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SHE'S A POWERFUL FORCE -- NATURAL DISASTERS
Was it surviving on rainwater?
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I don't know, kid. I have to believe he had some kind of access to water given people & animals can go quite some time without food, but not without water.
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he had food, tio hamza.
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(03-04-2023, 07:49 AM)BigMark Wrote: he had food, tio hamza.

Si! Una comida maravillosa!  Y los pechos de la tia! 
 
Un perro inteligente!
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hah
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Terrible, awful weather in the deep south. Tornadoes are hell, absolutely terrifying and deadly. I've never been hit dead on, but I have been in the vicinity of them and they are scary enough to make me be petrified whenever I get warnings. Some of you have seen me crying the blues about them and when they are around I don't take my eyes off the radar.
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3010476106PanicPriest

I would be freaked out

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You ain't kiddin'. I'd rather deal with a hurricane.
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Maui is burning to the ground. It's so sad & awful.

This poor woman just found out her home with her pets in it has burned.


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And a death toll over 36!

Ima gonna bet it was started by some local's BBQ . . . making Huli-Huli chicken.
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The Gods demand a sacrifice.
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Well now I feel a little like a jerk for hating how people make messages over Hawaii, but when the east side of the state burns (Washington state) they don't make posts and threads! Its becuase its so ugly, but beautiful Hawaii is burning! Nooooo

I thought I saw where it was man started, but now I am reading it is undetermined.

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I always feel sorry for so many of these people who are losing everything they've spent their life working for. I have a lot of compassion for them all.
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(03-26-2023, 05:58 PM)Duchess Wrote: Terrible, awful weather in the deep south. Tornadoes are hell, absolutely terrifying and deadly. I've never been hit dead on, but I have been in the vicinity of them and they are scary enough to make me be petrified whenever I get warnings. Some of you have seen me crying the blues about them and when they are around I don't take my eyes off the radar.

Once I was in my grandmas 7th floor apartment in Wichita and they were having watches and warnings going off, so we were watching the news ticker and they said there was a touch down spotted right near us. I went over to the window to see and just that minute a funnel came down in the parking lot, real little but enough to shove the cars around, and tracked right across the lot. About that time the sudden change in pressure made the whole window just...bend, and I realized maybe standing by a window in a tornado not one of my better ideas lol. It dissipated right after that, as many of them do. Scariest part of that was how really small the funnel looked but still had some power to it. Made me respect the big ones a whole lot more...
Thank god I am oblivious to the opinions of others while caught in the blinding splendor of my own cleverness.
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A small one touched down in the field in the back of my house once. It sounded like a train and I did the same thing and went over to the window to look knowing it may be a tornado. Then I realized oh shit that really is a tornado I better move away from the window lol.
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(08-11-2023, 12:03 AM)MirahM Wrote: Well now I feel a little like a jerk for hating how people make messages over Hawaii, but when the east side of the state burns (Washington state) they don't make posts and threads! Its becuase its so ugly, but beautiful Hawaii is burning! Nooooo

I thought I saw where it was man started, but now I am reading it is undetermined.

Well to be fair, the little town of Lahaina went up like a matchbox and many of the residents are saying they didn’t get any evacuation orders or anything. One lady said the only warning she got was when she heard an explosion, saw a large cloud of smoke in the distance and a shirtless guy riding by on a bicycle yelling you have to get out of here now.
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There was so little time to flee that people were jumping into the ocean to escape the flames.
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Yeah, they said it was like being in hell with people screaming, explosions and feeling their skin burning.
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Maui is not the island I visit with regularity.  Oahu is the island I like to call "home".

However, when in Maui, I usually stay on the West side . . . from Lahaina up to Kapalua . . . so I know the area that was devastated.

As it's Friday, a local Hawaiian tradition, beginning decades ago, is the playing of "Aloha Friday" on all the island radio stations.

To all of my Five-O ohana . . . thinking of you.



The song is very dated (My first recollection of Aloha Friday, was in the late 80's). 

Some of the terms I find endearing (besides the use of Pidgen): 

Bank Americard, is the modern day Visa.

Okole is Hawaiian for one's bottom (butt).

Keikeis is Hawaiian for kids.

Kalakaua is the main drag, running the length of Waikiki.

Pulehu is a term for grilling meat.

Y'all should know the word Poke . . . 
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The loss of life is mostly the fault of the Maui County government, which knew there was a high probability for a devastating fire and did nothing, even though a fire had broken out. Instead of ordering evacuation, they declared the fire was 100% contained -- probably because tourism is a huge part of the Maui economy.

Money talks, human life walks.
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