Am i safe from the hurricane flood thats coming? from brooklyn

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Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
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No clue. Park Slope here, my apartment came with busted windows, and I'm not going to be able to fix them on time. On the plus side, I'm well above ground.
 

Laser Priest

A Magpie Among Crows
Mar 24, 2011
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No one is safe. We are all DOOMED! DOOMED, I TELL YOU!

What are we talking about, exactly?
 

Laser Priest

A Magpie Among Crows
Mar 24, 2011
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Halberd said:
Necromancer Jim said:
No one is safe. We are all DOOMED! DOOMED, I TELL YOU!

What are we talking about, exactly?
Some massive flood or hurricane that is going to happen in America and everyone thinks it will be really bad or something
Ah, well my heart goes out to them. Or would, if I had one. I doubt they want the charred stone that seems to be in it's place.

But not being the god of hurricanes, I can't accurately predict how it'll affect our friend, OP.
 

jumjalalabash

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Jan 25, 2010
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Souplex said:
No clue. Park Slope here, my apartment came with busted windows, and I'm not going to be able to fix them on time. On the plus side, I'm well above ground.
Yaaa you REALLY need to cover that shit up tight. Flooding won't matter with a room gets torn out of the building. I live in Florida thats how mother fucking hurricanes work.
 

Hairetos

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Jul 5, 2010
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Souplex said:
No clue. Park Slope here, my apartment came with busted windows, and I'm not going to be able to fix them on time. On the plus side, I'm well above ground.
Wouldn't that mean you're even more vulnerable to the winds that are likely to blow out your windows?
 

emeraldrafael

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Jul 17, 2010
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Its a cat 2, geez grow a pair.

seriously though, I hve no idea where thats at, but i would say you'll probably see water. I dont know. i live in western PA, and we dont even need a hurricane to get floods, and we still deal. A cat 2 would be like,, nothing really. Just board your windows and have plenty of fresh water and if you can spring it a generator.

and relax, its not going to be that bad.
 

Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
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jumjalalabash said:
Souplex said:
No clue. Park Slope here, my apartment came with busted windows, and I'm not going to be able to fix them on time. On the plus side, I'm well above ground.
Yaaa you REALLY need to cover that shit up tight. Flooding won't matter with a room gets torn out of the building. I live in Florida thats how mother fucking hurricanes work.
That's Florida architecture. New York architecture is far sturdier than that. I'm talking nuke survival sturdy.
 

Slimshad

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Sep 16, 2009
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TheGoldenMan said:
That never happens in the Mid-West. CHI-TOWN!

OT: I have no clue. Just incase put a sleeping bag under your table.
Chi-Town? That makes it sound oriental in nature. I prefer Cha-Town, makes it seem kind of a happy place. You know like "Cha Cha Chicago!" sounds cooler than "Chi Chi Chicago!?@"

On-Topic: One of my friends lived through Katrina. Since they did have a warning of it, his family prepared. They put barbed wire along the building's fence, and they had guys posted with guns around it. They also boarded up all the windows of the rooms people were actually staying in or mattered, and they got a BUNCH of food.

So basically I would prepare for a zombie apocalypse. That's probably the safest bet, and hey if nothing comes of it at least you won't get burgled anytime soon.
 

Dango

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Feb 11, 2010
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It's a category 2 hurricane, and by the time it gets to New York it'll be a category 1, there really isn't that much to worry about.
 

jumjalalabash

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Jan 25, 2010
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Souplex said:
jumjalalabash said:
Souplex said:
No clue. Park Slope here, my apartment came with busted windows, and I'm not going to be able to fix them on time. On the plus side, I'm well above ground.
Yaaa you REALLY need to cover that shit up tight. Flooding won't matter with a room gets torn out of the building. I live in Florida thats how mother fucking hurricanes work.
That's Florida architecture. New York architecture is far sturdier than that. I'm talking nuke survival sturdy.
None of that matters if windows breaks. It'll gut the room. Also architecture differences of Florida and New York is vastly more complex then "my building is hard".
 

Vim-Hogar

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Sep 2, 2008
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laughinggod said:
I live in brooklyn fort hamilton 65st, Do you think the flood would reach this place?
Looks like you're outside the mandatory evacuation zone, but you should probably double check for yourself, either on this official pdf map or on this handy Google Maps version.

Zone A (orange on both maps) is the mandatory evacuation area for now, but if you're in one of the other zones, you should take note of that and be prepared to leave if things change (i.e. the storm surge turns out to be super high for some reason).

For other information, NYC.gov is probably a good place to start. Make sure you've got enough food and drinking water to last a couple days to a week, just in case.
 

ChildofGallifrey

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May 26, 2008
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Okay guys, I have some experience in this department. I grew up in Louisiana, and I was there for all the recent major storms (Lily, Katrina, Rita, Gustav, etc.). All of those were stronger than Irene is now, and it will be a Cat 1 by the time it reaches us. It's basically going to be a really, really bad thunderstorm.

Also, it appears to be turning pretty heavily east. Yesterday the projected path had the eye basically passing over my house (I live in Jersey City for reference, just past the Newport Mall, roughly a mile off of the river), today the eye is projected east of Nassau.

Don't worry friends. There will be damage, there will be power outages, but this is hardly the storm of the century.
 

KeyMaster45

Gone Gonzo
Jun 16, 2008
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You north-easters really get worked up over a hurricane don't you? You'll be fine, enjoy your unexpected days off and curl up with a good book till it stops raining. It's really quite a relaxing experience despite the hype. Yeah stuff gets damaged inevitably, but considering you live in Brooklyn, I think you'll be okay. You'll be luck if it's barely a cat 1 by the time it gets to you, and even then you'll probably only get tropical storm conditions at worst.(which is frankly no worse than a strong thunderstorm)

So be chill and enjoy your excuse to not do a god-damned productive thing for twelve or so hours.