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Jerry1
08-28-2006, 08:08 PM
Floridians get prepared as Ernesto nears By ADRIAN SAINZ, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 13 minutes ago



MIAMI - Florida residents rushed to fill their prescriptions and stood in long lines for gasoline, food and other supplies Monday as officials warned people not to wait for Tropical Storm Ernesto to become a hurricane again before taking precautions.

Forecasters said Ernesto could grow back into a hurricane in the warm waters off Cuba and come ashore in South Florida as early as Tuesday night, exactly one year after Hurricane Katrina pummeled the Gulf Coast.

It would be the first hurricane to hit the United States this year.

Memories of Katrina and the seven hurricanes that have struck Florida since 2004 were fresh in the minds of many.

"Make sure you have the supplies for the 72 hours after the storm," Gov. Jeb Bush warned people in Tallahassee, a day after declaring a state of emergency for all Florida. "A hurricane's a hurricane, and it has a devastation we've already seen. All you have to do is rewind to last year and see."

Pedro Ballesteros, 40, carried two new six-gallon gas tanks out of a Home Depot for his home generator.

"Every year we prepare a little more because we're learning from our past ordeals," he said. "I'm taking care of everything that's important — flashlights, batteries, gasoline."

Forecasters issued a tropical storm warning Monday afternoon for all of South Florida's eastern coast, north to Vero Beach, as well as the Keys and the Everglades. A warning means tropical storm activity is expected within 24 hours. About 400 miles of the state's densely populated Atlantic coast were under a hurricane watch, issued when such conditions could occur within 36 hours.

At 5 p.m. EDT, the fifth named storm of the hurricane season had top sustained winds of 40 mph, 1 mph above the minimum to be a tropical storm and down from 75 mph Sunday, the National Hurricane Center said. It was centered over Cuba, about 383 miles southeast of Key West. It was moving northwest at 13 mph.

Over the weekend, Ernesto became the first hurricane of the Atlantic season and lashed the Dominican Republic and Haiti. One person was reported killed along Haiti's southern coast.

There were no immediate reports of any damage or injuries in Cuba. The government regularly undertakes mass evacuations before tropical storms and hurricanes. This time, Cubans moved cattle to higher ground, tourists were evacuated from hotels, and baseball games were rescheduled for earlier in the day in Havana.

The Bahamas on Monday ordered boats in southern islands to stay in port. The island chain had a tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch in effect for western islands close to Florida's coast.

Forecaster Richard Knabb at the hurricane center in Miami urged people not to become complacent. "Just because the system is not a hurricane now, doesn't mean it can't be a hurricane later," he said.

In the Keys, visitors were ordered out, and authorities planned to evacuate sick and elderly people to Miami. Mobile home residents in the Keys were also urged to clear out. Miami-Dade County opened a shelter for people from the Keys.

Some Keys residents and business owners put plywood over windows or installed hurricane shutters as tourists struggled to get flights out.

As of midafternoon, no large-scale evacuations were ordered on the Florida mainland.

NASA dropped plans to launch the space shuttle on Tuesday and was prepared to roll Atlantis back to its giant hangar if necessary. Cruise ship companies diverted several liners to avoid the storm.

Many Florida residents rushed to stores to gather supplies and fill prescriptions. Motorists had to wait up to an hour and a half at several gas stations across South Florida.

Adrian Scarani, manager of a Marathon service station on a busy intersection in Miami-Dade County, ran out of regular gasoline. "It was crazy here this morning," he said.

Because of the demand at gasoline stations, the governor cautioned residents "not to overdue it" as they stock up on fuel. Bush urged motorists to drive as little as possible but added, "people don't need to overreact."

Kathleen Campos shopped for food and water at a Winn-Dixie in Miami and was also worried about getting enough cash, which might be hard to find after a storm if the electricity is knocked out.

Counties along the coast offered sandbags and got ready to distribute ice and water. Broward and Miami-Dade counties canceled school on Tuesday so that students would not get caught in the storm on their way home.

James Krie, 44, a Key West resident and general contractor, seemed unconcerned about the brewing storm. He acknowledged that outsiders might not understand.

"I feel like they look at us and say, `You dummies live down there,'" he said.

___



I thought I should post this. First big storm/possible hurricane to hit the US this year.

Worst part is that one of my closest friends just moved down there a few months ago....right in Ernesto's predicted path.
I figure a prayer or two may be in order here...

YourHonor
08-28-2006, 09:37 PM
It kills me about how people live where there are storms in a season as to where they have to move their trailer or board up their windows every year.

The storms are bound to hit certain areas and they hit every year. I wouldn't stay or move to those areas.

How about the fucking wack jobs that live in a mobile home in an area called "tornado alley" What a fucking place to live. They may stand a chance.

JoeFromDetroit
08-28-2006, 10:26 PM
Pussy year for Hurricanes...global warming, maaannn.

BIV
08-29-2006, 02:04 AM
Here he comes! Here comes Ernesto!

wakeboardfit
08-29-2006, 08:31 AM
this is a nothing storm. all it means is that i get to work from home on wednesday and my girlfriend gets the day off of school (she's a teacher btw before you guys get started) Jerry1, your buddy will be fine. the news really does make these storms worse than they seem. they are actually kind of fun.

d0uche_n0zzle
08-29-2006, 08:46 AM
Build Storm-proof homes, but that would make too much sense. :idiot:

Turtle
08-29-2006, 08:54 AM
I like toast.

Jerry1
08-29-2006, 12:57 PM
this is a nothing storm. all it means is that i get to work from home on wednesday and my girlfriend gets the day off of school (she's a teacher btw before you guys get started) Jerry1, your buddy will be fine. the news really does make these storms worse than they seem. they are actually kind of fun.
Thanks, you are probably right. Hope you are right. God I hate the media!:icon_evil

tar_baby
08-31-2006, 09:06 PM
haha..just watching the weather channel and saw a sign go behind the guy reporting live that said: "Ernesto needs a green card"

fuckin classic..anyone else catch this?

B54
08-31-2006, 09:39 PM
haha..just watching the weather channel and saw a sign go behind the guy reporting live that said: "Ernesto needs a green card"

fuckin classic..anyone else catch this?

Who the fuck watches the Weather Channel?

Ernesto didn't even touch Flordia. This season is going to be a slow one. I remember how there were predicted to be 10 major hurricanes this year, now it is down to 3. People bought that Global Warming was causing greater activity.

NoSurviivors
08-31-2006, 10:10 PM
arent we supposed to get like up to 6 inches of rain in NJ?? My basements gonna leak! mayor Nig- Nagin!!! hep me!!! Is gonna die!

NoSurviivors
08-31-2006, 10:12 PM
I like toast.

I'm made of cheese!

tar_baby
08-31-2006, 10:21 PM
Who the fuck watches the Weather Channel?

Ernesto didn't even touch Flordia. This season is going to be a slow one. I remember how there were predicted to be 10 major hurricanes this year, now it is down to 3. People bought that Global Warming was causing greater activity.

who watches the weather channel?...i do my friend...between the US Open and college football I was watching the weather channel

PALLY
08-31-2006, 11:06 PM
It will be fine. Just some rain. I heard it was going to be sunny the rest of the weekend there. So who the hell knows....

angrymissy
09-02-2006, 08:21 PM
Ernesto fucked my street up. My street an hour ago:

http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a63/angrymissy/ourstreet.jpg

tar_baby
09-02-2006, 08:51 PM
jesus christ..i didnt think it had that much steam left

angrymissy
09-02-2006, 09:26 PM
I live 4 houses from the South Bay on Long Island, and there are canals behind the houses as well, so I guess we're prone to flooding. I've only lived here since June, so when I looked outside and saw that, I had a "holy shit" moment. The waters are receding a bit right now but its still raining and REALLY windy.