Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hello Luggers, In the latest digest someone asked Dr. Joseph Yao about Typhoon York and I thought I would add my 2 cents. I made it back from Beijing late Wednesday afternoon when the Typhoon signal was at #3. (Hong Kong has a series of numbers indicating Typhoon severity by numbers related to wind speed - they progress from #3 (businesses still open, transport running) to #8 (businesses and schools closed, transport limited, ferries stopped) to #10 (winds in excess of 150km!) About 3 am Thursday the signal went to #8 which pleased my daughter mightily (no school) and about 6 am it went to #10. We live on the 35th floor of a downtown apartment building (spectacular views of Central and the harbour when it is clear). At the height of the storm the rain lashing across our 35th floor balcony was like a fire hose, hissing and foaming over the table. Most every window leaked - but only a little for the most part. The exhaust fans in the bathrooms howled and the exhaust fan shutters clattered and banged. We did not put the typhoon shutters down in the living room for fear we couldn't get them up again. Most every flight was cancelled and long distance flights were diverted to Taipei. This was maybe in reaction to the flipping over of the China Airlines plane two weeks ago in the last typhoon. Forty roads were closed in Hong Kong including Gloucester Road in Central where windows blew out of Immigration and Revenue Towers - a crane blew down across the airport highway - a container was blown into the harbour in Central. We stayed home and ate wieners and beans and watched old movies - Sound of Music and the King and I. For dinner we had hamburger in wine sauce - not bad for being typhoon bound! Today (Saturday) I have been out around town taking pictures of the damage trying out my recently purchased Voigtlander Skopar. In the parking lot of the HK Yacht Club there are several ancient trees uprooted. We will miss their shade when we park in future. All over downtown many old trees have had their tops twisted off and there are branches and parts of tree trunks lying everywhere. On the tops of several glass clad buildings including the beautiful Central Plaza Building there are several panels gone - and several panels punctured - some at very high floors. The main roads have been swept of the glass and debris but it hasn't been carted away and lies by the side of the road glittering in the gutters. It is amazing that only one person was killed (and a wind surfer is still lost and presumed dead - it was the ride of his life, I guess) but damage and clean up estimates are in the billions of dollars. There was an article in this morning's "South China Morning Post" - a reprint of a thought piece in the British "Guardian" by Martin Kettle. He pointed out that regional Asian disasters do not rate much coverage in the World wide media - dominated by networks like CNN with their 24 hour coverage - and how all media find it easy to pick up the US feeds (we get ABC and CBS news here every morning on the local channels for example) so Hurricane Floyd reports submerged reports on Typhoon York "doomed to regional media oblivion". Thought you might find interesting this personal report on York. If not, sorry to have used the band width. Cheers Howard Cummer