Hurricane Sandy left destruction in its wake,
underscoring the fragility of our coastlines and infrastructure.
More on that, and its connection with the
upcoming election later, but first a follow up on my last post which was filled
with anxiety and speculation about Sandy's potential impact on our friends in
Connecticut, our boat club, and
our boat. It's mostly bad news but a fortuitous wind change from
the east to the south just before the peak high tide during the storm made the
difference between disaster and catastrophe.
It meant that the water level in the parking lot where our club’s boats
are on the hard for the winter was "only" about 4-1/2 feet vs.,
potentially, 5-6.
As for my own boat,
which has a draft of 3-3/4 feet and was blocked about a foot off the ground,
the peak tide slightly lifted it, enough for it to shift off of its keel
stands, but settling onto three of the four boat stands that hold the hard
chine of the hull.
These stands are
mainly for stability, not to support the entire weight of the boat, the keel
stands doing the heavy support.
So, in a
sense, my boat is hanging in mid air right now by those boat stands.
This might put strain on the hull, but my
older, heavily built boat should come through as long as it can be reblocked
successfully.
A crane has been brought
in to remove damaged boats so, hopefully, the travel lift can get to those that
need reblocking such as mine.
Unfortunately, many other boats in the yard were damaged
or totaled. Boats were strewn all over
Water Street of South Norwalk. And where
we used to live across the Norwalk River on Sylvester Court, boats were on the
street as well.
This is but a microcosm of the coast above south Jersey
where the storm came ashore, with places like Staten Island which is as low
lying, and directly exposed to the east, taking a direct hit. And now they say
there may be a Nor'easter in the cards for later this week which will just
exacerbate misery and increase the potential for more damage. We can only hope for the best.
Hurricanes seem to follow me wherever I might be,
sometimes the same storm threatening us both in Florida and Connecticut.
The first hurricane I had to deal with in my
life of any significance was Hurricane Carol in 1954.
My parents usually rented a cottage in
Sag Harbor towards the end of each summer for a couple of weeks, a block from the
Peconic Bay.
Carol drove us out
of our rental, and although a block away from the Bay, water was half way up
the first floor.
Then in 1985 Hurricane Gloria came to call on Connecticut
and although only a Cat. 1, the winds were from the southeast, driving water
and tremendous wave action up the Norwalk River where we had a smaller boat at
the time – at a different marina than
where we are now -- and between the heaving of the docks and the wind, boats
broke free, another boat's bow pulpit plowed through the hull into our v-berth,
but above the waterline so at least it didn't sink.
I anxiously watched Hurricane Bob form in 1991 as we were
spending a two weeks summer vacation at Block Island. A couple of days out from the storm a direct
hit seemed unavoidable, so unlike some friends who decided to "ride it
out" I packed up the boat and ran back to Norwalk, safe enough from the
effects of the storm. Boats were strewn
all of the shores of Block Island although my friend, John, who tied his boat
in a spider web maze of lines between the fixed docks of Payne’s, thankfully
escaped relatively unscathed.
http://lacunaemusing.blogspot.com/2009/08/block-island-days.html
The next memorable hurricane was a terrifying one, Floyd
which hit in September 1999. We had just
bought our home in Florida that prior June and Ann was living in the house,
while I lived on the boat in Connecticut, finishing out my job there until the
end of that year (we had already sold our home in CT). Satellite imagery made Floyd look like the
storm of the century, and it did grow to a Cat. 4, huge in size, heading
directly at Florida, causing massive evacuations on the coast. The traffic north was colossal. I was terrified for my wife who was in the
house alone (but with our dog at the time, Treat), and although it was
completely shuttered, everyone was screaming evacuate north! It seemed to me, amateur meteorologist extraordinaire,
that while the storm had the potential to hit us head on in the North Palm
Beach area, it was highly unlikely it would turn south or even have much of an
impact far south of us, so while I95 and the Turnpike were clogged with cars
going north, Ann and I decided it best for her to go south to a friend's home,
inland, about 40 miles to the south which turned out to be the right decision.
With hindsight, she could have stayed put in our home
as the storm took a sharp right hand turn up the coast and ironically had more
of an impact on me living on our boat in Norwalk, CT. I had to strip the enclosure and remove
everything from the decks, tie off the boat with double lines and springs, put
out extra fenders, etc., but I stayed on the boat through the storm and as it
was not a direct hit, I merely rocked and rolled, and was fine. Tides never even approached the levels of Sandy.
2004 was another lousy hurricane year with both Hurricane
Francis and Hurricane Jeanne striking Florida only some twenty miles north of
us, and causing some minor damage to our home, although it was completely
shuttered (mostly a roof tiles missing and plantings ruined).
We were not in Florida for Francis but had
the pleasure of dealing with the aftermath of Jeanne with no power for days.
Luckily, our cousins owned a condo south of us so we occupied that while
waiting for power.
And let's not forget
Hurricane Ivan that same year which dumped enormous amounts of rain, but was
less of a wind event where we are.
Then there was 2005's Hurricane Wilma which we rode out in
our home, all shuttered up again, a storm that was coming from the west and,
therefore, Florida folklore would have you believe would be merely a minor inconvenience. Unfortunately, the eye went over our house
and as the storm emerged over the Atlantic the back end picked up significant
strength, probably even a Cat. 2 or 3 at one point. Our home was groaning in the wind, the
sliding glass doors, although behind heavy steel shutters, bowing in and out
just from the storm’s barometric pressure change. Wilma also knocked out power
but, luckily, it turned cool, not the usual tropical air mass behind the storm,
and living for days without power was even a little fun, cooking on sterno
stoves, flash lights to read by, my piano a constant companion.
Finally, last year we dealt with
Hurricane Irene, having to shutter up our house while living on the boat, expecting the worst for our home, which the storm completely missed, while we had to evacuate the boat!
Florida, although very vulnerable, deals with hurricanes
better than the northeast, especially one like Sandy that was both a hurricane
and a Nor'easter rolled into one, bringing in a cold air mass in its wake. It's one thing not to have power, and it’s
another to also have no heat in the cold.
Also, gas stations here are required to have generators to pump gas and
that is now a problem in the northeast with no such requirements. That will
change in the future, I'm sure.
And here is the connection to politics. Mayor Bloomberg
has it right to endorse President Obama even for no other reason than his
stance and record on global warming.
Most scientists are in agreement that hydrocarbon emissions are
responsible, not merely some grand cyclical weather factor.
Can this be reversed short term?
Of course not.
But it is an issue that has even greater
consequences than our debt, and it is more difficult to solve than our man made
fiscal crisis.
Watching the rise of the tide as Hurricane Sandy past by
Florida, my neighbor, who has lived on our waterway for fifty years, remarked
that during those years he has witnessed higher high tides and higher low tides
until, finally, reaching the top of our sea wall during Sandy, submerging both
my docks. It took days for it to recede,
long after the storm was battering the northeast. Yes, this is merely anecdotal evidence, but
even our short thirteen year stay here seems to confirm the observation. How can we deny the existence of what we have
wrought and the need to address this terrible problem? How will not only
Congress, but world governments agree upon global warming mitigation
priorities?
This brings me to the importance of this election.
It has been the most bitter election campaign
in my memory, not surprising given the polarization and subsequent action calcification
of our government.
It also is the
consequence of the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision which opened the
flood gates to Super PACs funded by corporations, wealthy individuals and
special interest groups.
This has led to
the pollution of the airways, endless robot-calls and an inundation of direct
mail.
In one week alone, these flyers
pictured here were sent to us.
Imagine the billions of dollars wasted on these
brainwashing attempts. Why do we permit
political advertising at all? There must
be other alternatives. But I guess they
work, just judging by the letters to the editor I read in the Palm Beach Post. Many simply regurgitate
the sputum of those ads. It is an
amazing circular process, garbage in, garbage out, and then making such
important decisions on highly emotionally charged accusations and innuendoes.
We voted early, the lines unbelievably lengthy. There are several proposed amendments to the
Florida State Constitution and the ballot is several pages long. GOP controlled
Florida had made the decision to make advance voting a much shorter period than
voters had in 2008. I can imagine how the lines will be tomorrow..
As to the outcome, here is an unscientific survey conducted
by my grade advisor from high school,
Roger Brickner (yes, we are still in touch more than fifty years later).
Politics has been his avocation since HE went
to high school, and he has accurately predicted presidential election outcomes
since he incorrectly picking Dewey in 1948.
He has an email following of
similar-minded friends and he canvassed
their predictions for this election and, based
on that approach, Obama will win both the popular vote (by 2.1%) and the
electoral college (289 to 249).
Intrade, the popular prediction platform, where you can
"bet" on a winner, most recently has the probability of an Obama win
at about 65%.
At to my own "prediction," I think the
anti-Obama vitriol runs deep, and that has been effectively harvested by his
opponents. For that reason, and using
the anecdotal evidence of the ubiquitous Romney / West signs lining our own
road, I think the popular vote will be closer than 2.1%, with the distinct
possibility of Obama losing the popular vote but winning the Electoral College.
But trying to quantify it is just guesswork.
PS: Last minute email from Roger (his own prediction, not
the average of his email followers):
I forgot to give the
grand summary... Guess I was so glad to complete all the states and all the
elections!
President electoral votes OBAMA 290 ROMNEY 248
popular vote OBAMA 51%
ROMNEY 48% OTHERS 1%
The Senate will be Dem
53, Rep. 45 Too close 2 (one held by a Rep., one held by a Dem.)
The House will be Rep. 235 Dem
200