Hurrincane Ida in the Gulf of Mexico

sallylou

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How did this hurricane sneak up on me? Hurricane Ida is entering the Gulf of Mexico as a category 2. The current cone suggests that Hurricane Ida will make land fall along LA-MS-AL. Florida is also in the cone.

Be alert and prepared if you're along the Gulf Coast.

Here are some links:

National Hurricane Center

STORM2K • View forum - Active Storms - All Basins
 
Our weather guys have been following IDA for a few days. I first heard about it early last week. Luckily, I am on the East coast, but we could still get a lot of rain out of Ida. We are having massive breezes this weekend. We've already had a palm tree blown down and my MIL's Thanksgiving decorations in the yard have broken due to the wind.
 
What is President Obama doing about Hurricane Ida?
 
Only you would take a weather announcement and use it to bash the President, Reba. This is hardly a political thread. It's about a hurricane and hurricane preparation. Don't you need to get some bottled water or something?
 
Me being the paranoid type since I lost my hearing, I have already taken 10 milk jugs and filled 3/4 full and put them into the deep freeze. It helps the electric when there's not much food in there, but it also helps to prepare for any weather issues.

We do have stockpiles of canned and non-perishables in the utility room and we have gotten the generator fixed and have gas for it. We've brought in the oil lamps and lamp oil, and have 50 (yes 50) flashlights ready to go with extra batteries.

The reason for so much, but in-laws were pack rats. I am OCD enough that I have to have everything planned and ready for anything. We even have all the blankets and comforters from Missouri in the house. they just been freshly washed. I think I'm just too obsessive.
 
I hope that's not so many people get an injury or a death...... Maybe none at all, I hope.
 
It was really weird before Ike hit. People were in some kind of denial and they didn't really prepare well for it. Evacuation fatigue, I guess.

I knew when they evacuated Galveston it was going to be bad. It was the worst hurricane I've experienced, and I've been through several major hurricanes. I lasted for about 6 hours best to my recollection and it seemed like forever. We were very fortunate because we only lost a tree which fell on a power line instead of our house. I hope that we don't get another hurricane like that in a long time.

Three people remained on Galveston Island during Ike and lived to tell about it. One guy was in a wooded house on a pier over the water. Crazy! They show the videos on the weather channel every once in a while.

I'm not ready so I'll be watching closely. If we are in the cone later this week, I'll be stocking up. We didn't have power for 8 days after Ike. Night was DARK!
 
What is President Obama doing about Hurricane Ida?

Only you would take a weather announcement and use it to bash the President, Reba. This is hardly a political thread. It's about a hurricane and hurricane preparation. Don't you need to get some bottled water or something?

:werd:

While it was prudent to criticise presidents in the past for their inadequate response to past hurricanes, Ida will probably make landfall as a tropical storm. This is hardly a situation where Federal response is called for. Instead, I would ask "What is each state doing to prepare for this storm?"
 
LA has already declared an emergency. I'm not sure about other states.

The second like is the best info for local responses. I've even communicated with people from my part of town there. You can find out things like which stores have batteries, etc.
 
LA has already declared an emergency. I'm not sure about other states.

The second like is the best info for local responses. I've even communicated with people from my part of town there. You can find out things like which stores have batteries, etc.

Yup, I know. :)
 
update from CNN

Hurricane Ida moves into U.S. Gulf Coast
Hurricane Ida moves into U.S. Gulf Coast - CNN.com

(CNN) -- Hurricane Ida moved into the southern Gulf of Mexico Sunday, prompting a declaration of emergency in Louisiana and concern along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

The storm regained hurricane intensity overnight Saturday, becoming a Category 2 hurricane, but forecasters said it is expected to weaken as it moves north. Ida drenched Nicaragua after making landfall last week as a Category 1 hurricane, then weakened to a tropical storm before resuming strength.

In El Salvador, at least 91 people died in flooding and mudslides, according to the government, but a low-pressure system out of the Pacific -- not Hurricane Ida -- triggered the disaster, forecaster Robby Berg of the National Hurricane Center said Sunday.

A hurricane warning, meaning hurricane conditions are possible within 24 hours, extends from Pascagoula, Mississippi to Indian Pass, Florida, forecasters said.

From Grande Isle, Louisiana, to west of Pascagoula, Mississippi, a tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch are in effect. This area includes New Orleans, which the center earlier excluded from the watch, and Lake Pontchartrain, the hurricane center said.

In anticipation of the storm's arrival, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Sunday afternoon.

Hurricane Ida "threatens the safety and security of those citizens" along the state's southeast coastline, he wrote in the declaration. The declaration gives the director of the governor's office of emergency preparedness authority "to undertake any activity authorized by law which he deems necessary and appropriate" to prepare for the possibility of a hurricane.

Alabama's Baldwin County commission urged that residents living in mobile homes, coastal communities or low-lying, flood-prone areas voluntarily evacuate. The county is under a local state of emergency and opened a shelter, according to a Sunday night statement from the county commission.

As of 10 p.m. ET Sunday, Ida had maximum sustained winds near 105 mph (165 km/hr) with higher gusts. But the storm was expected to weaken on Monday and possibly begin losing tropical characteristics on Tuesday, the hurricane center said.

The center of Ida was located about 400 miles (645 km) south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River, forecasters said. It was moving north-northwest at nearly 14 mph (22 km/hr) and was expected to increase in speed. The storm was expected to be near coastal areas of the northern Gulf by Monday night or early Tuesday, the hurricane center said.

As Ida moves in the Gulf of Mexico, conditions are expected to be unfavorable for any additional development, said CNN meteorologist Dave Hennen. Ida is expected to weaken because of a combination of wind shear, cooler water temperatures and the storm's interaction with a strong frontal system pushing off the Gulf Coast, he said.

But Ida is forecast to remain a hurricane as it moves in the northern Gulf toward the U.S. coast, the center said.

Florida's Division of Emergency Management asked residents to have disaster plans in place.

"Whether Ida maintains a storm or loses tropical characteristics, the Florida Gulf Coast region has the potential to see several inches of rain, strong winds, isolated tornadoes and dangerous surf and coastal flooding beginning Monday evening and continuing into Wednesday," the office said in a statement.

The area stretching from Indian Pass, Florida, to Aucilla River, Florida, is also under a tropical storm warning. Tropical storm conditions are possible within 24 hours, the center said.

Ida could drop between 1 and 3 inches of rain on portions of western Cuba, with isolated amounts of 8 inches possible in some spots, forecasters said. The central and eastern areas of the Gulf Coast northward to eastern Tennessee Valley and southern Appalachian Mountains could see 3 to 5 inches of rain with some areas getting as much as 8 inches, the center said.

Ida is the Atlantic region's ninth named storm. The Atlantic hurricane season ends November 30.
 
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