Tropical Storm Cindy was near hurricane strength at
Cindy flooded streets, tore down power lines and twisted trees in the historic French Quarter district of the Mardi Gras city and left about a 1/4 million people without power throughout Louisiana. She dumped about ten inches of rain on the region on her trek inland.
Meanwhile, the headline in Forbes is: "Oil Prices Top $60 a Barrel on Storm Fears." While it's certain that drilling operations in the Gulf of Mexico were suspended and production might just suffer a little bit, let's get a grip folks. This was an itty-bitty storm. Itty-bitty-Teeny-weeny storm. If this is what we have to look forward to this season, we'll be at $5 per gallon at the pumps in no time. (Personally, I'd pay $10 a gallon if they'd stop drilling in our beautiful Gulf. But I'm pretty sure that's just me. Sigh.) Read the story...
Cindy is now just a tropical depression, a term that begins to take on many meanings in Florida at this time of year. But wait! There's more! We also get this fabulous Tropical-Storm-Soon-To-Be-Major-Hurricane named Dennis. At no extra charge!
All the forecast tracks so far say Dennis will hit the Florida Panhandle. But, funny (peculiar, not ha-ha) thing about hurricane tracks: hurricanes don't always follow them. Ask Port Charlotte. So, if you're in Florida, you're in the cone of uncertainty at this point and you can't afford to take it lightly. More on Dennis in the next post...
1 comment:
Hurricane strength is 74 mph, not 112. Still bad, but not as bad.
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