This bumbling dolt. I am sure when your roof is being torn off in 120 mph winds that the Vid is top of mind.
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Ok then
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Ok then
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Ok then
Not surprising that the team rooting for a higher COVID death count also is rooting for stronger, deadlier hurricanes.
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Ok then
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
In 1962 during the Columbus Day storm, the anemometer on the Morrison Bridge in Portland broke at the last registered wind speed of 113 mph. Thanks to global warming, we haven't had a storm nearly that big in the last 60 years. I watched some Hurricane Ian coverage yesterday and they were way over selling the alleged wind speed of 155 mph at land fall. No way were they mentioning how they got that number and what the actual peak gusts were.
PS Anyone remember the last dazzler post that contained numbers and sh*t? Mello? JW? Bearslose?
Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
In 1962 during the Columbus Day storm, the anemometer on the Morrison Bridge in Portland broke at the last registered wind speed of 113 mph. Thanks to global warming, we haven't had a storm nearly that big in the last 60 years. I watched some Hurricane Ian coverage yesterday and they were way over selling the alleged wind speed of 155 mph at land fall. No way were they mentioning how they got that number and what the actual peak gusts were.
PS Anyone remember the last dazzler post that contained numbers and sh*t? Mello? JW? Bearslose?
I will never forget the Columbus Day storm of 1962. 120 in Olympia. We hunkered down in the kitchen playing board games by candlelight because us kids were way to scared to go to bed. Thought the house was falling down
It canceled an Olympia Bear games but the folks drove down to Portland the next day for the UW UO game

Big Category 5 Hurricane.
Until it wasn’t close to being so.
View attachment 52314
We have these numbers along the Oregon coast in one or 2 storms most years. Not as much rain or surge. But this was the most hyped storm ever.
And these are gusts. Not sustained.
In 1962 during the Columbus Day storm, the anemometer on the Morrison Bridge in Portland broke at the last registered wind speed of 113 mph. Thanks to global warming, we haven't had a storm nearly that big in the last 60 years. I watched some Hurricane Ian coverage yesterday and they were way over selling the alleged wind speed of 155 mph at land fall. No way were they mentioning how they got that number and what the actual peak gusts were.
PS Anyone remember the last dazzler post that contained numbers and sh*t? Mello? JW? Bearslose?
I will never forget the Columbus Day storm of 1962. 120 in Olympia. We hunkered down in the kitchen playing board games by candlelight because us kids were way to scared to go to bed. Thought the house was falling down
It canceled an Olympia Bear games but the folks drove down to Portland the next day for the UW UO game