to him talk all day, but to get an idea, go look at the video at the link.



More from the AFP Conference

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Right now I’m listening to young Republicans. Check this out: Young Conservatives of Texas. Laura Elizabeth Morales give me hope for the future. Glad there’s young people like her.

Now I’m listening to Eric Peterkofsky and he just shared this:

Eric works with Matt Sheffield at Newsbusters. These guys are revolutionizing the conservative online media. Very exiting to listen to them and see their work. Media Research Center is the right hand side’s research arm to keep media honest.



Eternal Life Sentence For Sex Offender

Monday, July 7th, 2008

You know you’ve been bad when your next 40 lives will be spent in prison.