wxman57 wrote:Anyone else notice that the major hurricane landfalls are shifting westward each season? Florida/AL in 2004, MS-LA in 2005, ????? in 2006?
Dennis made landfall in the Florida panhandle and it was a major hurricane.
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vbhoutex wrote:The Houston/Galveston metro area was very lucky. The rest of SE Texas was not lucky. The media is imo "under reporting" what happened all over SE TX and SW LA to the East of Houston. Many people in/from that area are still not allowed to go back to even assess their homes due to no available electricity/utilties for large areas. Last report I saw there were still 200,000 without electricity in E TX. Several of the largest refineries on the Gulf coast in the B/PA area were severely damaged and will not be back in service for months. That is not lucky or good for any of us, much less the people in that area that depend on them for employment.

vbhoutex wrote:The Houston/Galveston metro area was very lucky. The rest of SE Texas was not lucky. The media is imo "under reporting" what happened all over SE TX and SW LA to the East of Houston. Many people in/from that area are still not allowed to go back to even assess their homes due to no available electricity/utilties for large areas. Last report I saw there were still 200,000 without electricity in E TX. Several of the largest refineries on the Gulf coast in the B/PA area were severely damaged and will not be back in service for months. That is not lucky or good for any of us, much less the people in that area that depend on them for employment.

jschlitz wrote:I wholeheartedly agree with both of you David and Scott. Those to the east of us were extremely unlucky and I can see exactly why Kelly may be upset.
I might be 'one of those who actually agreed' but I'm just trying to put it into persective. Rita was not the $100B+ disaster for Texas that was feared, and a disaster of that magnitude is a much larger strain on both the state's and nation's resources than a storm that did 1/10 of that in terms of losses. A direct hit on HGX would not only have been a disaster for the state, but for the whole nation in terms of economic impact. Those are just the brutal facts. Don't shoot the messenger.
Maybe the term "lucky" isn't appropriate. I feel for those in East Texas & SW LA, I truly do. It's truly sad that our miss was at their expense.
Derek Ortt wrote:In a way, you were SOMEWHAT lucky in that Texas did not ge the eastern eye wall; thus, were spared the total obliteration that Cameron experienced. Highest winds in Texas were likely borderline 1/2 winds based upon the obs at Port Arthur, and sustained hurricane winds did not occur in Beaumont. Had it have came in 25 miles west, parts of Texas may not exist as we know them

Derek Ortt wrote:In a way, you were SOMEWHAT lucky in that Texas did not ge the eastern eye wall; thus, were spared the total obliteration that Cameron experienced. Highest winds in Texas were likely borderline 1/2 winds based upon the obs at Port Arthur, and sustained hurricane winds did not occur in Beaumont. Had it have came in 25 miles west, parts of Texas may not exist as we know them
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