southerngale wrote:Halogen wrote:O_O, obviously it will take a while to recover, but I don't recall seeing the eye over Texas in any image. Do you have a link to one by any chance?
Umm, it tracked right over Southeast Texas and then north right through Jasper, where I had evacuated to. The NHC said it was over Jasper at 10am Saturday morning but the worst of the storm occurred for many hours overnight and into the early morning. At 10am, conditions were bad but the worst of it was over. It was a terrifying experience with it hitting in the dark.
Yeah you are right the eye did go right over you guys...but even though you were hit hard, you were still very lucky...it could have been MUCH worse. At landfall Rita was a weakening Cat. 3, and in Beaumont they only got wind reports to Cat. 1 strength (up to Cat. 2 east of Beaumont). It would have been a lot worse if Rita would have hit as a strong 4 like originally expected. For 2006 I hope areas east of Houston are quiet, and I think that Houston southward deserves to take a bullet after being so lucky these last 2 years (I havn't been lucky however, I lived in Florida during 2004 lol). Hopefully though, that bullet ends up being weak and is only enough to teach us in Houston and points south a lesson, and not kill anyone. And for all those in Houston who thought that we saw Hurricane force winds from Rita (yes, I have met a few)...you are wrong. The highest gusts IAH reported was 61mph..yes enough to do minor damage but no not enough to be a hurricane.