The sets keep rolling in
WEATHER TIDBITS
Attention Tidbit readers. Health warning: Do not look at
Tidbitter’s mug shot next to his column if you are squeamish or while
eating a meal.
Sorry, readers, for tarnishing what was once a semi-respectable
weekly effort.
By the time you read this, yet another macking south swell will be
in the history books. Hurricane Hernan was born in the waters off
Manzanillo a week ago today and began to trek swiftly to the west,
northwest at 20 mph.
By Sunday at 3 a.m., he stormed into our surf window, a full-blown
category five with sustained winds of 161 mph and occasional gusts up
to 188 mph, making him the third strongest Eastern Pacific hurricane
of all time. Only Guillermo in August 1997 and Linda in September
1997 top him. Hernan had gale force winds 300 miles out from his core
or “eye.”
This column is actually being written on Tuesday. The first
“scouts” of Hernan’s waves are just beginning to feather, but I know
what’s going to transpire on Wednesday and Thursday.
A new area of disturbed weather is about to attain storm status,
off Southern Mexico, so the Chubasco machine is well-oiled and tuned
and of course it coincides with the beginning of the new school year.
I’m not trying to be a bad role model (but I am, believe me), but
if you don’t get around to starting school until like next week, I
don’t blame you. There are priorities. I used to belong to the “Not
When The Surf’s Up” student union.
Remember Hurricane Linda on Mon., Sept. 15, 1997? Of course, it
was the first “full day” of school. The truancy rate was very high
that day. Only seven bookworms were seen in the library that day. How
smart can they be?
Hernan update, 3:45 p.m. Tuesday: 3-to 5-foot sets are marching
precision like at a ridiculous (south, southeast 165) angle. Here it
comes.
It’ll be overhead everywhere by dark.
Tomorrow’s the banger! The “Bu” (Malibu) tomorrow.
Today’s wisdom: “When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro!”
-- Hunter S. Thompson.
* DENNIS MCTIGHE is a Laguna Beach resident. He earned a
bachelor’s degree in Earth Sciences from UC San Diego and was a U.S.
Air Force weatherman at Hickman Air Force Base, Hawaii.
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