rivka: (Default)
rivka ([personal profile] rivka) wrote2003-09-14 10:58 pm
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Apparently, Hurricane Isabel - now 1mph short of being a Cat 5 storm - is expected to make landfall somewhere on the East Coast, between North Carolina and New Jersey. My local weather report, however, is remarkably bland.

Some houses in Baltimore have big wooden shutters that cover the windows. I've always thought of that as a lovely, quaint decorative touch, but now I'm starting to consider that there might be other uses. We're inland, so you wouldn't think there would be all that much of an issue, but Washington DC is even further inland, and
In Washington, D.C., emergency officials were working on acquiring additional sandbags, and planned to begin a public education campaign and meet with other department and critical services leaders Monday.

"Then we're going to pray," said Peter LaPorte, director of the Emergency Management Agency.
I poked around a little online, looking for hurricane advice, but I didn't care much for what I found. Sure, we'll go out and buy some bottled water, extra batteries, bagged ice, and food that doesn't need cooking - but surely we're not going to need to shut off all our utilities and crouch on the floor in an inside room with our heads covered. Not in Baltimore.
ext_12719: black and white engraving of a person who looks sort of like me (Default)

Ummm...

[identity profile] gannet.livejournal.com 2003-09-15 04:10 am (UTC)(link)
You don't know me, I think (you're on my friendsfriends list). I just wanted to say that Chapel Hill, NC was hit by Hurricane Fran a few years ago badly enough that we had to boil water for a few days and power was out for two weeks. We're three-four hours from the coast by car, so the fact of being inland isn't enough...

Not that you should panic.

p.s. Congrats on the PhD!