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Cyclone Yasi (Read 20147 times)
Equitist
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #120 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:51pm
 


Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:43pm:
[Comment From peter peter: ]
alice river townsville. neighbour has lost entire row of 6 feet tall shrubs, across the road a 30 foot gum try snapped in half. and the real deal hasnt arrived yet Sad


We had trees snap in half around here in the December 2000 narrow freak storm that ripped the roofing off our high-set waterfront balcony and shredded it all over the front yard (>900sqm block with house towards rear waterfront)...

In the same storm, the roofing of the much larger balcony of the builder's home a few doors down from us was lifted off in one piece and landed intact on the roof across the road - it lifted so high and suddenly that it actually cleared the large TV antenna of the original (builder's) home...


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mellie
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #121 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:52pm
 
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:47pm:
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:45pm:
Go to this page....live comments from people all over the world

http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/anna-bligh-warns-people-to-evacuate-ahead-of-cyclone-yasi/story-e6freoof-1225998571123


Damn. You had me going for a minute. I thought it was the live cricket scores.


Mind your cricket cap doesn't fly off in the wind there...
Wink
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Ex Dame Pansi
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #122 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:55pm
 
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:47pm:
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:45pm:
Go to this page....live comments from people all over the world

http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/anna-bligh-warns-people-to-evacuate-ahead-of-cyclone-yasi/story-e6freoof-1225998571123


Damn. You had me going for a minute. I thought it was the live cricket scores.



you probably only missed 1o minutes nothing will have happened
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #123 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:59pm
 
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:55pm:
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:47pm:
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 5:45pm:
Go to this page....live comments from people all over the world

http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/anna-bligh-warns-people-to-evacuate-ahead-of-cyclone-yasi/story-e6freoof-1225998571123


Damn. You had me going for a minute. I thought it was the live cricket scores.



you probably only missed 1o minutes nothing will have happened



No wait, I think one of the terracotta soldiers moved...may have applied some block-out to his nose...or swatted a fly... Wink

'live' cricket score. Irony noted!

Cool
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« Last Edit: Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:08pm by mellie »  

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Life_goes_on
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #124 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:08pm
 
I packed a cut lunch, filled the thermos and stuffed the esky for the drive to Bundaberg today.

You wouldn't know the place experienced a flood on a month ago. All the places that were up their roofs in floodwater have been given a new lick of paint and are back in action. Apart from a few giant potholes and a lot of temporary road repairs you simply can't tell that there was a recent flood. I was expecting to see at least a few businesses still closed and a lot of homes still being worked on.

Cyclones f-ck up places a lot worse than floods.
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"You're just one lucky motherf-cker" - Someone, 5th February 2013

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #125 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:10pm
 
Worst cyclone in memory looms off Qld



Thousands of north Queenslanders are hunkered down in shelters and homes waiting for the most powerful cyclone in nearly a century to slam into the coast south of Cairns.

Category five tropical Cyclone Yasi should make landfall between Innisfail and Cardwell around 11pm (AEST) on Wednesday, with authorities confident they have picked the spot within a 30km range of accuracy.

The cyclone is powered by winds of 295km/h, and gusts have already brought down trees, ruined weather monitoring equipment on Willis Island, off Cairns, and taken out power at Airlie Beach, Ayr and Townsville.

Yasi will cross the coast on the high tide, with an accompanying storm surge expected to engulf low-lying areas.  

At Cardwell the surge could build to seven metres and at Townsville - up to three metres.


Yasi's size means its force will be felt a long way inland. The storm is forecast to maintain category three force as it passes over Georgetown - 300km inland - at 7am (AEST) on Thursday.

Flooding rains will fall between Cooktown and Sarina, moving inland.

Premier Anna Bligh said Yasi could be more destructive than the last cyclone of the same magnitude, which crossed the coast in 1918.  

That year, two devastating cyclones hit Mackay and then Innisfail, decimating the two towns and killing more than 100 people.


"This impact is likely to be more life-threatening than any experienced during recent generations," Ms Bligh told reporters in Brisbane.

"This is an event that we have no recent experience of."

More than 10,680 people have fled to 20 evacuation centres, while tens of thousands more are in their homes or in those of family or friends.

They have been warned they will be on their own during the storm and to take their safety seriously.

State disaster co-ordinator Ian Stewart has stressed emergency services will not be able to respond to triple-0 calls during the storm, as their own safety must be guaranteed.

People should huddle in the safest room of their home, likely to be the bathroom or toilet, with mattresses, food, water and raincoats and be prepared for the worst, Mr Stewart said.

"They should be preparing themselves for the fact that the roofs of their houses may lift off but that does not make the structure or the framework of the house any less sound," he said.

"They get wet, but it is far more dangerous to panic and run out of the house than to stay bunkered down in that area and simply get a bit wet."

Authorities have warned people not to go outside during the period of calm that means they are in the eye of the cyclone. The lull could last for more than one hour, but the storm would return to its worst afterwards.

Many in northern Queensland spent Wednesday morning making last-minute preparations, stocking up on food, cash, water, petrol and even buying out beer stocks at bottle shops.

The seaside tourist town of Cardwell was deserted. At Innisfail, Crown Hotel publican Max Wallace described the rain as torrential.

"People are very, very frightened at this moment," he told AAP.

"... Everyone's taped their windows, and everyone is just sitting back now, listening to radios and TVs to get an outlook on what's going on."

Cairns resident Anna Kris is one of thousands who will ride out the storm in an evacuation centre.

"The fear is just below the belt and were trying to keep it there," she told AAP.

Townsville's Ian Hollins will hunker down in his home, which he spent $50,000 to make cyclone-proof in the 1980s.

"If mine goes, everyone's goes," he told AAP.

"The only thing I'm worried about is the flying debris."

Authorities say flood-weary Queensland is prepared for Yasi, with hundreds of emergency services and defence personnel ready to go into action.

The plans extend to the possibility that offshore bases may be needed in the aftermath, with the navy prepared to bring ships to the coast if necessary, as they did during the response to the Asian tsunami of 2004.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard has warned Yasi would probably be the worst cyclone ever to hit Australia.

She said Queenslanders were about to face "many, many dreadful, frightening hours".

"In the hours of destruction that are coming to them, all of Australia is going to be thinking of them," she said.

The federal government was ready to send any help required.

Link -
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/worst-cyclone-in-memory-looms-off-...
===============
With the population of Queensland now, nearly as large as ALL of Australia was in 1918, this huge cyclone is a massive threat to property & lives, we will be in need of a little luck?
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #126 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:12pm
 
Quote:
With the population of Queensland now, nearly as large as ALL of Australia was in 1918


Yes, but only a fraction of the state's population are in the path of Yasi.
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #127 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:15pm
 
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:12pm:
Quote:
With the population of Queensland now, nearly as large as ALL of Australia was in 1918


Yes, but only a fraction of the state's population are in the path of Yasi.


A fraction bigger than Darwin 1974 though wouldn't you say?

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #128 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:20pm
 


Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:08pm:
Cyclones f-ck up places a lot worse than floods.


True - that would be because they not only bring a lot of flooding water over a short period of time, but they also have savage winds and storm surges have waves powered by those winds...

This is a particularly savage cyclone to boot!

All this is pointing to the need for a National Disaster Levy - instead of the proposed Flood Levy - wonder how knee-jerk oppositional Abbott will handle this...

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #129 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:21pm
 
Probably ten times the population of Darwin in 1974.

I guess it might affect somewhere around 400,000 by the time it ceases to be a cyclone.

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #130 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:23pm
 
Equitist wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:20pm:
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:08pm:
Cyclones f-ck up places a lot worse than floods.


True - that would be because they not only bring a lot of flooding water over a short period of time, but they also have savage winds and storm surges have waves powered by those winds...

This is a particularly savage cyclone to boot!

All this is pointing to the need for a National Disaster Levy - instead of the proposed Flood Levy - wonder how knee-jerk oppositional Abbott will handle this...



It's not his responsibility to 'handle' anything, it's Anna Blighs, c/o Labor remember, she is afterall their premier, not Abbott.

Remember, you get what you vote for!

I'm sure Labor have a firm grip on the situation, can a rat drown twice?

Cool

No really, can it?

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #131 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:26pm
 
It takes a special breed of nutjob to attempt to score political points off a natural disaster.
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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #132 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:27pm
 
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:26pm:
It takes a special breed of nutjob to attempt to score political points off a natural disaster.


Tell this to Gillards press- gallery!

Grin

It was her duty afterall.....sigh~!
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« Last Edit: Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:32pm by mellie »  

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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #133 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:37pm
 
Equitist wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:20pm:
Life_goes_on wrote on Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:08pm:
Cyclones f-ck up places a lot worse than floods.


True - that would be because they not only bring a lot of flooding water over a short period of time, but they also have savage winds and storm surges have waves powered by those winds...

This is a particularly savage cyclone to boot!

All this is pointing to the need for a National Disaster Levy - instead of the proposed Flood Levy - wonder how knee-jerk oppositional Abbott will handle this...




What do you expect him to do -  go out and stop it ?


Give it a rest Eq.  people will lose everything and lives could be lost as well and all you can do is sling off at Abbott. 



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Re: Cyclone Yasi
Reply #134 - Feb 2nd, 2011 at 6:38pm
 
People with disabilities, physical or mental living alone are of huge concern to me.

Left behind to panic alone.

Who will reassure them?

There was a guy with a disability just on the ABC, he advised reporters he has his bags packed, though doesn't know where to go.

He's clearly anxious, distressed, who will take care of him?

I hope the reporters do!

Smiley Someone has to.



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