Initially posted September 4, 2012
Hurricane 'Season', did not go without leaving its mark this year. It hit in the area of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas.
There are a mixture of elements involved, Hurricane Isaac, it seems to be.
The area geographically, where the hurricane hit, is an area where
intense rains and winds, sometimes even up to hurricanes, if they hit,
hit. That is a part of the vacation spot sometimes, and makes the area
what it is. The residents there have some understanding. A severe
hurricane is almost like the death of an elderly loved one that has been
in his or her final days for quite some time. Sad because of the loss
once passed. However, the moment was to be expected.
Intense ominous clouds are seen over the area. Some aspects are carry
overs from past storms. Storms of this nature, get into cycles,
sometimes. If they his the area a few times within the last decade, it
thinks that it is supposed to make its arrival again.
The clouds did not looks as bad, angry, dark, as they have in other places in other storms, over the past 5 years.
Another subject, is names for
series of hurricanes that hit areas.
It looks like the hurricane came up, in similar shape and direction as
the State of Florida, working its way up from the waters south of
Florida, around Puerto Rico then mushrooming in the land areas of the
states, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas.
{Reference:
http://www.enstarz.com/articles/5719/20120823/hurricane-isaac-2012-map-isaac-eyes-florida-in-possible-category-2-hurricane-developing-in-next-48-hours.htm}
Maybe things are not perfect for the holy ascetic for every square foot
of land there in that area where Hurricane Isaac took its toll, but,
there are places which have not been hit by hurricanes that have left
100,000 people without power, and the houses up to their roofs in water,
which is what Hurricane Isaac has done to many, that live in about the
same ways.
Soft and large, might sum up the nature of the storm, Isaac that just
made its way through, when it was making its way through, and broad and
moderately ominous, to describe the clouds that hung over, comparatively
speaking.
In some ways similar to the expectation of every now and then a severe
storm will come through the area, there also seems to be the nature of
the eye and soul of severe hurricane storm dropping down in that area.
All in all, there are houses still standing, 2 or 3 stories high, that
are up to their roof in water. Houses that just have flooding at the
minimal. When will power be on for everyone, will it be decades? How
much infrastructure for electric power has been destroyed? How much is
it all going to cost to make sure everyone there has a roof over their
head they can call a house and electric power?
$1.2 billion
http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2012/08/31/isaac-damage-could-cost-up-to-12.html
$1.5 billion and could top $2 billion
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-57504648/sifting-through-the-damage-in-isaacs-wake/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+cbsnews%2Ffeed+(CBSNews.com)
$27.7 billion
http://www.dsnews.com/articles/corelogic-tropical-storm-isaac-could-cause-277b-in-property-damage-2012-08-28-|||-
original:
http://envirocomputer.blogspot.com/2012/09/hurricane-isaac-not-before-summer-out.html