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Dear list members,

 

The extreme bouts of weather that have characterised the USA in recent

months, as documented here on SAMVA have continued. There are two new

stories today:

 

* Snow raps Kansas governor's storm response

* Soggy Midwest reeling from deadly storm

 

Moreover, the accidents continue:

* Navy helicopter hits power line; 5 killed

 

This is all in line with the predictions made on the basis of the

SAMVA USA chart.

 

Best wishes,

 

Thor

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Extreme Weather, Fires Befall Nation

May 9, 4:50 PM (ET)

NEW YORK (AP) - Nature's fury made life miserable Wednesday from one

end of the nation to the other, with people forced out of their homes

by wildfires near both coasts and the Canadian border and by major

flooding in the Midwest.

 

And although the calendar still said spring, the first named storm of

the year was whipping up surf on the beaches of the Southeast.

 

Overall, it wasn't quite a day for the record books.

 

" It's a major flood, " National Weather Service meteorologist Suzanne

Fortin said Wednesday of the flooding in Missouri. " It won't be a

record breaker, but it will be in the top three. "

 

However, a three-week-old fire in southern Georgia had become that

state's biggest on record after charring 167 square miles of forest

and swamp.

 

Smoke and a dusting of ashes filled the air through much of Florida

and southeastern Georgia. The haze over most of Florida even closed

several highways and sent people with breathing problems indoors.

 

The flooding was produced by the drenching weekend thunderstorms

across the Plains states that also devastated Greensburg, Kan. In

addition to 11 tornado deaths, two drowning deaths were blamed on the

storms, one each in Oklahoma and Kansas.

 

High water had poured over the tops of at least 20 levees along the

Missouri River and other streams in the state, authorities said Wednesday.

 

Missouri National Guard troops were helping. And Highway Patrol

troopers were working 24-hour shifts near Big Lake, a village town of

about 150 permanent residents in the state's northwest corner, which

was inundated by five levee breaks along the Missouri River and four

smaller ones on other streams, said patrol Lt. John Hotz.

 

No injuries were reported. Big Lake, some two miles from the Missouri

River, is about 35 miles northwest of St. Joseph.

 

In Missouri's Jackson County, authorities evacuated 300 to 400

residents of Levasy on Wednesday. At least a dozen homes were

partially under water from the Missouri River, a dispatcher said.

 

In central Missouri, the state capital, Jefferson City, was preparing

for flooding. After floods in 1993 and 1995, the city raised the

elevation of its riverside sewage treatment plant, and the federal

government bought out scores of homes on the north shore of the river,

but the airport and businesses are still vulnerable.

 

On the West Coast, in view of many Los Angeles residents, a blaze had

covered more than 800 acres in the city's sprawling Griffith Park

behind the iconic Griffith Observatory.

 

The danger to homes south of the park had eased Wednesday and many of

the hundreds of residents evacuated overnight were allowed to return.

However, fire officials warned that conditions could change.

 

" The canyons and those erratic winds are dangerous, " said fire Capt.

Carlos Calvillo.

 

The fire appeared to have been accidental, said Battalion chief John

Miller, who oversees arson investigations.

 

In the Southeast, a wildfire in northern Florida's Bradford County had

forced the evacuation of about 250 homes, said Annaleasa Winter, a

state forestry spokeswoman. That fire had blackened 16,000 to 18,000

acres and was 20 percent contained.

 

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist said the state had more than 200 active

fires Wednesday that had charred a total of 78 square miles.

 

Officials in southeastern Georgia issued a mandatory evacuation

Wednesday for an area including the town of Moniac, saying that by

early Thursday it may be in the path of a 107,000-acre blaze in the

Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, the largest recorded blaze in

Georgia history.

 

Another fire that started in Georgia crossed into Florida and

threatened the small town of Taylor, but Baker County Sheriff Joey

Dobson said Wednesday that the wind appeared to have moved the blaze

past the town. " We are not out of the woods yet, " Dobson cautioned.

 

Smoke from those fires was spreading across wide areas of Florida as

wind circulated around Subtropical Storm Andrea, centered about 100

miles off the Georgia coast with top sustained wind around 45 mph.

Andrea didn't seem to be much of a threat, the National Hurricane

Center in Miami said.

 

It didn't appear that Andrea's wind would hinder firefighting efforts,

said Jim Harrell, a spokesman for Florida's Division of Forestry.

However, firefighters also weren't likely to get much help soon as

meteorologists said no significant downpours were expected over land

through at least Thursday morning and any lightning could start more

fires.

 

Elsewhere, a wildfire near the Canadian border in northeastern

Minnesota had covered more than 34 square miles Wednesday, adding more

than 8 square miles in one day, authorities said. It had destroyed 45

buildings, including multimillion-dollar homes, and firefighters said

it was just 5 percent contained.

 

More than 100 people had been removed from their homes in the path of

the fire.

SAMVA , " cosmologer " <cosmologer wrote:

>

> Dear list members,

>

> The extreme bouts of weather that have characterised the USA in recent

> months, as documented here on SAMVA have continued. There are two new

> stories today:

>

> * Snow raps Kansas governor's storm response

> * Soggy Midwest reeling from deadly storm

>

> Moreover, the accidents continue:

> * Navy helicopter hits power line; 5 killed

>

> This is all in line with the predictions made on the basis of the

> SAMVA USA chart.

>

> Best wishes,

>

> Thor

>

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