Boy, Paul ...
If you were watching our local news (or if she were) that isn't what you
would be saying. NY 1 has excellent coverage... better than the networks.
Also, after the lack of cuation this winter was not appreciated and
as it turned out to be, perhaps, a bit of overkill from the point of
view of the citizens, much better to get that ire along with relief
than what went on last winter...
The news coverage may get redundant and boring but shutting down the
subway system was just right... there have been problems constantly with
normal rainstorms of shortages and interupted service - the weekends
have been devoted to limited service recently for repairs as it is but
there would be any number of jerks non-chalanting the whole thing and
getting themselves hurt or worse.
There could have been very serious problems underground - and probably
are a ton of them.
The skies are clearing but the winds are high -- maybe not high by
hurricane standards but not anything you would want to walk around in.
I'm in a good spot - on the 3rd floor, actually - Mark is so spry he
thinks it is only on the second floor.
Sun just came out... I may venture out with camera.. but not far.
Not much open around here.
What I'm impressed with is how well behaved everyone has been - actually
heeding warnings and staying out of the way of possible harm. HOpe
that continues.
ann
On 8/28/2011 10:48, Paul Stenquist wrote:
Saw that about Tom's tree. Unfortunate. I hate to see old trees come down,
particularly when they fall on houses.
But Irene is pretty much history. My daughters, who live in Brooklyn's Bay
Ridge neighborhood, not far from the point where the South Bay and East River
meet, report that it's all much ado about nothing. A few leaves fell from trees
and the streets are wet and slippery. That's the extent of the devastation.
Unfortunately, they don't know how they're going to get to work tomorrow, since
Mayor Bloomberg jumped the shark and shut down the subways until Monday night.
Boston will see nothing more than a wet and windy afternoon.
A good thing that, based on past hurricane behavior, was entirely predictable.
Paul
On Aug 28, 2011, at 8:59 AM, Mark Roberts wrote:
I just learned via Facebook the former PDML-member Tom Van Veen had a
15-foot tree come down on his house and another tree uproot and take
out a transformer. No one hurt (his wife& kid are out of town).
A lot of NYC is without power and the East River is starting to
overflow its banks. Annsan's not too far from there but her apartment
is on the second floor ;-)
Still just a bad rain storm here in Boston...
--
Mark Roberts - Photography& Multimedia
www.robertstech.com
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