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Hurricane Ike: Houston (and especially Galveston) We Have A Problem

UPDATE: Latest news reports say that the storm may be as much as 900 miles across meaning the impact will cover much of the Texas and Louisiana coasts. Some people think as many as 100,000 homes may be flooded. I do think (or at least hope) that much of this is media hype but it is gonna be a rough Saturday for Texas.

I realize that our readership is not as big as many other web sites and I am not sure if we have many readers in the Houston or Galveston area. But in the off chance that someone is reading this post and they live in Galveston let me offer a small bit of unsolicited advice.

GET OUT AND GET OUT NOW !!!!

Do not pass go, do not collect $ 200, do not water your plants, do not read the rest of this post.

GET OUT !!!

Now I am sure most people who live around Galveston are well aware of the story of the 1900 Hurricane which swept through the region but for the rest of our readers I’d like to cite an example of what happened in that year, quoting the book Isaac’s Storm by Erik Larson. Galveston was struck by a powerful hurricane and while Ike is not as strong it is expected to generate a huge storm surge. On that topic Larson wrote:

A single cubic yard of water weighs about fifteen hundred pounds. A wave 50 feet long and 10 feet wide has the static weight of 80 thousand pounds. Moving at thirty miles an hour it generates forward momentum of over TWO MILLION pounds.

The storm surge swept in to town and the water rose 5 feet in as many seconds.

For purposes of Ike you should rename Galveston as Atlantis and act accordingly.

Looking at the tracking map it does not seem we will see a direct hit in Houston but they will be on the bad (right) side of the storm and with more people in Houston metro area than in all of Louisiana, this is far more deadly than even Katrina should things go badly.

newike.gif

Landfall looks to occur tonight and perhaps the ONLY good thing is it does look like the storm will be moving quickly and should be through the area by Saturday night and will be down to tropical storm strength.

But going through Houston and Galveston it is likely to cause major damage with as many as 1 of of 5 windows in high rises littering the streets. The damage to the refineries could cause us to see gas soar again in price, perhaps as high as $ 5 per gallon.

However we can hope that these worst case scenarios will not occur but in terms of human life, if you are in the path of the storm do not play games

GET OUT AND GET OUT NOW

There are several good sites tracking the storm worth a look

MSNBC Tracker

Sci Guy

NOAA



7 Responses to “Hurricane Ike: Houston (and especially Galveston) We Have A Problem”

  1. Silhouette says:

    I had a strong dream last night that Galveston would be wiped off the map..essentially…lots of water spouts and tornado-type things doing some damage.

    I hope dreams don't come true in this case..

  2. RememberNovember says:

    Better safe than sorry- better alive and minus a few gallons of gas than dead. It's the weekend. find a motel and wait it out. Be safe people.

  3. JSpencer says:

    Gas already went up to 5 bux a gallon in some places here (MI) today – they didn't waste any time with that. Sure hope your dream was wrong Sil…

  4. Patrick E says:

    Obviously at this point we need to focus our thoughts and prayers on Ike.

    But for those interested in this topic I do highly commend the book Isaac's Storm by Erik Larson. It is a compelling story

  5. T_Steel says:

    The hurricane is bigger than Katrina. Looking at it on the visible radar is just scares and impresses me at the same time. Nature just doesn't give a damn.

  6. kritt11 says:

    I saw a documentary about the worst national weather event in our history- the hurricane that wiped out Galveston in 1900. It showed orphans strapped to the nuns who were caring for them– singing as they sunk to their deaths. In the aftermath, surviving male adults were forced at gunpoint to get rid of the more than 6,000 corpses that littered the street.

    I just don't get why so many chose to remain in Ike's path in Galveston. It goes beyond stubbornness and stupidity. It was obvious to all after Katrina that local emergency services would be overwhelmed during a catastrophe, and that the federal response would be tied up in red tape- to put it kindly. Given the town's unique history, it just seems senseless.

  7. Patrick E says:

    The good news is so far it appears that there is no major loss of life and the refineries seem to have avoided major damage.

    But lots of property damage in Galveston and points east/

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