Katrina - The Poll

Will you be "fascinated" by the news coverage of Katrina

  • yes

  • no


Results are only viewable after voting.

Papa Deuce

<font color="red">BBQ loving, fantasy football pla
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Sep 29, 2003
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Of course noboby wants to see people die and property damage, but strictly from a "watching nature's ferocity" perspective, will you be fascinated by the weather / news coverage of this hurricane?
 
Yes, even now I can barely stop watching the news coverage.
 
Yes, I do know people who live there. (Heard from a former coworker... he is moving into the hosptial today for an extended period... sent the family to Nashville for safety, but he can't leave. Hospitals don't get to close)

Plus NO is such a beautiful place... I hate to see that much history in peril.
 

I've been watching coverage all day..I have family near Gulf Shores, AL, where they are expecting the "tsunami-like" conditions...Thankfully they loaded up the RV and the cars and headed north to my parents and aunt's house day before yesterday.

As far as watching the weather, heck yes I am! They are expecting tropical storm force winds and heavy rain and flooding both here and where my parents and DH's parents live...
 
I have been glued to the television. This is awful, and I feel for the people that can't leave.
 
Even Jim Cantore is saying he can't stay near the water for this one, and he's been through some of the worst storms ever.

It's very scary to watch, but i'll be glued to the TV tonight watching the coverage.
 
I will all I can. Mostly because I know this could happen to FL! :faint: :scared: :eek:
As a midwesterner, we were very separated from this and did not pay that much attention.
 
Luv2Roam said:
I will all I can. Mostly because I know this could happen to FL! :faint: :scared: :eek:
Me, too. It scares me because if this happens here, I can get out, DH can't. I am just sick for the people in her path. I have almost cried a couple of times already just thinking about what it looked like after Andrew and what this storm can do.
 
I voted no, because I don't think "fascinated" is a good adjective to use. Horrified would be a better choice.

I'm waiting for my friends mom and dad and grandmother to arrive, they will stay with me for as long as they need to. :grouphug: His mom and dad live in NOLA, his gram lives in Biloxi. I hope they have homes to go back to when this is over.

Anne
 
I am fascinated but also horrified. I woudl direct everyone's attention to this piece from last year

In the event of a slow-moving Category 4 or Category 5 hurricane (with winds up to or exceeding 155 miles per hour), it's possible that only those crow's nests would remain above the water level. Such a storm, plowing over the lake, could generate a 20-foot surge that would easily overwhelm the levees of New Orleans, which only protect against a hybrid Category 2 or Category 3 storm (with winds up to about 110 miles per hour and a storm surge up to 12 feet). Soon the geographical "bowl" of the Crescent City would fill up with the waters of the lake, leaving those unable to evacuate with little option but to cluster on rooftops -- terrain they would have to share with hungry rats, fire ants, nutria, snakes, and perhaps alligators. The water itself would become a festering stew of sewage, gasoline, refinery chemicals, and debris.

I woudl also invite all to presuse this site on the impact of 1969's Hurricane Camille, a Cat 5 Hurricane
Hurricane Camille produced the highest hurricane tidal surge ever recorded in the United States. According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Mobile District 1970), a still-water, high water mark, of 22.6 feet above mean tide, was measured inside the VFW Clubhouse building in Pass Christian, Mississippi. Additionally, debris drift was found 25 feet above mean sea level in the vicinity of East Beach Blvd. Other locations more than 22 feet above sea level recorded high water marks. This included the Avalon Theater building in Pass Christian, a high water mark inside the building was measured to be 22.2 feet above sea level.

From air photos and ground surveys, the tidal surge of Hurricane Camille seemed without parallel in American history. No Pacific Coast tidal wave or Atlantic Coast storm (hurricane or winter storm) had ever submerged so much land to such a depth. In a truly biblical tale, one survivor told of sitting in his home during Camille, and watching as the ocean water spread through his yard and eventually flooded the first floor of his home. Retreating to the attic, the water was quickly neck deep, forcing him to kick out the small attic window and swim to a large transmission tower at the rear of his property. As he struggled to climb up the tower, he watched in horror, as the roof of his home went under water.
The morning after the storm, thousands crawled from beneath the wreckage in southern Mississippi, wandering zombie-like through the blasted landscape. In the first few days after the storm, normal society ceased to function. Immediately 15,000 people were homeless, there was no water, food, or fuel. The storm had wiped out all means of communication, and roads, bridges, airports, and even railways were impassable or destroyed. The Gulfport Hospital closed - and evacuated all 800 patients to hospitals in the center of the State. Adding to the devastated landscape, was a serious and growing vermin control problem.

Immediately after President Nixon sent 1,000 federal troops into the area, Governor John Williams declared martial law. Using federal troops and state police, all roads leading into the area where the eye had crossed the coast were sealed off. Military and local police imposed a curfew. The first problem to overcome was the thousands of dead farm animals, pets, and wildlife. Camille's incredible storm surge had drowned thousands of animals. Heavy equipment was brought in to bury thousands of dead cows, horses and pets. Next, insects and rodents had quickly overrun the stricken area - feeding on dead animal carcasses and rotting food. Rattlesnakes, fire ants, and rats bit dozens of victims as they sifted through the rubble. In an attempt to control fire ants, low flying spray planes roared up and down the Mississippi coast, dropping 100,000 pounds of mirex.
 
we always hear how animals know about these kind of things by instinct.
It would be interesting to know how animals, wild or otherwise are reacting now.
 
ducklite said:
I voted no, because I don't think "fascinated" is a good adjective to use. Horrified would be a better choice.

I'm waiting for my friends mom and dad and grandmother to arrive, they will stay with me for as long as they need to. :grouphug: His mom and dad live in NOLA, his gram lives in Biloxi. I hope they have homes to go back to when this is over.

Anne

Why, because fascinated is usually associated with good events? The definition of fascinated fits perfectly since all it really means is that you can't turn away from the event.


From Merriam Webster

Fascinated: 2 a : to transfix and hold spellbound by an irresistible power

I can't imagine a better adjective.
 
Luv2Roam said:
we always hear how animals know about these kind of things by instinct.
It would be interesting to know how animals, wild or otherwise are reacting now.

I'm no where near the eye. I have two ferrets, and they've both been a little out of sorts today. They are older, so are normally very sedate and sleep most of the time. But today one just wants to be held, the other has been agitated. It is odd how the animals know...

Anne
 
I keep popping from message board to message board for updates from posters in those areas and we have 2 TVs on for the news. Hubby keeps yelling down for me to change to such and such a channel.

Earlier on The Weather Channel, they had a man on who stated that FEMA is expecting 40,000 - 50,000 casualties if NO is hit directly. It's just numbing really. We can't even fathom the possibilities of this storm.
 
The death and destruction of a hurricane is part of God's plan. Those people were meant to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. While others in the path of the hurricane will survive, because it is part of God's plan. Who made the hurricane so large in the first place?
 
I am now. I had no idea until this afternoon when dh told me it had become such a killer storm. we just had it cross our path on thursday and I havent had the news on since. Now I'm thinking what if it hit us with such force? cant even imagine what these people are going to see tomorrow morning when they wake up. Its got to be truly devastating..

wow- there always has to be one person to stir the pot when people are coming together in such a horrific time. Shame on you.
 
Yes, I've been watching the weather channel all day. It just about brings me to tears. My heart breaks for all of these people in the storms' track and I've also been thinking about all of the animals. I'm a huge animal lover so it's upsetting for me to think about all of them that will suffer. I just heard on the news too that people going to the superdome in New Orleans can not take their animals, so it makes me wonder what they will do with them?
 


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