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OT-- The Colorado Hurricane

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CATherine - 08 Apr 2005 04:27 GMT
Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
and the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to
slow the wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.

It was hard to drive with the wind hitting the side of the car. By the
time I got to work, I was tired from my deathgrip on the steering
wheel. I opened the door to get out and the wind slammed the door on
my foot! It was like that all day. By the time I was done seeing
clients, I was tireder from fighting the wind than I was from the
work.

As i drove home across the prairie, I noticed damages from the wind.
Signs, storage sheds and even a portapotty at a construction site were
rolling in the wind. But I didn't have too much attention for seeing
things like that as I was trying to keep the car on the road.

Once i got home, I just relaxed for a moment before opening the door.
I was so glad the driver's door was on the lee side of the wind. Then
Jeff came out to escort me to the house. He often does, knowing I am
tired.

He had bad news for me. No electricity. Well, that happens some times
in the country. But I said it should come back on after awhile. He
said, No. Then he turned me around and said look up the hill behind
the house. So what do I see? Nothing. What should I see? Poles with
the electric wires.

The wind had hit the poles with hurricane force and snapped them like
matchsticks. At 10:30 in the morning. Jeff had called the power
company. They said they had so many poles down that they had borrowed
crews from other power companies. And in many places the wires had
snapped connections and were on the ground shorting out.

We were luckier than many people out here. We live in a very old place
with a real well; not just a pipe in the ground. My son set up a block
and tackle and lowered a bucket in the well so we could have water. We
have a wood stove so we could stay warm and cook. And we lit a lot of
candles. It was kind of like camping. But I sure missed my computer.

I am glad we have the power back on. We were out for about 30 hours.
They got our six poles replaced late last night. But there are still a
lot of broken poles to replace. I see trailers with loads of creosoted
poles sitting at sites of downed poles, waiting their turn.

A friend of mine lost her brand new roof. Now her insurance won't pay
for another one.

Last week I was snowed in for two days with a heavy wet snow. The next
few days was 70 degrees. Then this storm hit us. Now it is 70 again.
This sure is crazy weather for April. I want ot see some flowers. The
redbuds and apple tree should be blooming. At least I am seeing
daffodils in the city where the weather is a bit warmer than the
country.

--
CATherine
Karen - 08 Apr 2005 04:57 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
> --
> CATherine

Oh my goodness! I had no idea. I'm so glad it wasn't worse for you. I'm
sorry about your friend's roof. I don't understand insurance at all. I mean,
what do you pay for???
mlbriggs - 08 Apr 2005 05:50 GMT
>> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
>> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains and
[quoted text clipped - 55 lines]
> sorry about your friend's roof. I don't understand insurance at all. I
> mean, what do you pay for???

It looks like it hit you hard after it left Utah.  We woke up to six
inches of very wet snow.  It was gone by the next day.  The flowers are
still blooming.  Now we are expecting snow and rain for the next five
days.  It was like summer today.    MLB
CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:13 GMT
>> A friend of mine lost her brand new roof. Now her insurance won't pay
>> for another one.
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>sorry about your friend's roof. I don't understand insurance at all. I mean,
>what do you pay for???

Well, she had had a new roof put on from being damaged by a storm last
year. But she didn't want the cheap one from the insurance company.
She ordered a better roof and paid the difference herself. But this
wind took the good, so it was a waste. And the insurance won't replace
the good one and it hads been less than a year, so that is that as far
as they are concermned. My friend is about fed up with Colorado winds
and the insurance company. She wants to move back to Philly!!

--
CATherine
Hopitus - 08 Apr 2005 05:04 GMT
WOW! All day Tues. I kept peering out my son's house
windows (I was over there babysitting all day) looking for the promised
snow/rain weather tv had scared me with for days before....and all that
happened *all day* was very strong winds from western/northern directions.
Huge hardwood trees bent (not just branches, *the trees*) and I thought
often of you all, CAT, out there on the prairie, where the storm must have
had its full force!
Explanation to rpca friends: I live in downtown Denver,
which I usually refer to as "MileHigh"....CAT and family
live about 80 miles south and east of here, on the Great
Plains of CO, where trees are scarce and farms are numerous.....
I was so grateful and happy that the storm apparently missed MileHigh
completely except for the wind - no snow where I live, just a touch of rain.
But the tv said it
all flew by to north of here and swept through CAT's
area with its full power.
Yes, CAT, daffodils and also hyacinths are blooming big
here in son's yard, also violets and those pink flowers that start with a
"c" native to this area, not to mention the 'orange lily things.
And still the natives locally are telling me, the dumb former south
Floridian, that this is "the usual" weather in
our newer home.....Hopitus will be happy as h*** when
all these weather threats and storms quit for the summer.
I see what the natives meant when they said, "Ha. That lasts about 3 days!"
when I told them upon my arrival in
June that I had visited every season except spring.......

> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
> --
> CATherine
Monique Y. Mudama - 08 Apr 2005 16:12 GMT
> ....Hopitus will be happy as h*** when
> all these weather threats and storms quit for the summer.

Um, you're joking, right?

Last summer, anyway, there were afternoon storms almost every day.
Some were so intense that they flooded our parking lot.  I had to walk
through 3 and 4 inch deep lakes to get to my car.

Morning: bright and sunny.  Noon: bright and sunny.  3-4pm: sky is
falling; cancel all outdoor plans for the evening.  5pm: bright and
sunny, not a cloud in the sky.

Welcome to Colorado!

Signature

monique, who spoils Oscar unmercifully

pictures: http://www.bounceswoosh.org/rpca

Hopitus - 08 Apr 2005 19:44 GMT
I am one who was brought up in s. FL, the land of killer
'canes, wind and rain storms. The rain storms here are so
lame - no thunder to speak of, and I ain't seen lightning
yet, though never say never.
What I really meant with that statement was freedom from the %*IA^*(^A)($%
snow, ice, and other winter
crap that wafts down on us here regularly. LOL - one
person's "winter wonderland" is another's PITA if you
didn't grow up with it and every occurrence is a new
challenge in dealing w/it.
My ignorance of these matters is a source of never-ending amusement to my
neighbors, and sometimes to
my relatives here. Often I think, but never say, "well, I'd
like to plunk *you* down in the middle of a Class 5 'cane - common when I
was a child - and see how funny
that would be"....hee hee.

>> ....Hopitus will be happy as h*** when
>> all these weather threats and storms quit for the summer.
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> Welcome to Colorado!
Seanette Blaylock - 08 Apr 2005 05:10 GMT
CATherine <pepsicola5cents@drop.me.bigsandytelco.com> had some very
interesting things to say about OT-- The Colorado Hurricane:

>Last week I was snowed in for two days with a heavy wet snow. The next
>few days was 70 degrees. Then this storm hit us. Now it is 70 again.
>This sure is crazy weather for April. I want ot see some flowers. The
>redbuds and apple tree should be blooming. At least I am seeing
>daffodils in the city where the weather is a bit warmer than the
>country.

Yesterday was clear and very warm in Sacramento. Today featured cold
wind, overcast, sleet in some parts of the area, and even sightings of
funnel clouds (we had a tornado a couple of months ago), plus
clear/sunny/nice off and on.

Wonder what tomorrow's weather festivities will be like?

Signature

"The universe is quite robust in design and appears to be
doing just fine on its own, incompetent support staff notwithstanding.

:-)" - the Dennis formerly known as (evil), MCFL
Hopitus - 08 Apr 2005 05:42 GMT
Years ago, when we lived in Bay Area, CA, I used to visit some pals in
Sacramento....its population was less
than 100,000 in those days. I loved its weather and was
amazed, coming from where I was born/raised, that there
was an area where you can enjoy warm temps. (OK, heat!) w/o sweating like a
pig and watching your makeup
ooze right off your face in summer. I remember the fun we had @ that tourist
place between Sac. & Placerville
w/all the wierd memorabilia etc. Was it called "Sam's"
or somethng like that?

> CATherine <pepsicola5cents@drop.me.bigsandytelco.com> had some very
> interesting things to say about OT-- The Colorado Hurricane:
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> :-)" - the Dennis formerly known as (evil), MCFL
Tanada - 08 Apr 2005 19:24 GMT
> I remember the fun we had @ that tourist
> place between Sac. & Placerville
> w/all the wierd memorabilia etc. Was it called "Sam's"
> or somethng like that?

Sam's Club, IIRC.  We loved it too when we were living up there.  It had
a general store, arcades, a movie memorabilia and prop museum, three
different types of restaurants, and more.  It was so fun to visit and
one could kill a whole day there without being bored.

Pam S.
Jo Firey - 08 Apr 2005 06:34 GMT
One tiny bright spot.  If the trees haven't bloomed yet, at least now they
will bloom.  Those winds would have stripped the trees.

Here's to true spring.  Soon.

Jo
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
> --
> CATherine
CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:16 GMT
>One tiny bright spot.  If the trees haven't bloomed yet, at least now they
>will bloom.  Those winds would have stripped the trees.
>
>Here's to true spring.  Soon.
>
>Jo

You are right about that. A freind has a plum tree blooming and only
the sheltered side has blooms left on it. It is always a wonderful
spectacle every spring when the redbuds and apple trees and plums and
others are in bloom. About the time they fade the lilacs are in bloom.
I love Spring.

--
CATherine
Irulan - 08 Apr 2005 16:05 GMT
Wow, glad to hear you are all ok. We live in a relatively new subdivision
so there are no poles or wires above ground, but we still lose power
once in a while when the main generator in another part of the town
goes down. The thing I miss most is the air/conditioner and the
refrigerator. I gotta buy a power generator.
Jazz & his mama

Signature

Irulan
from the stars we come
to the stars we return
from now until the end of time

> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
> --
> CATherine
CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:03 GMT
>Wow, glad to hear you are all ok. We live in a relatively new subdivision
>so there are no poles or wires above ground, but we still lose power
>once in a while when the main generator in another part of the town
>goes down. The thing I miss most is the air/conditioner and the
>refrigerator. I gotta buy a power generator.
>Jazz & his mama

One of my neighbors has a wind-powered generator. I wonder how the
wind storm affected it?  

--
CATherine
CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:19 GMT
>Wow, glad to hear you are all ok. We live in a relatively new subdivision
>so there are no poles or wires above ground, but we still lose power
>once in a while when the main generator in another part of the town
>goes down. The thing I miss most is the air/conditioner and the
>refrigerator. I gotta buy a power generator.
>Jazz & his mama

Underground wires are best for a windy area like this. A few years ago
we removed the ancient, cloth-covered wires from the company pole to
our house and put the wires underground through a pvc pipe. Funny
thing, though. I noticed the downed poles were all oriented east-west;
cross-wise to the wind.

--
CATherine
Monique Y. Mudama - 08 Apr 2005 16:09 GMT
> The wind had hit the poles with hurricane force and snapped them
> like matchsticks. At 10:30 in the morning. Jeff had called the power
> company. They said they had so many poles down that they had
> borrowed crews from other power companies. And in many places the
> wires had snapped connections and were on the ground shorting out.

Wow.  I didn't even notice any unusual weather here in Boulder and
Longmont.

DH is disbelieving that the winds could have been that strong; do you
know of an article somewhere I can show him?

> Last week I was snowed in for two days with a heavy wet snow. The
> next few days was 70 degrees. Then this storm hit us. Now it is 70
> again.  This sure is crazy weather for April. I want ot see some
> flowers. The redbuds and apple tree should be blooming. At least I
> am seeing daffodils in the city where the weather is a bit warmer
> than the country.

I thought crazy weather was par for the course in Colorado.  I
certainly get more colds here than I did in Virginia, which I
attribute to the temp fluctuations.

Glad to hear that you're doing okay and that it was just the power.

Signature

monique, who spoils Oscar unmercifully

pictures: http://www.bounceswoosh.org/rpca

CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:09 GMT
>> The wind had hit the poles with hurricane force and snapped them
>> like matchsticks. At 10:30 in the morning. Jeff had called the power
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>DH is disbelieving that the winds could have been that strong; do you
>know of an article somewhere I can show him?

Well, The Colorado Springs has the Gazette on the Internet. I don't
know if the Limon Leader is online or not. But Mountain View Electric
Assn. has a web site. They will be putting out a newsletter soon about
all the line work they did. Maybe they will have an article online as
well. I don't know the URLs. Maybe you can Google? I don't know how to
do that, either. BTW, the Hurricane word is my own description, cause
i read somewhere that any wind over 60 is hurricane force. And I am
positive the wind was mmore than that out here.

--
CATherine
glsummer@neptunelink.com - 08 Apr 2005 16:30 GMT
>Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
>extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 50 lines]
>daffodils in the city where the weather is a bit warmer than the
>country.

Oh, CATherine, that's scary!  Glad you are okay, and that you got the
power back.

Ginger-lyn

Home Pages:
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Marina - 08 Apr 2005 16:55 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through.

How terrible, Catherine! I'm so glad to read that you're all alright.
Also very glad that Jeff is there to help you.

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Victor Martinez - 08 Apr 2005 16:59 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
> and the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to
> slow the wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.

YIKES! Sounds scary! I guess this is the time of year for violent storms
for those of us not on the coastal areas. We had a nasty hail storm a
couple of weeks ago that caused over 100 million dollars worth of
damage. It was so nasty it killed hundreds of birds all over the city.
Purrs to you!

Signature

Victor M. Martinez
Owned and operated by the Fantastic Seven (TM)
Send your spam here: uce@ftc.gov
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Hopitus - 08 Apr 2005 19:36 GMT
Uh, this is a little irreverent, Victor, but did the kids then
have a big feast on the fallen birds? Or do they insist on
live prey? Personally, it sounds like the answer to a cat's
prayer to Bast......manna from heaven.

>> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
>> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> It was so nasty it killed hundreds of birds all over the city.
> Purrs to you!
Victor Martinez - 08 Apr 2005 20:21 GMT
> Uh, this is a little irreverent, Victor, but did the kids then
> have a big feast on the fallen birds? Or do they insist on

I'm sure a bunch of cats did, but mine did not partake of the banquet.... :)

> live prey? Personally, it sounds like the answer to a cat's
> prayer to Bast......manna from heaven.

No kidding. Bad news for the birdies though...

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Victor M. Martinez
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CATherine - 09 Apr 2005 22:20 GMT
>> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
>> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>damage. It was so nasty it killed hundreds of birds all over the city.
>Purrs to you!

Hail storms are so dangerous. I feel so sorry for all the birds and
animals who can't get to shelter. We have hail storms here sometimes
but we have lots of sheds and places for them to shelter in. A couple
years ago we had a violent hailstorm that hit a swathe of land west of
us a couple miles. It poured down two feet of hail and denuded trees
and filled ditches. Most of the trees did not recover from it.

--
CATherine
-L. - 08 Apr 2005 17:01 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through.

<snip>

Wow - take care!  That sounds scary!

-L.
jmcquown - 08 Apr 2005 21:20 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
> and the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to
> slow the wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.

(snippage)

Yikes!  Now that's some powerful wind!  I'm glad you're safe and got your
power back.  You were very lucky to be without it only 30 hours considering
the damage.

Several years back, I think it was in June, the Memphis area was similarly
hit.  I'd been at work about 30 minutes.  It was about 7:15 AM when I looked
up from my desk and it was literally black as midnight outside.  I exclaimed
to no one in particular "Oh crap!"  A co-worker sitting one aisle over whose
desk faced away from the window said, "What's wrong, Jill?"  Look out the
window!  I heard her say, "Oh crap!"  The storm hit almost simultaneously
and the wind was so strong (they estimated 60-70 MPH as well) the trees on
those grass "islands" in the parking lot were literally horizontal with the
ground.  Then, of course, the electricity went out.  My employer had a
generator (they took up 3 of the 5 floors in the building).  It powered
everything EXCEPT air conditioning (aside from the server room).  As the
morning progressed it got warmer and warmer in the office.  We had to pour
water from coffee pots to flush the toilets... which (it turned out) didn't
work for very long.  Turned out some of the water pumping stations had been
knocked offline as well and the stench became unbearable.

My apartment is surrounded by trees and I was more concerned about finding
out if it was still there.  The phones were out at the apartment office.
They finally told us all to go home close to noon.  My apartment was safe,
but my power was off for 5 days.  My phone also didn't work, nor did any of
the pay phones in the vicinity.  I didn't have a cell phone at the time.  So
I had to drive to work every day to find out if they were "open".  They
weren't.  But the good thing about that was the generators still powered the
ice machines in the breakrooms.  I loaded up bags of ice to take back for my
big cooler.

You mentioned it was like "camping out"; I became very adept at cooking on
my grill - breakfast (bacon, then eggs cooked in the bacon drippings), a pan
of cornbread, even a pot of jambalaya!  Thank goodness for cast iron
cookware :)

Glad you're safe.  Purrs to everyone in the area.

Jill
Victor Martinez - 08 Apr 2005 23:16 GMT
> They finally told us all to go home close to noon.  My apartment was safe,
> but my power was off for 5 days.  My phone also didn't work, nor did any of

That's something we can't afford to have, maybe this is the year we buy
a gasoline generator. We need electricity to run the filter in the fish
tank, without it, in a few hours every fish would die. :(
We can manage without power and the cats' food doesn't spoil, so we're
ok. It's the fish I worry about.

Signature

Victor M. Martinez
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Send your spam here: uce@ftc.gov
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polonca12000 - 08 Apr 2005 22:48 GMT
Lots of purrs and best wishes for you and anyone else affected,
Signature

Polonca & Soncek

> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
> and the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to
> slow the wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.
<snip>
Adrian - 09 Apr 2005 14:08 GMT
> Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
> extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains
> and the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to
> slow the wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.

<snip>

I'm glad you came through without too much damage. Sorry about your
friend's roof.
Signature

Adrian (Owned by Snoopy & Bagheera)
A house is not a home, without a cat.

SuzQ - 10 Apr 2005 17:35 GMT
I'm glad it was only 30 hrs. In michigan i'd been without power for days
and onetime for 10 days. Life in the Northern US can be interesting.
Suz&Spicey
CATherine - 11 Apr 2005 00:55 GMT
>I'm glad it was only 30 hrs. In michigan i'd been without power for days
>and onetime for 10 days. Life in the Northern US can be interesting.
>Suz&Spicey

Ten days is a very long time. Did you at least have gas for cooking? I
was worried about everything in my deep freeze. I bought a bag of
charcoal in case I had to start cooking everything. And I was upset my
chocolate-cherry ice cream melted. It re-froze; but part of it had
separated and didn't taste so good.

--
CATherine
 
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