Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
Citizens have been warned to avoid entering the sea.
The warning was issued by the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management after the TT Meteorological Service (TTMS) issued a hazardous sea alert at yellow level near shore areas from yesterday to Tuesday.
“Yellow means there is potential for negative impact. However, the damage is avoidable if persons monitor conditions and reduce their level of exposure,” the ODPM said.
The agency said it, together with the TTMS, is advising sea bathers, fishermen and small craft operators to carefully monitor near-shore activities and take the necessary action to preserve life and property.
The ODPM also urged residents and visitors near coastal areas to get ready and stay ready by implementing the following safety measures which included; avoid entering the sea if unnecessary, be alert for large waves and dangerous currents, follow instructions of lifeguards.
https://newsday.co.tt/2019/09/28/odpm-w ... n-the-sea/
The Trinidad and Tobago Meteorological Service (Met Office) has issued a Hazardous Seas Alert #1 - Yellow Level for the period Friday 4 pm to Tuesday 10 am.
Long-period, north-easterly swells generated by Hurricane Lorenzo are expected to affect northern and sheltered nearshore coastal areas. Effects will be in the form of occasional battering waves which can lead to localized disruption to sea bathing and other nearshore coastal activities. Localised beach erosion is also possible. Effects will be exacerbated at high tide as spring tides are in effect.
Sea bathers, fishermen and small craft operators should carefully monitor nearshore coastal sea conditions and exercise caution along affected areas. Be alert for dangerous breaking waves and currents. Follow the instructions of lifeguards.
http://www.looptt.com/content/met-issue ... evel-alert
De Dragon wrote:randolphinshan wrote:De Dragon wrote:randolphinshan wrote:sMASH wrote:PNM wanted Brisn Lara stadium, WGTL, rapid tram, and how much they spent to refurbish white Hall, reduced taxes fir the yachting Industry, so trucking water to fill a dam is completely on the table.
Not gonna happen, but if it does it will surely not cost 1 billion that the taxpayer paid for a corrupt wastewater treatment plant that UNC crooks built that has not produced a SINGLE DROP of water.
And for you brainwashed PP sheep water was trucked in 2010 from Caroni Usine Ste Madeline pond and Petrotrin Clarke Road pond to Pointe a Pierrre during the drought.
Dummy Tokesy, filling a national reservoir cannot on any scale, be compared to filling a tank for the continued operation of a refinery. MANY plants in Pt. Lisas do that during low supply from WASA, because the infrastructure is there.
When you do not know anything it pays to keep your mouth shut.The river was never filled in a tank Sardis, it was pumped directly into the reservoir you see from the highway. There is no tank the refinery uses to store water, water is stored in the reservoir before going to the water treatment plant for use as steam along with other things. I was a process engineer there so I know. Now go back to cleaning the boss lady vodka vomit
OK, well then was the reservoir of comparable size to Navet or Hollis? No? Then shut your Rowley hole! Tank, reservoir, pond whatever, the volume is what matters moron! Process Engineer and you can't calculate and compare volume? You mean Sanitation Engineer aka Cleaner Lady. With stellar employees like you and Josh-O no wonder PT had to close!
matr1x wrote:Saw the funnel cloud too
The_Honourable wrote:Funnel cloud also... didn't touch down as yet.
The_Honourable wrote:Ireland... just because.
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:funny thing is, last year there were no Xs on the map
redmanjp wrote:shake d livin wake d dead wrote:funny thing is, last year there were no Xs on the map
NHC is only concerned with development of
Tropical Cyclones. Those October rains wasn't anything like that. Just a whole lot of rain.
But Met Office should be issuing a yellow alert for what's coming.