Thursday, September 25, 2008

Ike's damages--and the future

Eric Berger has some interesting analysis of absolute and relative costs here:

http://blogs.chron.com/sciguy/archives/2008/09/post_53.html


In addition, there is one regional issue that will demand to be addressed once a state of normalcy is restored, and that's the massive loss of power. It's true that Ike was a once-in-a-generation storm, but it seems to me that some measures can be taken to ameliorate the near-perfect annihilation of the electrical grid in southeast Texas. Continued hardening the major transmission lines and critical points and aggressive maintenance of electrical rights of way from overgrowth seem two obvious items that could be put on a prioritized year-to-year progress plan. I know it's ugly when the limbs well-shaped trees are lopped to allow clearance for power lines, but I think a memory of the current hardships endured by many should suffice to procure agreement on a reasonable compromise here.

Monday, September 15, 2008

If you were inland and west of downtown Houston,

... it appears that the worst part of the storm was the last 4 to 6 hours, when north and then west gales howled over and through the greater part of residential Houston and its suburbs. My neighbors and the co-workers I contacted agreed, based on the sound of the wind. At our home it sounded like a locomotive parked outside the back windows. I'm sure that's when we lost some shingles and the majority of our fence. Just a trickle, thankfully, of windblown water seeped from the bathroom ceiling. I'm guessing that our steady winds here on the southwest side were in the neighborhood of 75 to 80 mph, with some higher gusts. Outside the storm surge zones, the storm was not especially a wet one. The major flooding that took place Sunday was due to the straight-down showers preceding the cold front that slid through.

Friday, September 12, 2008

The enemy below...

not the enemy above. It appears that Ike will be a storm-surge event and a wind event, but not a rain even, at least not in the Houston region. Galveston continues to get punished horribly and the low-lying communities around Galveston Bay will flood, as will Texas and Louisiana coastal areas east of here. However, Dr. Siebert of channel 26 just confirmed what I've been noticing for about an hour: Ike has started to suck wind, dry wind, into the region surrounding his eye, and his structure seems to be loosening. Dr. Siebert mentioned something about the winds being ready to drop to 80 mph or less. This and the continued rapid motion of this storm will bring some somewhat sooner relief from the wind/rain conditions, although we're still facing a long night's vigil over this storm. Let's keep our fingers crossed that this in fact turns out to be the trend. The damage will still be staggering, but let's hope there's a light in this windy tunnel.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Don't like Ike...

General Ike is preparing to launch an assault on the TTO (Texas Theatre of Operations) by the weekend. We'll keep our eyes and ears open, begin some basic prep, and hope his beachhead is not our backyard.

Meanwhile, unless we receive a rescinding order from University Command, we are planning to hold class Thursday evening. See you there.