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to you share holder how in the hell do you make any cash, when you keep pushing nsmg down. goal is to keep over 20 any help here, thank you
it seem to me the s.o.s.
drtayi0r, yes your are right
Posted by: NYPDBLUE
In reply to: nuzzi_boy who wrote msg# 3224 Date:6/18/2007 10:13:44 AM
Post #of 3366
I want .40!
NYPDBLUE, who care, i hope it went up
time to back your dump truck and start buying now$$$$$$$$$$
Summary: Renewed signs of La Niña development
After stalling for around a month, there are renewed signs from the Pacific Basin which are consistent with the early stages of a La Niña event. Furthermore, computer models have been unwavering in their predictions of a La Niña forming during winter.
The SOI has risen sharply, the Trade Winds are much stronger than average and the cloud cover in the Pacific near the equator has been consistently below normal during June. These are all positive indicators for a possible La Niña. The signal in the ocean is not as strong as a month or two back, mainly as a result of transient warming in response to weakened Trade Winds in May. However, the eastern Pacific remains cooler than average and a persistence of strong Trade Winds should see this cooling intensify and spread to the west.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/index.shtml
4 die in Texas floods
Posted 16h 11m ago | Comments 4 | Recommend 1 E-mail | Save | Print |
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Graphic: Slot canyons are death traps in flash floods
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Heavy rains and high winds belted parts of the state early Tuesday, causing flooding, forcing street closures and damaging houses and other structures.
Three women were killed Monday when the sport-utility vehicle they were in slammed into a dump truck, officials said. Weather was a factor, authorities said.
Larry Hathorn, the husband of one of the women, Debbie Picha, 52, said he was speaking to his wife by phone when the accident occurred.
"Debbie and I were talking when suddenly she said, 'Oh, my God!' four times. Then the phone went dead," he told the Austin American-Statesman in an article published Tuesday.
Authorities rescued a man stranded atop his minivan Monday in western Texas as raging floodwaters threatened to consume him. A woman died Sunday when a gust of wind caused the motorcycle she was a passenger on to hit a guardrail, police said. The motorcycle driver survived.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Tuesday | Texas | National Weather Service | Officials
In northern Texas, a severe storm blew a home from its foundation, ripped the roof off at least one house and caused damage to two other homes, a Wise County dispatcher said. No injuries were reported. Officials closed roads in two counties to protect motorists from high waters.
The overnight storm prompted the National Weather Service to issue a tornado warning for parts of northern Texas, but there had been no confirmed tornado sightings, weather service meteorologist Jessica Schultz said.
In Real County, about 80 miles northwest of San Antonio, officials were notifying campgrounds and homes along the Frio River of rising waters and possibly dangerous conditions, a county dispatcher said.
Sustained rainfall over the last month has left the ground saturated, and parts of northern, central and eastern Texas are at high risks of flash flooding, according to the state's emergency operations center.
Gov. Rick Perry has ordered search and rescue teams to be at a high state of readiness to provide rapid responses when necessary, according to a state emergency situation report. Two helicopters and 50 other state vehicles are available to rescue personnel under Perry's directive.
The severe weather shows no sign of letting up, with chances of rain and thunderstorms as high as 90% in some parts of Texas on Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
well i try did not work the m.m waiting last minute to change to 21 you know they are f**ken pricks
how many share to move it 22 do you need
rngrover2 are you there. how do you move nsmg up when ask at 20
well chevdawg need to kick some ass, wegi going wrong way, any help
Date:6/26/2007 11:10:44 AM
Post #of 2854
Peak Hurricane Season Image - Very good to look into
http://img515.imageshack.us/my.php?image=peakofseasonxq9.gif
Lotsa waves.Something could develop anytime,and Hurricane stocks could be on fire.
There is one tropical wave located a from 4 north, 32 west to 13 north to 27 west and is moving west at 15 knots.
Another wave is near 20 north and 78 west; some unsettled weather is near Cuba from this wave.
Another tropical wave is located in the eastern Caribbean. This wave axis is also tilted from 6 north, 66 west to 20 north, 65 west and moving west at 15 knots. There have been some showers over the Virgin Islands Monday and an increase in showers is likely over Puerto Rico Tuesday.
In addition to these tropical waves, there is a weak trough of low pressure from around the bahamas, moving slowly west. This trough could affect Florida by Wednesday and Thursday causing an increase in shower and thunderstorm activity.
by AccuWeather.com Meteorologist
From The TimesJune 26, 2007
Monsoon mayhemLewis Smith, Environmental Reporter
Torrential rain swept across Britain yesterday bringing flooding, tornados and death on the wettest June day on record.
A 28-year-old man died trying to unblock a drain in Hull despite the efforts of emergency services. In Sheffield, a 13-year-old boy who was swept into a swollen river near a playground was feared dead and a 68-year-old man died while attempting to cross a flooded road.
Hundreds of shoppers and office workers were last night stranded by rising waters in the Meadow Hall area of Sheffield as rescue helicopters were airlifting to safety those in most need. One of those trapped described cars floating down the road outside as floodwaters swelled by four feet in a matter of minutes.
In Humberside, hundreds of motorists were marooned on the main route into Hull as floodwater and stranded cars blocked the A63 into the city. Motorists and lorry drivers were standing in the road and sitting on their vehicles in the five-mile tailback in the South Cave area.
Related Links
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A spokesman for Humberside Fire and Rescue Service said that the day had “possibly been the busiest 12 hours in the history of the service”. He said that the service dealt with more than 1,500 calls.
Elsewhere, hundreds of homes and businesses were flooded, schools evacuated and cars swept away as more rain fell in 24 hours across Britain than usually falls in the entire month of June. Tens of thousands of homes are this morning without power.
Four tornados were also reported, in Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire; Treeton, South Yorkshire; Cranwell, Bedfordshire; and Telford, Shropshire.
A further deluge is forecast to sweep across the country from the South West at the end of the week.
nypdblue,the different is june of 06 we had storm's action, however march 07 nsmg hit 30, alot of people cash out, now they are comming back in and pushing nsmg down, its been one hella of a fight to push nsmg to 25
22 to 23
It is amazing how fast the gulf is heating up. You can see it on a day/day basis
NYPDBLUE what are you looking for
dpdw will run faster, see any storm
is there any news on storm's brewing???????????
Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
000
AXNT20 KNHC 250604
TWDAT
TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
205 AM EDT MON JUN 25 2007
TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION FOR NORTH AMERICA...CENTRAL
AMERICA...THE GULF OF MEXICO...THE CARIBBEAN SEA...NORTHERN
SECTIONS OF SOUTH AMERICA...AND THE ATLANTIC OCEAN TO THE
AFRICAN COAST FROM THE EQUATOR TO 32N. THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION
IS BASED ON SATELLITE IMAGERY...METEOROLOGICAL ANALYSIS...
WEATHER OBSERVATIONS...AND RADAR.
BASED ON 0000 UTC SURFACE ANALYSIS AND SATELLITE IMAGERY
THROUGH 0515 UTC.
...TROPICAL WAVES...
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 14N24W 9N27W 3N28W
MOVING WEST 15 TO 20 KT. NO DEEP CONVECTIVE PRECIPITATION
IS NEAR THIS TROPICAL WAVE.
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE 17N55W 11N58W 5N58W IN GUYANA.
THIS WAVE IS MOVING WEST 15 KT.
A CARIBBEAN SEA TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 72W FROM THE SOUTHWESTERN
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC NEAR 13N72W. SHOWERS WERE EVIDENT AROUND
25/0300 UTC. THIS PRECIPITATION HAS BEEN WEAKENING DUE TO
WARMING CLOUD TOP TEMPERATURES.
...THE ITCZ...
12N17W 8N25W 8N28W 6N40W 10N57W. SCATTERED MODERATE SHOWERS TO
ISOLATED STRONG THUNDERSTORMS FROM 3N TO 6N BETWEEN 32W AND 41W.
STRONG SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE WITHIN 15 NM ON EITHER SIDE
OF 7N52W 10N58W. SCATTERED MODERATE SHOWERS TO ISOLATED STRONG
THUNDERSTORMS ALONG THE AFRICA COAST FROM 9N TO 14N BETWEEN 14W
AND 27W.
...DISCUSSION...
THE GULF OF MEXICO...
CYCLONIC FLOW FROM A MIDDLE TO UPPER LEVEL CYCLONIC CIRCULATION
CENTER AND SHORTWAVE TROUGH COVER SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI AND
LOUISIANA...INTO THE GULF OF MEXICO NORTH OF 26N BETWEEN 85W
AND 97W. MIDDLE TO UPPER LEVEL DRY AIR HAS WRAPPED ITSELF IN
A BAND IN THE FLOW AROUND THE CYCLONIC CENTER...FROM WESTERN
LOUISIANA INTO THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO. UPPER LEVEL
ANTICYCLONIC FLOW COVERS THE AREA SOUTH OF 27N...INCLUDING
OVER MEXICO...FROM A 98W RIDGE. NUMEROUS STRONG SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS WITHIN A 30 TO 60 NM RADIUS OF 17N98W WEST OF
THE ISTHMUS OF TEHUANTEPEC. ANOTHER SUCH AREA GOES FROM 17N
TO 18N BETWEEN 95W AND 97W. A FEW AREAS OF SCATTERED MODERATE
SHOWERS TO ISOLATED STRONG THUNDERSTORMS ARE FROM 20N TO 24N
IN MEXICO. THIS PRECIPITATION IS OCCURRING UNDER THE UPPER
LEVEL RIDGE.
THE CARIBBEAN SEA...
UPPER LEVEL NORTH TO NORTHWESTERLY WIND FLOW COVERS THE
NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF THE AREA...SPILLING INTO THE CARIBBEAN
SEA FROM THE SOUTHEASTERN GULF OF MEXICO. THIS NORTHERLY FLOW
MOVES TOWARD THE BASE OF A MIDDLE TO UPPER LEVEL TROUGH...WHICH
STARTS OUT FROM A 27N72W ATLANTIC OCEAN CYCLONIC CIRCULATION
CENTER...CROSSES THE SOUTHERN BAHAMAS...AND REACHES 15N78W IN
THE CARIBBEAN SEA. ISOLATED MODERATE SHOWERS WERE OCCURRING
AT 25/0300 UTC...AND NOW ARE DISSIPATING IN HAITI FROM 18N TO
19N BETWEEN 72W AND 73W. ISOLATED MODERATE SHOWERS ARE POSSIBLE
IN CLUSTERS OF LOW CLOUDS IN THE SURFACE-TO-LOW LEVEL TRADEWIND
FLOW.
THE ATLANTIC OCEAN...
A MIDDLE TO UPPER LEVEL TROUGH EXTENDS FROM A 27N72W ATLANTIC
OCEAN CYCLONIC CIRCULATION CENTER TO THE SOUTHERN BAHAMAS...
AND INTO THE WEST-CENTRAL CARIBBEAN SEA. ISOLATED MODERATE
SHOWERS FROM 25N TO 28N BETWEEN 69W AND 73W. AN UPPER LEVEL
ANTICYCLONIC CIRCULATION CENTER IS CENTERED NEAR 21N60W. AN
UPPER LEVEL RIDGE GOES FROM THE 21N60W CENTER BEYOND 32N57W.
A WEAK 1017 MB LOW PRESSURE CENTER IS NEAR 28N75W.
AN INVERTED MIDDLE TO UPPER LEVEL TROUGH GOES FROM
A 27N43W CYCLONIC CIRCULATION CENTER BEYOND 33N39W.
UPPER LEVEL WESTERLY WINDS ARE SOUTH OF 14N EAST OF 60W.
NOAA Predicts Above Normal 2007 Atlantic Hurricane Season...
Experts at the NOAA Climate Prediction Center are projecting a 75 percent chance that the Atlantic Hurricane Season will be above normal this year - showing
The gulf and caribbean are definately really heating up with 84s now in the GOM. I dont know how hot it normally gets in the gulf but 84 in june seems high.
http://image.weather.com/images/maps/tropical/atl_sst_720x486.jpg
another african wave set to roll off. they just keep coming. pretty soon one of these will form.
Bill would require weather radios in mobile homes nationwide
Updated 1d 11h ago | Comments 19 | Recommend 3 E-mail | Save | Print |
Enlarge By Charlie Nye, The Indianapolis Star
Kathryn Martin, who lost her 2-year-old son, C.J., in the Nov. 6, 2005, tornado that tore through Evansville, Ind., testified in support of H.B. 1033, nicknamed C.J.'s Law, during the Indiana House of Representatives public safety committee meeting in January 2007. The law passed.
Enlarge By Darron Cummings, AP
Residents of Eastbrook Mobile Home Park sift through debris in Evansville, Ind., Nov. 8, 2005.
By Ryan Lenz, Associated Press Writer
EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Mobile homes across the nation would come equipped from the manufacturer with early warning radios to alert residents of dangerous weather under a bill announced Thursday in Washington.
The bill, introduced by Rep. Brad Ellsworth from southern Indiana's 8th District, mirrors state legislation dubbed "C.J.'s Law" that sailed through this year's General Assembly. It requires all mobile homes installed after June 30 come equipped with the radios that broadcast warnings from the National Weather Service.
"This is about public safety. It's about taking one more step," Ellsworth, a former Vanderburgh County sheriff and Democrat, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Washington.
As sheriff, Ellsworth oversaw rescue and recovery operations for days following a tornado that killed 25 people on Nov. 6, 2005.
The storm hit in the pre-dawn hours with winds estimated around 200 mph. Twenty of the storm's victims lived in Eastbrook Mobile Home Park on the outskirts of Evansville, where emergency officials said few had weather radios or nearby shelters where they could have gone as the storm neared.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Bill | Indianapolis Star | EVANSVILLE | Vanderburgh County | Indiana House of Representatives | Kathryn Martin
Opponents
Bill would require weather radios in mobile homes nationwide
Updated 1d 11h ago | Comments 19 | Recommend 3 E-mail | Save | Print |
Enlarge By Charlie Nye, The Indianapolis Star
Kathryn Martin, who lost her 2-year-old son, C.J., in the Nov. 6, 2005, tornado that tore through Evansville, Ind., testified in support of H.B. 1033, nicknamed C.J.'s Law, during the Indiana House of Representatives public safety committee meeting in January 2007. The law passed.
Enlarge By Darron Cummings, AP
Residents of Eastbrook Mobile Home Park sift through debris in Evansville, Ind., Nov. 8, 2005.
By Ryan Lenz, Associated Press Writer
EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Mobile homes across the nation would come equipped from the manufacturer with early warning radios to alert residents of dangerous weather under a bill announced Thursday in Washington.
The bill, introduced by Rep. Brad Ellsworth from southern Indiana's 8th District, mirrors state legislation dubbed "C.J.'s Law" that sailed through this year's General Assembly. It requires all mobile homes installed after June 30 come equipped with the radios that broadcast warnings from the National Weather Service.
"This is about public safety. It's about taking one more step," Ellsworth, a former Vanderburgh County sheriff and Democrat, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Washington.
As sheriff, Ellsworth oversaw rescue and recovery operations for days following a tornado that killed 25 people on Nov. 6, 2005.
The storm hit in the pre-dawn hours with winds estimated around 200 mph. Twenty of the storm's victims lived in Eastbrook Mobile Home Park on the outskirts of Evansville, where emergency officials said few had weather radios or nearby shelters where they could have gone as the storm neared.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Bill | Indianapolis Star | EVANSVILLE | Vanderburgh County | Indiana House of Representatives | Kathryn Martin
Opponents
fl wave is tracking sse entering warmer waters.
http://hadar.cira.colostate.edu/ramsdis/online/trop_ge_storm_relative_0.html
both the ECMWF and GFS are calling an end to the persistent trofiness we have had these last few weeks. This could start setting up the bermuda high for the rest of the season. Usually around mid july is when the bermuda high will set up a more permanent position.
http://www.ecmwf.int/products/forecasts/d/getchart/catalog/products/forecasts/medium/deterministic/m....
NYPDBLUE need people push toward 25+ right out the gate
where the action dpdw?????????????????????????
Still looks to be moving into the gulf before to long:http://www.goes.noaa.gov/HURRLOOPS/huirloop.html
looks like the caribbean is exploding more to the north:http://websearch.cs.com/wm/boomframe.jsp?query=bay+news+9+tropical+weather+update&page=1&off....
Atlantic Basin update
Tropical Moisture May Impact Gulf
The Atlantic Basin remains quiet at this point in time, and no development is expected over the next few days.
There are only three tropical waves of importance. The first is along 24 west and south of 12 north and is moving west at 15 knots. There is some convection associated with this wave, but no development is anticipated with this wave.
A second wave is along 42 west and south of 13 north moving west at around 15 knots. Some thunderstorms have developed around this wave, but development is not expected.
The third wave is in the eastern Caribbean along 70 west, south of 20 north moving west at 15 knots. Some convection associated with this wave is found over portions of Puerto Rico and Hispaniola. This wave will continue to move westward over the next few days and could provide a surge of moisture to the western and central Gulf Coast states by early next week.
By AccuWeather.com Meteorologist Rob Miller
dpdw i move it to 67 dam if it did not go back down??????