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It's not a hurricane until a reporter is blown away
Published: 8/29/2012 11:24 AM
Last Modified: 8/29/2012 11:27 AM


Students get in on the fun, too! Research students from the the University of Alabama measure wind speeds as Hurricane Isaac makes landfall Wednesday in New Orleans, La. Isaac was packing 80 mph winds, making it a Category 1 hurricane. It came ashore early Tuesday near the mouth of the Mississippi River, driving a wall of water nearly 11 feet high inland and soaking a neck of land that stretches into the Gulf.

There is apparently a hurricane that is just sitting over the coast of Louisiana right now. How do I know this? Not from satellites or radar or weather observation stations. I know there is a hurricane because an army of intrepid reporters is bravely standing on the empty streets of New Orleans and on the beach in Gulfport, wobbly and soaking wet, screaming over the wind caused by Hurricane Isaac.

I know it’s important to some people to have people on the scene to show what conditions are like, but it’s not worth it to have people standing in 80 mph winds, ignoring everyone heading away from the coast.

However, it is worth it for us to see these poor reporters being blown every which way, fall over and tumble down the street. (That leads me to today’s vocabulary word, kids: Schadenfreude.)

So, from the comfort and dryness of our offices in downtown Tulsa, we have scoured the internet to find some of the best videos of these poor reporters, braving it all to tell us what we can see from an observation station and a security camera. Most of these videos have that “wait for it” moment, so be sure to wait for it.

(All that being said, and in the interest of full disclosure, I would like to ride out a little hurricane or tropical storm at some point in my lifetime. You know, a decent distance inland and fully stocked and prepared. Could be an adventure!)

For a primer on Hurricane Isaac, here is the latest from the Associated Press (remember: wait for it)


Here, famed weather reporter Jim Cantore does some “tebowing” during Isaac today.


That WAS a heck of a gust!


“Look at the boat, not me falling down like a clown!”


DEBRIS! We have debris!


The legendary Al Roker/Mike Sidel bromance


Jim, it’s incredible what the power of the water is doing to your poor cameraman


OK, this one is just adorable.


--Jerry Wofford



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Almanac
View 2012
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
TemperaturePrecipitation
DateHigh TempLow TempTotalMonth to dateHistorical average
1 44° 16° 0 0.00 0.05
2 59° 24° 0 0.00 0.11
3 57° 33° 0 0.00 0.16
4 68° 37° Trace 0.00 0.21
5 69° 29° 0 0.00 0.26
6 66° 33° 0 0.00 0.32
7 59° 38° 0.05 0.05 0.38
8 51° 34° 0 0.05 0.44
9 44° 36° 0.01 0.06 0.51
10 62° 37° 0.07 0.13 0.57
11 54° 28° 0 0.13 0.64
12 44° 30° 0.25 0.38 0.70
13 55° 40° 0.01 0.39 0.76
14 ° ° 0.83
15 ° ° 0.89
16 ° ° 0.95
17 ° ° 1.02
18 ° ° 1.09
19 ° ° 1.16
20 ° ° 1.23
21 ° ° 1.31
22 ° ° 1.38
23 ° ° 1.46
24 ° ° 1.53
25 ° ° 1.61
26 ° ° 1.69
27 ° ° 1.77
28 ° ° 1.85

Weather World

Follow Jerry Wofford on Twitter for updates during severe weather conditions.

Tulsa weather milestones of 2013 (as of Feb. 12)

Highest temperature: 70 on Jan. 11 (Record: 115 on Aug. 15, 1936)
Lowest temperature: 15 on Jan. 16 (Record: Minus-16 on Jan. 22, 1930)
Hottest month (average): 40.5 degrees in January (Record: 91.7 degrees on July 1980)
Coldest month (average): 40. 5 degrees in January (Record: 21.7 in January 1918)
Most snowfall (day): 0.1 of an inch on Feb. 12(Record: 13.2 inches on Feb. 1, 2011)
Most snowfall (month): 0.1 of an inch in February(Record: 22.5 inches in February 2011)
Most rainfall (day): 0.91 of an inch on Jan. 29 (Record: 9.27 inches on May 26-27, 1984)
Most rainfall (month): 1.54 of an inch in January (Record: 18.18 inches on September 1971)
Highest wind speed: 30 mph on Jan. 30
Previous day with any rain: Feb. 12
Previous day with 1 inch or more of rain: Oct. 17, 2012
Previous day with any snow: Feb. 12
Previous day with freezing temperatures: Feb. 12
Read regular updates on Oklahoma's unpredictable weather and learn more about meteorology from the Tulsa office of the National Weather Service.

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>> Meet the forecasters

Contributors
Staff Writer Althea Peterson started writing for the Tulsa World in March 2007 after previous stops at the Norman Transcript in 2006 and the Oklahoma Gazette in 2005. She followed her older brother from rural Wisconsin (with a public school that never seemed to call snow days) to the University of Oklahoma, but did not follow his pursuit to study meteorology. However, she tries to find as many opportunities to report on the weather as possible.

Staff Writer Jerry Wofford came to the Tulsa World in 2010 from The Manhattan Mercury in Manhattan, Kan. Originally from western Arkansas and a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Jerry has lived in Tornado Alley his entire life and is one of those people who goes outside when the sirens go off.

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