NOAA bouys?
I posted this earlier on the "Rita surge" topic, but it's all too applicable now-
I agree. I'm from the Mississippi Coast but was in L.A. when Katrina hit. I haven't got a clear understanding on why 8-12 hours before landfall in Louisiana there was no difinitive storm surge gauge, eventhough NOAA has dotted the Gulf with bouys that measure such, i.e "Warning, NOAA measures a consistant 30 foot storm suge that will wash 1/2 mile inland in coastal Mississippi..." This is exactly what the storm surge did, and I've been to ground zero in Waveland and Bay St Louis to see it! Any info on why NOAA or NHC can't give a percisie measurement of a surge in the gulf as a storm is hours away from landfall is appreciated. Hell, they are supposed to be able to read an approaching tsunami, correct?
So, if you have the answer, let me know.
Why is stormtrack.org so revelvant?
I streamed WLOX TV/Biloxi sat Aug 28 and caught the 11pm chief meteorolisht update (aka Mike Redor
http://wlox.com/Global/story.asp?S=64099&nav=menu40_3). This quailfied blok said Katrina would be a kat-2 and no Camile. He even started his live cast to Harrison/Hancock county with, "This is no Camile, and let me show you why...."
I lived on the MS coast for the last 20 yeras, most in the casino industry, 15K employees. So, I wonder, how many people watched his report Sunday at 11pm and breathed a sigh of releigh, only to be met with a 30ft surge? WLOX is the ONLY network affliate other then cable. PS - when the final toll is in, "think Thiland." Been there, seen it...
So - I vented!