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Hurricane Katrina, re: the doomsday warning
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:11 am
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:11 am
Today marks the 20 year anniversary of the NHCs infamous doomsday warning.
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If tweet fails to load, click here. quote:
Devastating damage expected...
Hurricane Katrina, a most powerful hurricane with unprecedented strength, rivaling the intensity of Hurricane Camille of 1969.
Most of the area will be uninhabitable for weeks, perhaps longer. At least one half of well-constructed homes will have roof and wall failure. All gabled roofs will fail, leaving those homes severely damaged or destroyed.
The majority of industrial buildings will become non-functional. Partial to complete wall and roof failure is expected. All wood-framed low-rising apartment buildings will be destroyed. Concrete block low-rise apartments will sustain major damage, including some wall and roof failure.
High-rise office and apartment buildings will sway dangerously, a few to the point of total collapse. All windows will blow out.
Airborne debris will be widespread and may include heavy items such as household appliances and even light vehicles. Sport utility vehicles and light trucks will be moved. The blown debris will create additional destruction. Persons, pets, and livestock exposed to the winds will face certain death if struck.
Power outages will last for weeks, as most power poles will be down and transformers destroyed. Water shortages will make human suffering incredible by modern standards.
The vast majority of native trees will be snapped or uprooted. Only the heartiest will remain standing but be totally defoliated. Few crops will remain. Livestock left exposed to the winds will be killed.
An inland hurricane wind warning is issued when sustained winds near hurricane force, or frequent gusts at or above hurricane force, are certain within the next 12 to 24 hours.
Once tropical storm and hurricane force winds onset, do not venture outside!"
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:12 am to East Coast Band
staaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawp with the katrina threads
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:14 am to East Coast Band
What's dumb is weather people will use revisionist history to prove that this was right, when the actual storm wasn't bad at all in LA (different story for the Gulf coast obviously). It was the floods after the levees failed that caused the most damage.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:14 am to East Coast Band
There's a new Doc on Netflix but it looks like all the other Katrina Docs
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:17 am to East Coast Band
Coolest August on record.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:22 am to CocomoLSU
quote:
different story for the Gulf coast obviously
The NWS New Orleans forecast area includes the Mississippi coast.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:24 am to CocomoLSU
quote:
What's dumb is weather people will use revisionist history to prove that this was right, when the actual storm wasn't bad at all in LA (different story for the Gulf coast obviously). It was the floods after the levees failed that caused the most damage
This warning came from the NWS New Orleans office, which is the NWS office responsible for the coastal counties of Mississippi. With regards to those counties, I would say the warning was pretty on point. The warning was also issued when Katrina was at Cat. 5 strength with 175 mph sustained winds.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:25 am to East Coast Band
The day Baton Rouge died.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:26 am to CocomoLSU
quote:
when the actual storm wasn't bad at all in LA
Not like the roof of the dome was ripped open and skyscraper windows were blown out all over downtown.
Not to mention the shear number of trees lost and damage to live Oaks uptown that will never recover.
But yeah, the levees did all that. Not bad at all.
Schmuck.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:28 am to fightin tigers
Ask people in Plaquemines and Lower St Bernard if it "wasn't bad". Clown take. 
This post was edited on 8/28/25 at 10:29 am
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:30 am to East Coast Band
What’s funny is this was partly right in that places were uninhabitable for weeks but wrong in how it would happen. This warning was all about a Cat 5 hurricane and wind. It doesn’t even mention surge, the levees, and flooding.
I’ve always approved of his use of “most powerful hurricane”. People don’t write like that anymore, just 20 years later.
I’ve always approved of his use of “most powerful hurricane”. People don’t write like that anymore, just 20 years later.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:30 am to OysterPoBoy
quote:
Coolest August on record.
I remember the summer prior to Katrina being very mild too. I think it only got above 90 degrees three days in NOLA that summer (afternoon showers almost everyday).
ETA: I just looked up the NOLA temperature data. I was wrong about above 90 degrees for only three days. There were a lot more days above 90 than just three days. But it was a cool summer. Two cool fronts reached NOLA and there was more rain than normal. June, July and August normally average 83 degrees. The summer of 2004 averaged 81.9 degrees.
This post was edited on 8/28/25 at 10:43 am
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:34 am to fightin tigers
quote:
Not like the roof of the dome was ripped open and skyscraper windows were blown out all over downtown.
Not to mention the shear number of trees lost and damage to live Oaks uptown that will never recover.
But yeah, the levees did all that. Not bad at all.
Schmuck.
Nothing of that lives up to this certain death warning about the wind.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:38 am to fightin tigers
quote:
Not like the roof of the dome was ripped open and skyscraper windows were blown out all over downtown.
Not to mention the shear number of trees lost and damage to live Oaks uptown that will never recover.
But yeah, the levees did all that. Not bad at all.
Schmuck.
Exactly...you took the words out of my mouth......even without the levees breaking. NOLA got frick in the arse pretty bad
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:40 am to East Coast Band
can we move on at some point?
Don't have to forget it, but can we quit talking about it?
Don't have to forget it, but can we quit talking about it?
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:40 am to glassman
quote:
Ask people in Plaquemines and Lower St Bernard if it "wasn't bad". Clown take.
Had nothing to do with levees breaking
2005 Hurricane Katrina - fishing boats deposited by storm surge on LA 23 in Empire, Louisiana after the storm.

This post was edited on 8/28/25 at 10:50 am
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:42 am to The Torch
quote:
There's a new Doc on Netflix but it looks like all the other Katrina Docs
I watched the first two of three eps and fast-forwarded through most of the third. Honore was one of the only bright spots in the entire thing. The third ep was 99% communist drivel.
Eta: Spike (ep 3 is his) should’ve just played the Saints v Falcons in first game back in Dome. The end.
Also, I don’t recall a single mention of the MS coast. At all. Maybe on a brief news clip.
This post was edited on 8/28/25 at 10:59 am
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:45 am to East Coast Band
quote:
At least one half of well-constructed homes will have roof and wall failure. All gabled roofs will fail, leaving those homes severely damaged or destroyed. The majority of industrial buildings will become non-functional. Partial to complete wall and roof failure is expected. All wood-framed low-rising apartment buildings will be destroyed. Concrete block low-rise apartments will sustain major damage, including some wall and roof failure. High-rise office and apartment buildings will sway dangerously, a few to the point of total collapse. All windows will blow out.
I’m fairly certain this didn’t happen.
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:47 am to Oilfieldbiology
quote:
I’m fairly certain this didn’t happen.
It happened, not just in NOLA but it did happen along the Gulf Coast and the lower lying areas
Posted on 8/28/25 at 10:50 am to The Torch
Watched one the other day and what hit me the most is the media was a big problem. Taking up shop in the quarter ( highest point and then spreading rumors without actually verifying.
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