The day after a hurricane is almost always strikingly beautiful. I rode out Camille where our farm weather station registered 200mph before the anemometer blew away, as well as Frederick and handful of other more minor storms. The beauty was always in striking contrast to the destruction and smell of death and rotting garbage from no power for weeks.
I was hoping to hear you went to the beach to see what the wind did to the tide, it normally should have been a very high tide but might have been unusually low due to wind shift. I have seen entire bays vacuumed to mudflats one storm, and 8ft of water downtown in another, and both happening in a single storm, simply due to wind direction/eye orientation over the area.
4 comments:
Another beautiful day on HHI. I would make breakfast on that grill to celebrate.
Glad all's ok. My breakfast was about the same.
Father McDonald, Deo gratias for your safety. I pray for a fast recovery for each person impacted in any way from the hurricane.
Pax.
Mark Thomas
The day after a hurricane is almost always strikingly beautiful. I rode out Camille where our farm weather station registered 200mph before the anemometer blew away, as well as Frederick and handful of other more minor storms. The beauty was always in striking contrast to the destruction and smell of death and rotting garbage from no power for weeks.
I was hoping to hear you went to the beach to see what the wind did to the tide, it normally should have been a very high tide but might have been unusually low due to wind shift. I have seen entire bays vacuumed to mudflats one storm, and 8ft of water downtown in another, and both happening in a single storm, simply due to wind direction/eye orientation over the area.
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