jazzfan1247 wrote:dhweather wrote:Yep, until you've been here, you wouldn't understand.
It is exactly this kind of statement that inspired me to post in the first place. I admit it, I'm not there, so I don't get the same emotional impact and I don't know how it FEELS like. Given that, I have to give considerable weight to the evidence that Derek has presented, because of it's SCIENTIFIC value. Say all you want about how strong you
think Katrina was at landfall...you are entitled to your own opinion, but be aware that you are arguing against current
scientific evidence.
Now, don't take this the wrong way, but I do agree with what jschlitz said. Yes, the damage is terrible even wind-wise, and there are homes here and there that exhibit severe damage, but based on the aerial shots, the wind damage didn't seem "impressive" enough to be called a Cat 4. There may be reasons for this other than Katrina being weaker than some people think, but again, this is just my amateur opinion, and I would still put more weight on the evidence Derek posted, given that it is far more objective. Though if I were willing to play the damage game others are, this is how I would see it.
I'm not emotional about it at all.
I see water lines 35 feet above MSL. That's not emotion, that's fact.
If you want to call a tape measure scientific, then so be it.
I see palm trees snapped in the middle. That's typical of 4/5 winds.
My anemometer was destroyed early on by debris. So was the
anemometer at the Diamondhead Fire department, which failed at 144 MPH.
I see rooftop structures peeled off of condominiums and tossed like
leaves. This in an area 40-60 feet above MSL, so it's clearly a wind
event.
I see large number of trees leveled - gone.
Nothing personal here, but as I mentioned before, we went to war based
on satellite "intelligence". In hindsight, every intelligence agency stated
clearly that we needed
on the ground intelligence for accurate information.
The same thing applies to this - satellite and radar loops only tell you so
much of the story. Coming here, looking at physical evidence, measure
debris lines, interview local officials, gather data from local weather stations.
I have yet to hear one person that was here for Camille, an agreed upon
Cat 5, say that Katrina was not as bad as Camille was.
All of this, yet we take the measurements from a guy that was knocked
out and woke up in a tree as the gospel without any reservation (1935
keys hurricane). Nobody questions the calibration of his instruments
or his personal observations. It's carved in stone.