Red Bluff Daily News

September 03, 2016

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/722928

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 11 of 23

Washington 81/66 New York 78/66 Miami 92/78 Atlanta 85/69 Detroit 79/56 Houston 92/74 Chicago 76/59 Minneapolis 76/62 Kansas City 80/61 El Paso 90/71 Denver 87/5 8 Billings 73/53 Los Angeles 76/60 San Francisco 68/58 Seattle 68/50 AIRQUALITYFORECAST Whatitmeans:0-50:Good; 51-100:Moderate; 101-150:Unhealthyforsensitivepeople; 151+:Unhealthyforall. Source: Airnow.gov City Today'sairquality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast s-sunny,pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain,sf-snow flurries,sn-snow,i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Africa CarsonCity Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollenlevels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) Extreme Very high High Moderate Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hoursofsunlight River Levels SacramentoRiver Flood 7a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: SUNDAY 86° 58° MONDAY 90° 60° Mostly sunn y Sunshine TUESDAY 91° 63° Sunn y WEDNESDAY 95° 63° Sunn y and seasonably warm TODAY 89° 58° Plenty of sunshine. An evening shower; otherwise, mainly clear tonight. High ....................................................................... 90° Low ........................................................................ 60° Normal high ......................................................... 93° Normal low ........................................................... 61° Record high ........................................... 112° in 1950 Record low .............................................. 48° in 1946 Humidity noon today ........................................ 26% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 0.00" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.03" Season to date ................................................ 23.37" Normal season to date .................................. 24.17" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .................................................................. Good Napa ................................................................... Good Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................................. Good Yuba City ................................................... Moderate Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass ....................... N.A. Mold .........................N.A. Trees ....................... N.A. Weeds ..................... N.A. 6 Highest at 12 p.m. Today 6:39 a.m. 7:37 p.m. 8:50 a.m. 8:58 p.m. Sunday 6:40 a.m. 7:35 p.m. 9:48 a.m. 9:28 p.m. 12 hr., 58 min. Sep9 First Sep16 Full Last Sep23 New Sep30 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........3.80 ....... -0.30 atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......130.10 ....... -0.10 atOrdFerry................................114 ........97.60 .......none atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......239.10 ....... -0.20 atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......201.80 ....... -0.20 atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......167.60 ....... -0.10 BlackButte ....................444.63..............40,941 .....28.5% LakeOroville..................765.64.........1,827,949 .....48.9% LakeShasta .................1012.94.........3,119,637 .....68.5% LakeTrinity..................2261.36.........1,056,541 .....39.9% Whiskeytown...............1208.64............236,751 .....98.2% Weather Trivia ™ How high was the tidal surge produced by Hurricane Camille? Over 20 feet. Today Sunday Anaheim 78/61/pc 77/61/pc Bakersfield 92/61/s 84/60/s Chula Vista 73/61/pc 73/62/pc Crescent City 62/50/pc 62/49/pc Death Valley 107/76/s 100/68/s Eureka 65/51/pc 66/49/pc Fremont 72/58/s 73/55/pc Fresno 89/57/s 83/56/s Glendale 78/56/pc 77/56/pc Huntington Beach 74/63/pc 73/63/pc Irvine 74/61/pc 74/62/pc Lake Tahoe 69/36/s 63/32/s Long Beach 76/64/pc 76/64/pc Los Angeles 76/60/pc 74/59/pc Mammoth Mountain 73/34/s 69/29/s Modesto 85/55/s 82/56/s Monterey 64/56/pc 64/54/pc Moreno Valley 85/54/pc 81/54/pc Napa 79/50/s 78/51/s Needles 106/75/s 100/71/s Oakland 69/59/pc 72/57/pc Oxnard 71/59/pc 70/58/pc Redding 90/59/s 87/58/s Riverside 84/54/pc 80/54/pc Sacramento 83/54/s 81/55/s San Bernardino 85/55/pc 81/55/pc San Diego 72/64/pc 73/64/pc San Francisco 68/58/pc 69/56/pc San Jose 73/57/pc 75/57/pc San Luis Obispo 71/55/pc 70/52/pc Santa Ana 75/65/pc 74/64/pc Santa Barbara 71/56/pc 73/55/pc Santa Clarita 81/54/s 79/53/pc Stockton 84/54/s 82/54/s Ventura 71/58/pc 69/56/pc Yosemite Valley 79/50/s 74/46/s Today Sunday Albuquerque 86/64/s 88/64/pc Atlanta 85/69/pc 87/70/s Baltimore 79/61/r 78/62/r Boston 73/63/s 71/64/c Buffalo 78/53/s 82/57/pc Chicago 76/59/s 82/64/s Cincinnati 82/59/s 84/60/s Dallas 89/71/pc 93/75/s Denver 87/58/pc 89/55/pc Detroit 79/56/s 81/58/s El Paso 90/71/t 94/73/s Fargo 83/65/pc 80/60/t Honolulu 87/77/c 87/76/sh Houston 92/74/t 92/77/t Indianapolis 82/60/s 84/62/s Kansas City 80/61/pc 84/69/pc Las Vegas 99/73/s 92/67/s Louisville 85/62/s 87/66/s Miami 92/78/sh 90/78/t Minneapolis 76/62/pc 79/68/c New Orleans 92/79/t 91/79/pc New York City 78/66/s 76/66/r Oklahoma City 85/66/pc 89/72/pc Hermine will emerge over the Atlantic Ocean near the North Carolina coast today. In this position, rain and the risk of flooding will extend from eastern North Carolina to southeastern Virginia and Delmarva. Gusty winds will increase the risk of coastal flooding. Rain, wind and the risk of coastal flooding will expand northward in the mid- Atlantic as Labor Day weekend progresses. Most areas from Maine to Minnesota and Oklahoma will be dry and sunny. A few storms will extend from Florida to Texas, mainly along the Gulf coast with severe storms in the Dakotas. High ........................... 107° in Needles, CA Low ............... 19° in Bodie State Park, CA High ........................ 122° in Jahra, Kuwait Low ... -19° in Summit Station, Greenland Bogota 67/47/pc 65/48/t Buenos Aires 56/36/pc 56/46/sh Caracas 87/75/pc 87/73/pc Ensenada 76/57/pc 77/56/pc Mexico City 72/58/t 71/58/t Montreal 74/56/s 79/57/s Rio de Janeiro 83/70/pc 85/70/pc Tijuana 75/60/pc 75/60/pc Toronto 76/57/s 79/56/s Vancouver 63/50/c 65/52/pc Orlando 87/74/t 90/74/pc Philadelphia 79/66/c 77/66/r Phoenix 104/75/s 101/73/s Pittsburgh 80/56/s 82/57/pc Portland, ME 76/54/s 72/56/pc Portland, OR 69/52/pc 70/51/pc St. Louis 83/64/s 86/68/s Salt Lake City 88/65/s 80/54/pc Seattle 68/50/c 69/52/pc Tucson 101/71/s 102/70/s Washington, DC 81/66/r 79/66/c Cairo 93/75/s 94/77/s Casablanca 93/74/pc 97/76/pc Johannesburg 78/49/s 77/50/s Kinshasa 91/72/pc 89/72/c Lagos 83/74/t 85/76/c Nairobi 73/49/c 76/55/pc Tripoli 87/70/pc 88/69/pc Baghdad 114/78/s 111/78/s Beijing 87/67/s 84/65/t Hong Kong 88/80/sh 88/80/t Jerusalem 81/65/s 81/66/s Kabul 89/54/s 90/53/s Manila 90/81/t 89/80/t Melbourne 59/47/pc 61/48/c New Delhi 94/79/s 94/79/s Seoul 83/69/pc 87/67/pc Singapore 89/79/c 89/78/t Sydney 68/50/r 69/50/s Tehran 94/74/s 95/75/s Tokyo 85/77/sh 85/77/sh Amsterdam 71/62/pc 68/58/t Athens 86/72/s 86/70/s Belgrade 83/60/pc 85/62/pc Berlin 77/60/pc 71/56/t Budapest 82/60/pc 84/62/pc Dublin 62/52/r 64/54/sh London 71/58/r 72/54/pc Madrid 96/66/pc 98/67/pc Moscow 69/52/pc 65/54/sh Paris 82/60/pc 74/57/t Rome 87/65/pc 84/67/pc Stockholm 63/49/t 62/46/pc Vienna 81/60/pc 86/59/pc Zurich 81/57/pc 77/55/t 78/41 82/45 80/49 80/46 81/46 83/54 86/55 79/50 83/49 87/57 88/58 70/42 74/42 78/46 90/59 89/58 78/47 66/55 68/54 65/51 77/50 75/45 77/45 62/50 78/50 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 ByJasonDearen The Associated Press DEKLE BEACH, FLA. The first hurricane to hit Flor- ida in more than a decade wiped away beachside buildings and toppled trees onto homes Friday before plowing inland on a path that could send it rolling up the densely populated East Coast with heavy rain, high winds and flooding. Hermine quickly weak- ened to a tropical storm as it spun through Georgia and the Carolinas. But the National Hurricane Cen- ter predicted it would re- gain hurricane strength af- ter emerging in the Atlan- tic Ocean. The system could then lash coastal areas as far north as Connecticut and Rhode Island through Labor Day. "Anyone along the U.S. East Coast needs to be pay- ing close attention this weekend," said Dennis Felt- gen, a spokesman for the National Hurricane Center. In Florida, Hermine's main impact was power outages and damage from storm surges. A homeless man in Marion County, south of Gainesville, died when a tree fell on him, Gov. Rick Scott said. An estimated 325,000 people were without power in Florida and more than 107,000 in neighboring Georgia, officials said. At 2 p.m., the storm was centered about 80 miles southwest of Charleston, South Carolina, and mov- ing northeast at 18 mph, according to the hurricane center. The system was forecast to regain hurricane status by Monday morning off the Maryland-Delaware coast before weakening again as it moves north. Tropical storm watches and warn- ings were posted up and down the coastline. Back in Florida, a storm surge at Dekle Beach dam- aged numerous homes and destroyed storage buildings and a 100-yard fishing pier. The area is about 60 miles southeast of St. Marks, where Hermine made land- fall at 1:30 a.m. in the Big Bend area, where Florida's peninsula and panhandle meet. Nancy Geohagen walked around collecting photos and other items for her neighbors that had been thrown from storage. "I know who this base- ball bat belongs to," she said plucking it from a pile of debris. An unnamed spring storm that hit the beach in 1993 killed 10 people who refused to evacuate. This time, only three residents stayed behind. All escaped injury. In nearby Steinhatchee, a storm surge crashed into Bobbi Pattison's home. She wore galoshes and was cov- ered in black muck as she stoodinherlivingroomamid overturned furniture and an acridsmell.Tinycrabsdarted around her floor. "I had a hurricane cock- tail party last night and God got even with me," she said with a chuckle. Where her bar once stood now was only wet sand and rubble. Pattison and two neighbors managed to set upright a large wooden statue of a sea captain she had carved from wood that washed ashore in the 1993 storm. In Keaton Beach, about two dozen people waited on a road just after sunrise Friday, trying to get to their homes. Police blocked the road because of flooding. Dustin Beach, 31, had rushed there from a hospi- tal in Tallahassee where his wife had given birth Thurs- day night to a girl to see if his home still stood. "When my wife got up this morning, she said, 'Go home and check on the house. I need to know where we're going after we leave the hospital,'" Beach said. Cindy Simpson was wait- ing near her car, hoping her beach home and boats sur- vived. "It's a home on stilts so I put everything up- stairs. We have two boats in the boat house, and I hope they're still there," she said. It was sometime after midnight when Alan Au- try, 48, started hearing the large pines that line his Tallahassee neighborhood start to crack and fall to the ground. Then he heard one come down on the top floor of his house. The tree didn't initially crash through the roof, and Autry and his wife went to a neighbor's house. Sometime before dawn, the corner of his house col- lapsed from the weight of the tree. "We've been married 13 years and this is our fifth hurricane," said Autry who moved from central Florida six years ago. "By far, this is the worst damage we've ever had." WEATHER A erslammingFlorida,HerminethreatensEastCoast JOHNRAOUX—THEASSOCIATEDPRESS Workers clean up debris caused by Hurricane Hermine, in the parking lot in front of a convenience store Friday in Cedar Key, Fla. Wilcox Oaks Golf Club AllNew Proprietary Memberships OneTimeInitiationfee$250 Family $ 199 monthly Single $ 149 Monthly Call530-527-6680 www.WilcoxOaksGolfClub.com 235 S Main St., Red Bluff 530 527-1657 www.thefurnituredepot.net HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00 SATURDAY 9:00-5:00 • SUNDAY 11:00-5:00 Furniture DEPOT LaborDaySpecials end Monday LABOR DAY HOURS 10AM-4PM 0% FINANCING UP TO 48 MONTHS THIS WEEKEND 25yearsprofessional experience. QualityWork Very Reasonable Rates Red Bluff Transmission • Automatic • Manual • Computer Diagnosis • Clutches • Transfer Cases • CV Axles CALL TODAY! 529-4493 440 Antelope Blvd. #6 Bob's Youcantmissus... Weonly moved 50 feet!! Round Up Saloon Round Up Saloon 610WashingtonSt. Red Bluff Supporting Farmers Market with live music on Wednesdaynites call for dates (530) 527-9901 www.gummsoptical.com (530) 527-2510 1-800-481-LENS (5367) 910MainSt.,SuiteC,RedBluff Fitsover eyeglasses Regular Haircut $ 2 00 off KWIK KUTS FamilyHairSalon 1064SouthMainSt.,RedBluff•529-3540 ANY RETAIL PRODUCT 20 % off withanychemicalserviceof $50 or more Notgoodwithotheroffers Expires 9/30/16 With coupon Reg. $13.95 STOVEJUNCTION The TheNorthState'spremiersupplierofstoves 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 530-528-2221 • Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com Over 25 years of experience Tues-Sat9am-5pm• ClosedSun&Mon Now Carrying! GreenMountainGrills & Accessories Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties | WEATHER | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2016 12 A

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - September 03, 2016