36+ hours of hell
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36+ hours of hell
Can you imagine being in the northeastern Yucatan? Over 36 hours
of hurricane force winds, over 24 hours of cat3+ winds. Intense storm
surge, driving rains.
of hurricane force winds, over 24 hours of cat3+ winds. Intense storm
surge, driving rains.
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- Dr. Jonah Rainwater
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A 24' surge would be a huge forecast failure for the NHC. I know TWC's surge forecast maps only showed 10'-15' near Cancun and Cozumel, largely because of the offshore topography. But Wilma's agonizing landfall was well forecast, so shouldn't they have factored that into their surge forecast? I'm afraid some people in the area assumed they'd be safe because they're above 15', and are in a serious situation now.
The same thing happened in Mississippi. The surge was so unprecedented that even the American deathtoll outside of New Orleans was at least 300-400 between Mississippi and the Lousisiana delta area. These surges might be special cases, but they prove the uselessness of a "surge maximum" for a particular stretch of coastline. (15' for the Yucatan; 25' for Mississippi) I wish the NHC had at least erred on the side of caution.
On another note; besides 24+ hours of major hurricane winds and 24+ of unrelenting storm surge, there's now been a good 36 hours of solid hurricane CDO rainfall. I mean 60"+....that is five feet of rain. What were Isidore's rainfall totals for the area?
The same thing happened in Mississippi. The surge was so unprecedented that even the American deathtoll outside of New Orleans was at least 300-400 between Mississippi and the Lousisiana delta area. These surges might be special cases, but they prove the uselessness of a "surge maximum" for a particular stretch of coastline. (15' for the Yucatan; 25' for Mississippi) I wish the NHC had at least erred on the side of caution.
On another note; besides 24+ hours of major hurricane winds and 24+ of unrelenting storm surge, there's now been a good 36 hours of solid hurricane CDO rainfall. I mean 60"+....that is five feet of rain. What were Isidore's rainfall totals for the area?
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Matt-hurricanewatcher
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- SeaBrz_FL
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Can you imagine being in the northeastern Yucatan? Over 36 hours of hurricane force winds, over 24 hours of cat3+ winds. Intense storm surge, driving rains.
NO! Mentally, you start breaking down after 12 hours. Some of my "normal" family members and other evacuees at our hotel proved this theory in the 24 hours of Frances last year. Thank God one of the other evacuees in the hotel had a bottle of Xanax and was willing to share them.
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SeaBrz_FL wrote:NO! Mentally, you start breaking down after 12 hours. Some of my "normal" family members and other evacuees at our hotel proved this theory in the 24 hours of Frances last year. Thank God one of the other evacuees in the hotel had a bottle of Xanax and was willing to share them.
Pretty bold statement can you provide any sources? Everyone is different and many can function for much longer periods of extreme duress without resorting to mind numbing drugs. I'd hate to face a raging storm surge after taking a couple of Xanax. I guess it depends on the depth of the gene pool.
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timNms
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SeaBrz_FL wrote:Can you imagine being in the northeastern Yucatan? Over 36 hours of hurricane force winds, over 24 hours of cat3+ winds. Intense storm surge, driving rains.
NO! Mentally, you start breaking down after 12 hours. Some of my "normal" family members and other evacuees at our hotel proved this theory in the 24 hours of Frances last year. Thank God one of the other evacuees in the hotel had a bottle of Xanax and was willing to share them.
doesn't it take days for Xanax to start working? most antidepressant meds take at least 4 to 6 weeks to really make a difference
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timNms wrote:doesn't it take days for Xanax to start working? most antidepressant meds take at least 4 to 6 weeks to really make a difference
Xanax is a short-acting benzodiazepene tranquilizer, not an anti-depressant. It starts acting within 30 minutes, and the effects last about 4-6 hours.
Think Valium, but shoter-term, and slightly faster acting.
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timNms
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calidoug wrote:timNms wrote:doesn't it take days for Xanax to start working? most antidepressant meds take at least 4 to 6 weeks to really make a difference
Xanax is a short-acting benzodiazepene tranquilizer, not an anti-depressant. It starts acting within 30 minutes, and the effects last about 4-6 hours.
Think Valium, but shoter-term, and slightly faster acting.
Learned something new today. Thanx! (Might need some Xanax in the next day or 2 as we're testing the kids at school!)
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jburns wrote:SeaBrz_FL wrote:NO! Mentally, you start breaking down after 12 hours. Some of my "normal" family members and other evacuees at our hotel proved this theory in the 24 hours of Frances last year. Thank God one of the other evacuees in the hotel had a bottle of Xanax and was willing to share them.
Pretty bold statement can you provide any sources? Everyone is different and many can function for much longer periods of extreme duress without resorting to mind numbing drugs. I'd hate to face a raging storm surge after taking a couple of Xanax. I guess it depends on the depth of the gene pool.
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natmicstef
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jburns wrote: I guess it depends on the depth of the gene pool.
That last sentence was rather unnecessary. Everyone is different and reactions under extreme stress should not be a reflection of a person's gene pool.
Last edited by natmicstef on Sun Oct 23, 2005 8:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
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