I just saw on news whats happening,ive never seen anything like that ever in my life and i hope i wont,its sad and scary.I just tought that there r members on CS from New Orleans and thay r away from home now and it would be good to see that we had them on our minds when thay will be back.And ofcourse not only for CS members for everyone there.
I have been following the situation as much as I can - thankfully, it appears to be much better managed this time around (disasters have a way of teaching I suppose). It is my hope that all will be okay...
ManyfeathersWerrimull, Victoria Australia243 posts
Hurricanes are devastating. I remember 3 years ago when it happened again. At least this time they were warned in advance. I pray for all Americans, may you be safe & caring enough to help others who are less fortunate than you.
Ive been keeping an eye on this too and just found this on the bbc's site......
As Hurricane Gustav approaches New Orleans, the internet is providing detailed information, personal accounts and lively discussions about all aspects of the storm. Here are a few of them:
The first port-of-call for official details of the hurricane's progress can be found at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Their National Hurricane Center website has maps plotting the predicted route of the storm, as well as a array of technical data.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency and Louisiana's emergency pages also have useful resources, advice and links. Communities have set up their own sites to give information
Replete with maps and accessible information are the news sites MSNBC and NOLA, as well as the weather site Accuweather.
Amid concern that the oil industry could be badly affected, the Wall Street Journal has a map tracking the hurricane, marked with the major energy facilities along its route.
Communities have launched their own sites and blogs such as Hurricane Gustav Resources to give information about road and school closures, evacuation shelters "and more".
Personal accounts of the storm can be found on local pages like New Orleans metablogs and Vasavana, where citizens are relaying their experiences of packing up and heading away from the path of the storm.
Established web favourites such as Wikipedia have set up dedicated pages with lists of shelters, people offering their help and other links. Facebook has a number of groups for people to keep in touch and Twitter has plenty of people commenting on the storm.
Lively discussions can be found on weather sites such as Jeff Masters' blog and Ejang, which is tracking the storm using Googlemaps.
There is another storm brewing now and heading for S. Carolina and northern Florida. It looks like its all still good in New Orleans so far. So long as the levees hold and no destructive tornados come out of it all.
rwantin: I have been following the situation as much as I can - thankfully, it appears to be much better managed this time around (disasters have a way of teaching I suppose). It is my hope that all will be okay...
Report threads that break rules, are offensive, or contain fighting. Staff may not be aware of the forum abuse, and cannot do anything about it unless you tell us about it. click to report forum abuse »
If one of the comments is offensive, please report the comment instead (there is a link in each comment to report it).