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Alembic Club » Miscellaneous » Archive: 2005 » Archive through June 03, 2005 » 2003 Archive » Archive through September 15, 2003 » Let's get going all you East coast bass players! « Previous Next »

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elzie
Advanced Member
Username: elzie

Post Number: 206
Registered: 8-2002
Posted on Sunday, September 14, 2003 - 4:25 pm:   Edit Post

Okay, we have one mean category 5 hurricane heading in our direction. It's time to crank up those weathermakers and other amps to redirect this thing.

I will be using a bi-amped setup for 600 watts into 6 10" and 2 15" speakers. Let's get these puppies cranking! With enough power we may be able to avoid this thing and send it back out to the Atlantic where it belongs, but not too much, we don't want to redirect it to Belgium ;)

On a more serious note, who here is in the Carolinas and are you planning to pack up???

Paul The Good One
palembic
Senior Member
Username: palembic

Post Number: 593
Registered: 9-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 12:31 am:   Edit Post

Well ....let them come our way!
Just give us a yell and we start playing too so the thing cane hurri in the middle of the atlantic. Except a lonely hareng with a heartache there will be no damage.

Paul the bad one
alembic76407
Intermediate Member
Username: alembic76407

Post Number: 179
Registered: 5-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 5:46 am:   Edit Post

do I need to load up Tornadic Thunder and head east, it works well for tornados but I'm not sure about hurricanes, we may have to put everybodys amps together, hurricane or not, that might be fun


David T (The loud one)
davehouck
Intermediate Member
Username: davehouck

Post Number: 141
Registered: 5-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 6:26 am:   Edit Post

I live in North Carolina. I'm four hours from the coast. I'm watching the weather channel.
bigredbass
Intermediate Member
Username: bigredbass

Post Number: 159
Registered: 9-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 8:55 am:   Edit Post

While we have a lot of fun, let me be utterly serious at this time.

I grew up on the Texas Gulf Coast and have lived in Pensacola and Jacksonville, FL, prior to moving to Nashville in 1990. I lived most of my life warily eyeing the hurricanes that made it into the Gulf. My earliest memory is my dad carrying me through our living room , , . through waist deep water (HIS waist) and through the backyard to our next door neighbors' house, through gale force winds and rain. They had an old house that was up on blocks. We kids slept on the floor and I could hear the flood water lapping right beneath us as if we were on a pier. This was hurricane Audrey in the late 50s.

You can't 'ride out' or 'have a hurricane party' with a monster like Isabel. I'm writing this Monday AM. Where it will go, how strong it will be if it comes ashore, who knows? But, SHOULD it be heading for you at its current strength, LEAVE.
Make sure your homeowners insurance is paid up, get the wife, kids, pets, and irreplaceable papers and GO.

This is how it will come.

The weather immediately before will be nice. It will then seem as if a hard rain is coming. Before any bad weather begins, the wind will steadily pick up. If you're at the beach the waves and tides will grow higher and higher in an ominous fashion. Over the next 24 hours, the rain and wind will increase steadily past anything most have us have ever experienced. Hurricanes spawn lots of tornados. But unlike a tornado whose winds come and go quickly, this wind will blow faster and faster for many hours. Trees will begin to dance. Yard furniture become projectiles. The lights will certainly go out, as well as phones, water, cable, even cell phones. Rain and flooding of almost Biblical proportions. You could have several feet of water in your home. Your house could survive only to have the neighbor's tree come through the living room. You or your car or your house could fly. And unless you have an M1 Abrams in the driveway, you're trapped. You probably won't be able to drive over the downed trees, power poles, etc., or your car will be already flooded and useless. Transformers will be exploding on poles like m80s.

Now if you are in the bullseye, then the eye will pass over you. Calm, sunny weather for a little while. You will see that you are in a 'canyon'. with a wall of clouds around you. Then everything I described above will happen all over again in reverse order.

Are you getting the picture? You can't go to 'an interior room' and wait for this to blow over.

Afterwards, there may be no power, water, gas, etc. for days, maybe weeks. There may be no grocery stores, restuarants, banks. The emergency workers will be completely overwhelmed. You may no longer have a home, or it may be horribly damaged.

I've run through this because I'm always stunned by how many 'new' people have moved to the Gulf and Atlantic coasts who have NO IDEA of just how dangerous these big hurricanes are. And even if you live 50 to 100 miles inland, you can be in danger.

Fortunately, lots of these things weaken, stay out to sea, or they miss you and hit somewhere else.

But if you are in or near the bullseye, take care, be smart, take you and yours and get the hell out. Later, when you think your friends will laugh at you for running out, they won't.
They will wish they had also.

Good Luck and God Bless You

J o e y
elzie
Advanced Member
Username: elzie

Post Number: 207
Registered: 8-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 10:44 am:   Edit Post

I too remember a few hurricanes as a kid, right here in Massachusetts. I happen to like extreme weather conditions, to a point.

When I got married in October of 1999, we had our honeymoon on Key West. We got hit with a pretty good hurricane while we were there. I want to say it was Irene, but I'm not 100%. It was a direct hit. It was quite an experience seeing the whole island under water!

I was awakened at 5 am by the owner of the guest house that we stayed at. We were hurrying to put ALL the furniture up on chairs before the water came in. That was not fun at 5 am with a hangover.... The floor was 12" above the ground and water was coming in. There were only a few, and I mean a few, spots on the island that I could see land.

I hope that everyone that could be in this hurricane's path is ready to move before it comes to shore. I also hope everyone stays safe :-)

Paul The Good One (when I'm sleeping)
dela217
Intermediate Member
Username: dela217

Post Number: 195
Registered: 6-2002
Posted on Monday, September 15, 2003 - 11:48 am:   Edit Post

Yep. Get out! I grew up here in New Orleans and my family "rode out" hurricane Betsy. What a mess. We were without power for a couple of weeks. I was about 10 years old or so and can still remember quite vividly a man getting shot to death for breaking in line at an ice house. Ice, when you are without power for 2 weeks is something to kill for, I guess.

I still remember hurricane Camile too. Also a category 5 storm. After this storm passed, I was amazed at the damage. There is a bridge about 40 minutes away from where I live. This bridge is about 2.5 miles long. After the storm the bridge was covered with litter. I do not mean paper and trash. What I saw on the MIDDLE of this bridge were toilets, refrigerators, etc...

Get out.

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