ROCK wrote:Extremeweatherguy wrote:I have seen Cat. 1/2 force winds and I would stay for that, but a cat. 3 or higher on the coast I would leave, but inland I would probably stay for anything since I have a safe room (room surrounded by like 3 ft. thick concrete).
Your in Spring. Why would you leave? Unless you are worried about trees. Thats about 70-80 miles inland. Personally, I rode out Alicia with a direct hit from the eyewall in the Clear Lake area and thats about 30 miles inland. Not a big deal except it took 3 weeks for power to come back on.
Side note- alot of people evaced Houston that didn't need to during Rita. One of the reasons I went 25 miles in 18 hours and never got anywhere. IMO, people outside the mandatory evac zones should stay put or stay put long enough to let us closer to the coast get out.
Maybe it depends on the storm. Jasper is 80-90 miles inland and that's where I evacuated to late Wednesday night before Rita hit. I woke up Thursday morning to a mandatory evacuation in Jasper! First time ever. Unfortunately, we were stuck as we had used most of our gas getting there as Hwy.96 that runs through Jasper is an official evacuation route and it was the largest evacuation in history. (good though, as it saved lives) There was no gas in the area and everything was shut down...we had to ride it out there. Scariest night of my life!
Anyway, so I guess depending on the storm as to how far inland the destruction goes. Jasper had signifcant damage. I was shocked at how bad it was that far inland. The winds were ferocious, howling so loud, uprooting trees everywhere, snapping trees and power poles, even metal sign posts were bent in half, roofs were blown off, a house with people inside floated right off its foundation. I had doubts of surviving all night - it was terrifying.
This is a city without power and in peril, rescue workers said Monday, citing a worst-case scenario of two months without electricity for the town nicknamed “The Jewel of the Forest.”
The curtain of trees surrounding Jasper became her enemy when Hurricane Rita roared through.
"We sustained hurricane winds of about 100 to 120 mph for about a nine-hour period, so we have thousands of trees down within our city," said Jasper Police Chief Todd Hunter, who paused during a hectic day to sound a shrill note of alarm. "Our city is without gas. We have no gas except to run emergency vehicles, This city is without food. There were some MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) brought in yesterday, but it was not enough.
"People are becoming desperate. They've been three days without water. They weren't prepared," he added. He asked people to call their state representatives and senators and "try to encourage them to get our food and get our water to us, because we're desperate and we need them now. People have been without all basic needs for days."
Denise Kelley, Jasper's acting city manager, warned the emergency cannot be quickly resolved.
...and remember, Jasper is 80-90 miles inland. Rita was horrific.