I could have sworn that I posted part four of my 2004 Weather Stories last night...but somehow they din't make it onto the web. So I will combine Part Four with the planned Conclusion.
6. Record number of Typhoons in Japan: Typhoon Tokage raked the Japanese islands between October 19-21, killing 79 people. It was the most fatalities from a typhoon in Japan since October 1979. Tokage was the tenth typhoon to affect Japan during the year, which was a new record. The old record was six.
5. Kansas Tornadoes: Significant tornadoes struck Harper County, Kansas on May 12th and again on May 29th. I was there to view seven of the nine tornadoes on the 29th. There were eleven tornadoes on the 12th.
4. Alabama November Tornado Outbreak: An outbreak of severe weather on the afternoon of the 23rd and the early morning hours of the 24th produced sixteen tornadoes across the state. Four of the tornadoes were rated as F2 intensity.
3. Hurricanes Charley, Frances, and Jeanne all target Central Florida: Hurricane Charley became the strongest and most damaging hurricane to strike the U.S. since 1992’s Hurricane Andrew. The category four hurricane produced a 180 mph wind gust at Punta Gorda, Florida. Twenty two people died and total damages amounted to $15 billion. Hurricane Frances made landfall near Sewell’s Point, Florida on September 5th with winds of 105 mph. It caused more extensive damage as it crossed the Florida Peninsula and produced over 100 tornadoes over the Southeast. Twenty three people died as a result of the storm. Frances also caused extensive flooding in the Asheville, NC area. Jeanne made landfall at very nearly the same location as did Frances on September 26th with top winds of 120 mph. The hurricane produced more extensive damage as it crossed the Sunshine State before exiting into the Gulf. Ten people died from Hurricane Jeanne in the U.S.
2. Indian Ocean Tsunami: A massive undersea earthquake during the early morning hours of December 26th off the coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra (magnitude 9.0) produced a tsunami that spread out across the Indian Ocean like ripples from a stone thrown in a pond. As the tsunami reached shore across Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka Thailand, Malaysia, the Maldives and Bangladesh. So far, over 114,000 people have died, and the death toll promises to go much higher.
NUMBER ONE
This list has been a blend of Alabama, national and international weather stories. It is hard to pick anything over the unqualified disaster that happened in the Indian Ocean this past Sunday, but as far as Alabama impact, Hurricane Ivan’s landfall at Gulf Shores on September 16th had to be our top weather story.
Ivan will be long remembered as a classic Cape Verde hurricane with a twenty five day lifespan as it formed in the far eastern Atlantic, crossed the southern Windward Islands, moved into the Gulf of Mexico and made landfall on the Alabama coast. It reached Category Five intensity three times during its life. On the evening of the 11th, Air Force reconnaissance measured a central pressure of 910 mb, which tied Ivan with 1998’s Mitch as the fifth strongest Atlantic hurricane ever observed.
Grenada, Jamaica and the Cayman Islands were seriously affected by the major hurricane. Ivan weakened to strong Category Three status right before reaching land in the United States with top winds of 120 mph. The eye had expanded to a diameter of 50 miles before landfall, so the strongest winds occurred near the Alabama/Florida border. The worst storm surge damage occurred in eastern sections of Baldwin County, Alabama and Escambia County, Florida. Here storm surges reached 10-15 feet above normal. A minimum pressure of 943 millibars was measured as Fairhope, on the western side of the eye. The highest official wind speed measured was a gust of 108 mph at the Pensacola Naval Air Station. A wind gust of 157 mph was observed on an oil drilling rig 70 miles south of Dauphin Island on the afternoon of the 15th. In addition, a remarkable wave height of 52.5 feet was reported from a buoy south of the Alabama coast that afternoon. This may be a record wave height for any NOAA buoy.
A swarm of tornadoes in the Florida Panhandle killed seven people jus before landfall. These were just three of the amazing 117 tornadoes recorded across the eastern United States associated with Ivan. Ninety four people died as a direct result of Ivan, including twenty six in the United States. The estimated U.S. damage is placed at $15 billion.
Damaging winds and heavy flooding rains accompanied Ivan all the way into Central Alabama. At one point, 1.8 million people were without power, including a record 832,000 Alabama Power customers.
Top Weather Stories of 2004 (CONCLUSION)
December 30, 2004, 11:09 pm
by Bill Murray
in General Thoughts
After Christmas Thoughts
December 30, 2004, 9:40 am
I love Thanksgiving and Christmas. But New Year's Day is also exciting for me. I believe in New Year's resolutions (strongly so). After all, if we are slack about renewing and improving ourselves, we will slowly fade away.
I don't believe the old saying that "resolutions are made to be broken." Yes, human nature will insure that we can't keep them all. But if you only keep 3 out of 10 that is an improvement.
I got off my diet during Thanksgiving and Christmas and enjoyed one of my greatest loves--sausage balls. If stranded on a small Pacific island and I could have a sausage ball on the hour and a poptart (frosted brown sugar cinnamon, of course) on the half-hour, I might decline being rescued.
But, alas, now there will be no more sausage balls until next Thanksgiving and Christmas. I had a lone poptart several weeks ago and that was the first one in over a year.
I need to advertise my resolutions so I will be held accountable. So here goes:
1. I promise to lose an additional 25 pounds in 2005.
2. I will continue searching for an electric shaver that REALLY works.
3. I will continue highly scientific research to find how to make my shredded wheat and oatmeal taste better. (the box tastes better than the content.)
4. I will walk at least a mile every day. (That's a given because Little Miss Molly will see to that)
5. I will not wait until late Saturday night or very early Sunday morning to study my Sunday School lesson.
6. I will try to learn more about weather and improve forecasting ability. (Please take my word for it--there is still plenty to learn even though I have been in weather for 47 years. Forecasting will never be perfect)
7. I will continue to return shopping carts to their rightful locations after loading my purchases in my car. (It is another one of my top pet peeves and I have a near spotless record on this one. I have NEVER left a shopping cart abandoned but once. Lightning was popping all around at the time and the shopping cart was metal
8. I will try to become less fearful of lightning. That is the one element of weather that I am most afraid of. But I don't want to get TOO brave!
9. I will continue to use my turn indicators. I am very good at that anyway. It is one of my top pet peeves along with tailgating.
10. I will continue to obey speed limits. When I am traveling down the Birmingham Autobahn (Interstate 459) I set my speed control on 68 MPH (2 MPH under the speed limit) and migrate to the right lane. I am a brave person, but if "road rage" breaks out, you will see me jumping the ditch and heading for the woods.
So, wish me luck. Looks like it is badly needed!
Happy New Year!
I don't believe the old saying that "resolutions are made to be broken." Yes, human nature will insure that we can't keep them all. But if you only keep 3 out of 10 that is an improvement.
I got off my diet during Thanksgiving and Christmas and enjoyed one of my greatest loves--sausage balls. If stranded on a small Pacific island and I could have a sausage ball on the hour and a poptart (frosted brown sugar cinnamon, of course) on the half-hour, I might decline being rescued.
But, alas, now there will be no more sausage balls until next Thanksgiving and Christmas. I had a lone poptart several weeks ago and that was the first one in over a year.
I need to advertise my resolutions so I will be held accountable. So here goes:
1. I promise to lose an additional 25 pounds in 2005.
2. I will continue searching for an electric shaver that REALLY works.
3. I will continue highly scientific research to find how to make my shredded wheat and oatmeal taste better. (the box tastes better than the content.)
4. I will walk at least a mile every day. (That's a given because Little Miss Molly will see to that)
5. I will not wait until late Saturday night or very early Sunday morning to study my Sunday School lesson.
6. I will try to learn more about weather and improve forecasting ability. (Please take my word for it--there is still plenty to learn even though I have been in weather for 47 years. Forecasting will never be perfect)
7. I will continue to return shopping carts to their rightful locations after loading my purchases in my car. (It is another one of my top pet peeves and I have a near spotless record on this one. I have NEVER left a shopping cart abandoned but once. Lightning was popping all around at the time and the shopping cart was metal
8. I will try to become less fearful of lightning. That is the one element of weather that I am most afraid of. But I don't want to get TOO brave!
9. I will continue to use my turn indicators. I am very good at that anyway. It is one of my top pet peeves along with tailgating.
10. I will continue to obey speed limits. When I am traveling down the Birmingham Autobahn (Interstate 459) I set my speed control on 68 MPH (2 MPH under the speed limit) and migrate to the right lane. I am a brave person, but if "road rage" breaks out, you will see me jumping the ditch and heading for the woods.
So, wish me luck. Looks like it is badly needed!
Happy New Year!
by J.B. Elliott
in General Thoughts
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