Afda Concept Art Writing Prompt: An Unusual Brush With Death
One month after Hurricane Claudette pounded Texas, hurricane warnings were posted Friday along parts of the coast as fast-moving Tropical Storm Erika churned across the gulf.The race westward by Erika, which reached tropical storm strength only Thursday, caught Gulf Coast residents by surprise, sending farmers, fishermen and some residents scrambling Friday.Forecasters with the National Wea
stanley website ther Service said that as of Friday evening, Erika was about 185 miles east of Brownsville and moving west near 20 mph, with sustained winds near 60 mph.Weather service forecaster Jim Campbell said the storm was expected to make landfall in the early morning hours Saturday near the mouth of the Rio Grande, just east of Brownsville. It s making the beeline just straight at us, Campbell said.
stanley cupe The storm was expected to come ashore as a hurricane, with 75 mph wind, the minimal strength for hurricanes. Heavy rain, a storm surge of 3 to 6 feet and large battering waves were expected, forecasters said. There was also the possibility of tornadoes. I sure don t recall one moving this fast, said Harley Londrie, manager of ZimCo
stanley water bottle Marine on Port Isabel. He spent Friday morning calling his fleet of 23 boats in from around the gulf. It s moving so fast they ll otherwise be right in the middle of it, he said.Claudette, the first hurricane of the Atlantic storm season, hit the mid-Texas coast July 15 with 85-mph wind. Two people were killed by falling trees or limbs, and the storm tore off roofs a Rbzc A Doctor s-Office-in-a-Chair Measures All Your Vitals At Once
A few weeks ago, Discovery Channel aired one of the worst pseudo-science documentaries in its history. Called Eaten Alive, it was about what would happen if a giant anaconda tried to eat a person. Now, the environmental researcher behind the documentary says he still thinks it was a good idea.
https://gizmodo/seriously-fuck-discovery-and-its-eaten-alive-by-an-ana-1668364996 Naturalist Paul Rosolie, who has won prai
stanley cup se from the U.N. and activists like Bill McKibben for his work, says he took the job wi
stanley cup th Discovery because he desperately wanted to
stanley becher study anacondas in the Amazon. With little funding available for conservation biology, he thought that getting eaten by a snake on TV would be a small price to pay for good scientific work. In a long article on Mongabay, Rosolie explains all the research he and his colleagues were able to do, thanks to Discovery bankrolling their trip. Rosolie, who has a degree in environmental science, brought several working scientists with his team. They studied over a dozen of the endangered snakes, tracked their movements in their natural habitats, and investigated the agricultural and mining practices that threaten the snakes ; environment. All of that sounds great, and reminds me of similar comments from scientists who have taken money from National Geographic to make splashy adventure specials while also doing important research work. The difference is that National Geographic actually focuses on the science, and doesn ;t require