Find some gas!
Monday, September 29th, 2008It’s totally not water-related, but most people are concerned about finding gas right now. The best resource I’ve found for info is on Twitter, using the tag #atlgas.
Any other good resources?
It’s totally not water-related, but most people are concerned about finding gas right now. The best resource I’ve found for info is on Twitter, using the tag #atlgas.
Any other good resources?
With Hanna zooming past the east coast, we can turn our eyes to the next possible rainmaker - Hurricane Ike.
Hurricane Ike is a category 3 hurricane as of this writing, and early tracking suggests it might thread the needle between Florida and Cuba and come up the west coast of Florida.
On that track, it could very easily end up bringing Georgia some much needed rain. Alternatively, if it follows Hanna but as a larger storm, it could at least brush Georgia.
In any case, Ike is the next big system in the area - what are your thoughts?
For a while, it looked like we might be right about Hanna bringing us some rain — turns out we’re wrong. All of the latest models now show Hanna hitting in the Carolinas and then shooting off to the northeast. We’re not likely to get much of anything out of it.
In the meantime, Lanier has slowly been dropping this month; down about an inch so far. Certainly not bad, but that pace will start to accelerate as the ground begins to dry up from Fay.
Maybe Ike or Josephine will show us some love…
Being the first day of the month, it’s time for our monthly status chart and things are looking better! Fay certainly did a lot of good for us. Rather than drop 2.5 feet like we did last August, the lake actually rose.
The bad news is that we’re still in rough shape. Today is the lowest the lake has ever been on September 1st, which is the kind of record we’re setting every day still. The key is whether the lake will plummet over these next few months like it did last year. The extra moisure in the ground and the threat of more heavy rain (Hanna?) tend to point to good news, but you never know.
Last September the lake dropped by over three feet (1061.77 down to 1058.73). What do you think it will do this year?
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