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10 Images Of Terrifying Weather Events

10 Images Of Terrifying Weather Events Head Editor Jamie founded Listverse due to an insatiable desire to share fascinating, obscure, and bizarre facts. He has been a guest speaker on numerous national radio and television stations and is a five time published author.More About Us Weather is notoriously unpredictable. A sharply dressed weatherman smiles brightly through your TV set on a Monday morning, promising a sunny day, only for you to get caught up in a hailstorm of note and arrive at work late in a car peppered with dents. Weather can also be extremely dangerous. Tornadoes, hurricanes and blizzards, to name but a few, cause havoc around the globe every year leaving death and destruction in their wake.

LET S REMINISCE: The great ice storm of 1949

LET S REMINISCE: The great ice storm of 1949 By Jerry Lincecum Special to the Herald Democrat After reading my column on the Blizzard of 2011, one of my veteran Telling Our Stories writers suggested that I look up one of my previous columns about the Great Ice Storm of 1949. I’m talking about the one that started on Jan. 22 and didn’t end until Feb. 4. I checked the dates on the internet, finding it listed as the worst ice storm in company history of Texas Power and Light. Steel towers crumpled and two inches of ice accumulated on some transmission wires. I was not quite seven years old, and on our farm near Groesbeck we had several old oak and pecan trees that lost large limbs. There was the fun part, too, in that our pond froze hard enough for skating (using tow sacks). Fortunately, my family was still burning wood in stoves and fireplaces, because butane froze in the tanks of some of our neighbors. So we managed to stay warm and my mother cooked a lot of red beans and corn

Disaster Recovery for Government Organizations -Planning, Practice, and People

Disaster Recovery for Government Organizations -Planning, Practice, and People Jim Smith, CIO, State of Maine Jim Smith, CIO, State of Maine When the State of Maine computer operator drove to work on that cold, crisp morning in January of 1998, he probably did not realize that he would soon be living in the State’s data center, full time. In addition, he probably did not know he would bring his family with him. In Maine, in January, you need heat to survive and thousands of families did not have heat that January. The Great Ice Storm of 1998 hit Maine and Eastern Canada hard. It extended over two weeks. Over half the state’s population was out of power for over two weeks, schools and government offices were closed, radio communication systems were out; every state, car, building, and road was covered in a four-inch layer of ice. It made travel impossible and it challenged basic survival.

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