shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
There's this insane storm that landed on us.

We've had not one but two tornado warnings. Both originating in Staten Island.
And there's a tornado warning in Brooklyn. Their definition of tornado warning is not the same as mine. I came from a Kansas. A tornado warning in Kansas is a tornado has hit the ground. In NYC, a tornado warning is the conditions are perfect for one but they can't tell if there is one anywhere and haven't seen one.

LOL!

NY is hilarious when it comes to weather warnings.

Also keep in mind that if a tornado hit -- what would we do? We live on a series of islands. Basements are necessarily accessible. I mean come on! Although I do live in a 77 unit apartment complex built in the 1920s with stone, brick and motar. I figure I'm safe. Also the airports are still open and running business as usual, as are the ferries and subways.

The weather people are a big indignant about it.

What happened? We had it in the 60s all day long, and then suddenly it got warmer.
Boom.

Date: 2019-05-29 02:07 am (UTC)
wpadmirer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] wpadmirer
Yeah, definitely not like tornado warnings anywhere else.

We get them in Florida, and most of the time it means there is going to be a damn tornado. But we don't get anything like Kansas and Oklahoma get. (My sister lives in Oklahoma City.) That's crazy shit.

Date: 2019-05-29 02:50 am (UTC)
wpadmirer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] wpadmirer
Yeah, and Florida is having temperatures in the low 100s and no rain. The world is wacky.

Date: 2019-05-29 04:40 am (UTC)
cactuswatcher: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cactuswatcher
In AZ, too, we've been unusually cool. It snowed a little last week on top of Mt Lemmon, the highest mountain very near Tucson. The Midwest has been pretty much spring as usual: cool air from the west hits hot moist air from the gulf and you get one storm after another. I heard NBC saying tonight that all the rivers around St. Louis are high. Not a big surprise. If the Missouri and the Mississippi are high, the rest of the rivers will back up above flood stage even if it hasn't rained much in the local area.

Date: 2019-05-29 04:25 am (UTC)
conuly: (Default)
From: [personal profile] conuly
A tornado touched down in 2007, in Brooklyn. Prior to that, it took out half the trees on my block and twisted the gutter off my roof.
Edited Date: 2019-05-29 04:25 am (UTC)

Date: 2019-05-29 04:25 am (UTC)
conuly: (Default)
From: [personal profile] conuly
Well, it's like snow in Alabama - a quarter inch, and they close schools, because people there don't know how to deal with those.

Date: 2019-05-29 05:23 am (UTC)
cactuswatcher: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cactuswatcher
Yeah, anyplace else "conditions are right" means a tornado watch not a warning. The local media weather people love to play up anything to help them get an audience. In Phoenix they'd track the dust storms in real time like they were tornadoes. The actual property damage from the dust storms is pretty trivial.

It used to be the weather bureau wouldn't even call it a tornado real time unless somebody the weather bureau trusted saw it. In St. Louis some folks would call any dark cloud they saw a tornado. I've seen a lot of ugly green clouds, but I've never seen much rotation or a tornado on the ground. I've seen the aftermath of a tornado: very bad for those who get hit. But, at least in St. Louis, you're far more likely to get serious damage in a wide area from a microburst than a tornado. Not surprisingly a lot of folks confuse microburst damage for tornado damage. (microbursts knock all manner of things over, rip off roofs and break otherwise sturdy trees, because of severe straight line winds. Tornados just demolish anything they actually hit, because of the twsiting winds.) It was watching a microburst tear a full grown walnut tree out of the ground that convinced me that it was wiser to seek shelter in severe weather, rather than try to watch the show going on outside.

Brick and mortar isn't safe against a tornado. But given the chances of a tornado hitting anything in particular in NYC, I wouldn't worry about it if I were you. ;o)

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