@lovendures Wouldn't mind a prayer or two... the center is due to come right thru here as a tropical storm with 2-4 inches of rain and winds steady 40-50 miles and up to 60-70 maybe higher and not just gusts the weather prognosticator. Schools are closing for tomorrow with the expectation of downed streets, power outages and flooded streets and some areas. Lower risk of spinoff tornadoes if they do occur they should be brief they said.
@journeywithme2 sending prayers to you and all dealing with this storm. Stay safe.
Absolutely. May the force of Zeta be more mild than expected and may she leave you unscathed. I think the Gulf states are "hurricaned" out this year. Hopefully this will not make voting an issue for all the people in the path of the storm either.
Lots of love and healing light to you.
Say hello to TS Eta which is in the Central Caribbean and heading to Central America.
Following up on @lovendures alert, with the formation of Eta, the 2020 hurricane season is now tied with 2005 as comprising the most active hurricane seasons on record. Eta is expected to make landfall in Nicaragua as a major hurricane and will also bring torrential rains to Honduras and El Salvador (Eta's ETA is Monday night/Tuesday morning). What concerns me is that, due to their mountainous terrains, these countries are highly vulnerable to mudslides and river flooding. Extreme weather events like these are also why more and more Central Americans are making their way to the US-Mexico border.
You are exactly right. The dirt roads wash out during this time of year in poor Central American countries, like Honduras. It’s rainy season now until February. Hurricanes add to the problem of isolation and inability to get food, medicine and supplies to the extremely poor rural areas. Thank you for mentioning this so we can all surround our brothers and sisters with light and hope.
It's easy to not pay attention to these thing right now, but with TS Theta now churning in the northeast Atlantic, the 2020 season has surpassed 2005 to become the busiest hurricane season on record. There's also a tropical disturbance in the Caribbean that will probably become a storm in the next two days.
To be honest, I'm tired of thinking about and tracking hurricanes. The problem is, each time I see a new storm start to develop on the NHC map, I'm secretly wishing that the storm will wreak as much havoc as possible. My shadow side is excited by catastrophism, and as an aspiring healer, I know I need to excise that component of myself. Plus, I am adding psychic power to storms just by mentally "rooting" for them from behind my computer. Hurricane season might still be on, but I'm done with constantly checking the NHC website.
I confess, I love hurricanes. I don't want people harmed by them but I think they are magnificent. And yes I've been through a few.
For one thing, they humble us. People think they have the divine right to build on a sandbar or below sea level and wonder why they get flooded out or washed away--- well that's just Earth doing what Earth does. If you want to live on the beach, fine, but know the risk you take.
And for another thing, tropical systems are actually beneficial in many ways. They are heat engines. They draw heat from the ocean and transfer some of that heat to the atmosphere. Some of the ocean heat turns into mechanical energy (wind) which helps drive the global winds and ocean currents. In this way, removing heat from the oceans helps mitigate some of the effects of global warming. And they break up and stir up things like red tide blooms. On land, their rain helps refill our reservoirs and aquifers. Their wind helps clear out dead branches and dead trees that could become wildfire fuel. And if cleared out often, the dead trees and branches don't accumulate to such an extent that when a storm *does* come through, all the dead wood comes down at once and blocks roads and damages homes.
This has really been a very *good* hurricane season-- there have been a record number of storms but few have been very destructive to humans. Lots of little tropical storms that mostly stay out to sea is the heat rebalancing in a fairly benign way.
So I don't think it is a good idea to wish them away. Maybe just wish that the people and property in their path are protected.