This week I was watching the Discovery Channel Show, "Deadliest Catch." That is the show about crab fishing. The narrator kept on talking about an "Alaskan Hurricane." Is that for real? Anybody know what that means?
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Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
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- DanKellFla
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Re: Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
Hurricanes cannot exist over Alaska. The water is too cold. It is caused by extratropical systems, which some come from hurricanes and typhoons. They produce hurricane force winds and are large storms.
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- Dionne
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Re: Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
The Deadliest Catch episode "Finish Line" details a Williwaw wind. Wiliwaws can come out of nowhere without warning and can reach hurricane strength winds. These winds are most commonly known as outflow winds. They have the capacity of capsizing boats and damaging buildings. During the winter of '75 we lost several homes under construction on "hillside", an area at the base of the Chugach mountains in Anchorage. Duration of the windstorm was 20 minutes max.
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Re: Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
Ptarmigan wrote:Hurricanes cannot exist over Alaska. The water is too cold. It is caused by extratropical systems, which some come from hurricanes and typhoons. They produce hurricane force winds and are large storms.
Ioke in 2006 is a good example.
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Re: Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch has used cheesy looking overlays of faux hurricane satellites in the Bering Sea before. That annoys me almost as much as when TV news investigative reports make 'snapshot' or shutter sound effects when showing still pictures. Or when they called Hurricane Grace a Category 5 in The Perfect Storm.
Or like that Preminger movie with John Wayne and Patricia Neal, about the immediate aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack. Maybe I only noticed because the radar I trained on in "A" school was the AN/SPS-10 surface search radar. But surface ships of December 1941 didn't have an array of radar antennaes on their masts.
Old movies with good special effects- A Night to Remember. No CGI, and sometimes one could tell the Titanic was actually about a ten foot long ship in a swimming pool, but much better acting.
And the Jon Hall/Dorothy Lamour film from the 1930s, The Hurricane, for a 70+ year old black and white movie, the depiction of wind damage and storm surge looks almost like a documentary, and an excellent script.
Or like that Preminger movie with John Wayne and Patricia Neal, about the immediate aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack. Maybe I only noticed because the radar I trained on in "A" school was the AN/SPS-10 surface search radar. But surface ships of December 1941 didn't have an array of radar antennaes on their masts.
Old movies with good special effects- A Night to Remember. No CGI, and sometimes one could tell the Titanic was actually about a ten foot long ship in a swimming pool, but much better acting.
And the Jon Hall/Dorothy Lamour film from the 1930s, The Hurricane, for a 70+ year old black and white movie, the depiction of wind damage and storm surge looks almost like a documentary, and an excellent script.
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Re: Alaskan Hurricane? : Deadliest Catch
Ed Mahmoud wrote:Deadliest Catch has used cheesy looking overlays of faux hurricane satellites in the Bering Sea before. That annoys me almost as much as when TV news investigative reports make 'snapshot' or shutter sound effects when showing still pictures. Or when they called Hurricane Grace a Category 5 in The Perfect Storm.
Or like that Preminger movie with John Wayne and Patricia Neal, about the immediate aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack. Maybe I only noticed because the radar I trained on in "A" school was the AN/SPS-10 surface search radar. But surface ships of December 1941 didn't have an array of radar antennaes on their masts.
Old movies with good special effects- A Night to Remember. No CGI, and sometimes one could tell the Titanic was actually about a ten foot long ship in a swimming pool, but much better acting.
And the Jon Hall/Dorothy Lamour film from the 1930s, The Hurricane, for a 70+ year old black and white movie, the depiction of wind damage and storm surge looks almost like a documentary, and an excellent script.
I saw A Night To Remember. Great movie. Better than James Cameron's Titanic.
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