Nicholas is now a hurricane with 75 mph winds.
Thinking of our friends in in Houston and Galveston tonight with the big rain expected from Nicholas. It is now expected to really slow down which is not good. Many areas where Ida landed are also going to get hit again in the same LA area.
Thinking of you @unk-p, @jsr78 and anyone else in the path of this storm. I know there are others but am drawing a blank. Please let us know how you are doing.
@jeanne-mayell The Bitter Southerner has some excellent articles all of the time.. but this am's newsletter had one of particular interest to me as I grew up living a good deal of summers and other times in Charleston Heights back behind the naval base. https://bittersoutherner.com the article Common High Ground (for some reason it doesn't let me copy/paste the link) There is also a great article about Stacey Abrams.
The article I read points out how climate change and rising seas and increasingly lethal hurricanes are affecting the entire coastline there.
@lovendures I think @baba prediction was a hurricane would hit Galveston and I think that's what Nicholas did it barely hit Houston. I live on the west side all I got was rain and some wind and slept through it. I have power and water uninterrupted rather impressive prediction. Galveston can handle a storm that size.
@jsr78 I sure hope Nicholas dwindles in to nothing quickly...this was a LOT of rain " HOUSTON -- Tropical Storm Nicholas hit the Texas coast early Tuesday as a hurricane and dumped more than a foot (30.5 centimeters) of rain along the same area swamped by Hurricane Harvey in 2017, drenching storm-battered Louisiana, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of people and bringing the potential for life-threatening flash floods across the Deep South.
Nicholas made landfall on the eastern part of the Matagorda Peninsula and was soon downgraded to a tropical storm. It was about 15 miles (25 kilometers) south-southwest of Houston, Texas, with maximum winds of 60 mph (95 kph) as of 7 a.m. CDT Tuesday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Nicholas was the 14th named storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season.
Galveston saw nearly 14 inches (35 centimeters) of rain from Nicholas while Houston reported more than 6 inches (15 centimeters) of rain - a fraction of what fell during Harvey, which dumped more than 60 inches (152 centimeters) of rain in southeast Texas over a four-day period.
Latest Updates on Nicholas' Track
The storm was moving north-northeast at 8 mph (13 kph) and the center of Nicholas was expected to move slowly over southeastern Texas on Tuesday and over southwestern Louisiana on Wednesday."
@lovendures thanks for asking about us, Love. I am doing fine, the storm didn't do any real damage to the house or the trees. The only sad thing that happened at my place was that a tiny baby squirrel was blown out of it's nest. It was dead already when i found it (actually the cat that i got from my roof after Hurricane Harvey found it, and placed it on the doorstep).
I hope everyone else is doing well. I am super busy this week, so i have to force myself to stay off of the internet for a while, but i should be back next week sometime. Peace & love to everybody!
Odette has manifested.
The NHC predicts she will remain a tropical storm and stay in the Atlantic.
@ana So glad Odette didn't become the monster I was half expecting.
She's been off the coast for a few days here in NC, we've been getting random bands of rain and wind, but nothing crazy.
Yaaaayyy Glad to hear that!!!! Sure did not want a visit from "Opal's cousin"!!!!
I am happy also!
There is so much to learn from the Hurricane predictions we had this year. We are half way through and have had some interesting hits and some definite misses. I am looking forward to reviewing everything when this is over to see what observations can be made on this exercise.
The best part of making predictions on this site?
Nobody screams that you are wrong. haha.
It is a safe place to take a risk and grow your intuition. The more we learn the more we can help others and be prepared for situations which may arise in the future.
I hope we can all use whatever intuition we have for the greater good, not simply our own personal good.
Now, let's see what happens with Peter and the rest of the season. Let's see what greater good can come from this experiment and all efforts we make at trying to use our gifts for the highest possible positive way.