Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Graphs and wave chart of Noel Data thanks to Chris Fogarty at the Canadian Hurricane Centre
Below is a time trace of air pressure, wind speed and wind gusts at George's Bank Buoy
near the Gulf of Maine. The wind units are in meters per second. In more
common units, the highest wind recorded by the buoy was 82 gusting 108
km/h - similar to what was experienced over much of Nova Scotia.
Next is a time trace of sig-wave heights in meters at the George's Bank Buoy. The
sig-waves got up to 14 meters or 46 feet! The peak waves were measured over
70 feet (height of a 7-storey building)! No wonder there was so much beach
damage!
And finally a map of the sig-waves around Eastern Canada the morning of the
storm, showing 10-meter (30+ feet) along most of the Atlantic Coast of Nova
Scotia.
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Damage from Noel in Queens County NS
The power of Noel
By SHERRI BORDEN COLLEY and PATRICIA BROOKS ARENBURG Staff Reporters
Tue. Nov 6 - 11:42 AM
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Post-tropical storm Noel was still disrupting the lives of Nova Scotians on Monday night, almost two days after it lashed the province with high winds and rain.
Some 13,000 homes and businesses still had no power as of 10 p.m. Monday, and a coastal road running alongside one of the province’s popular beaches lay in ruins.
It could be as late as 11:30 p.m. tonight before customers in some areas of the Eastern Shore and Pictou, Guysborough and Cape Breton counties have their electricity restored.
Noel, whose wind gusts peaked at 135 kilometres an hour on McNabs Island in Halifax Harbour at 4 a.m. Sunday, knocked out power to 170,000 homes and businesses across the province, sending more than 230 work crews into action restoring lines and clearing downed trees.
By Monday morning, 49,000 Nova Scotia Power customers still couldn’t take a hot shower or cook their breakfasts at home. By 3 p.m., that number had dropped to 30,000, with the help of power crews from New Brunswick, Quebec and Maine who were slated to work until midnight Monday and resume their efforts early today.
Halifax Regional Municipality was one of the hardest-hit areas in the province, and about 1,000 households in the urban part of the municipality still had no power Monday evening.
"We will, of course, do every effort we can to bring it back on sooner," Margaret Murphy, a Nova Scotia Power spokeswoman, said Monday afternoon of customers who could remain without electricity until tonight.
The stress of sitting in a cold home without power was wearing on Erin Wilson, a Halifax mother who used a fondue set and candles to boil water to warm bottles for her four-month-old daughter. Ms. Wilson’s Duncan Street home lost power at about 4 a.m. Sunday.
She said a Nova Scotia Power customer service representative told her that her case would be a priority because she and her fiance have a young child. When Ms. Wilson called again late Sunday, she was told to contact the Emergency Management Office.
"I don’t know what that would have done, so we didn’t call them," she said.
On Monday afternoon, the couple were told that crews were attending to bigger areas first.
"I guess what makes me the most upset is that they’re (Nova Scotia Power) going to the media and saying they’re doing such a wonderful job and they’re not. It’s not like we live out in the middle of nowhere. We’re almost downtown."
No one from Nova Scotia Power was available Monday afternoon to speak about Ms. Wilson’s situation.
Residents and visitors on the South Shore were in awe Monday of Noel’s devastation of the road bordering Queensland Beach. The pavement looked like it had been ripped and crumpled like paper.
"It looks just like an earthquake hit," Kelly Backman said.
Ms. Backman and her husband Tim, of Halifax, were working in Hubbards and came down to survey the damage. The long stretch of road was blocked to motorists but was still accessible on foot.
Beach rocks were thrown onto parts of Conrads Road and littered the parking lot across the road from Queens-land Beach.
Tom Hurshman, a Queensland resident who arrived with his camera, said hurricane Juan, in late September 2003, "did a little damage, but nothing like this. This got the pavement all tore up. They’re going to have to redo it all over again."
Transportation Department crews were working to restore order there and in Indian Harbour and Peggys Cove, where road shoulders were washed out.
"We have already cleared trees that were toppled and were on the road," department spokesman Dan Davis said.
Transportation Minister Murray Scott toured the Queensland site Monday afternoon.
In the Peggys Cove area, Noel washed out three shoulders along Highway 333, leaving one guardrail dangling. Large waves continued to crash on the rocks as tourists snapped photos of the famous lighthouse.
The Sou’wester Restaurant was closed due to what appeared to be minor damage. For the most part, the scenic route appeared unscathed.
But the damage was all too real for Barry Colpitts, a well-known carver of folk art in East Ship Harbour. He said Noel’s wrath wrecked his livelihood.
He said he lost about 100 trees in the storm and his painting shed was lifted about three metres and rolled into the woods, destroying several pieces.
A 1.2-metre statue of Jesus also blew off Mr. Colpitts’ brightly coloured house and landed on his porch.
"I got him in the house now because he’s smashed up," he said.
Noel also cost him about $200 worth of paint and all his paintbrushes, he said.
Mr. Colpitts sells to galleries and individual customers and said he makes $14,000 to $15,000 after expenses in a "real good year." He thinks Noel will cost him about $2,000.
The storm also put a beating on his pasture, where he has a couple of oxen and a beef cow.
"It’s just a mess, a tangle of barbed wire and roots and tree trunks," Mr. Colpitts said. "It’s a terrible, terrible mess."
And he was still without electricity Monday.
"You would think it wouldn’t affect my carving so much because I don’t use power for my carving, but it’s so frigging dark," Mr. Colpitts said. "I’m going to cut my fingers off trying to (carve)."
Outages also gave some students an unexpected holiday. The Halifax regional school board closed 20 of its 137 schools Monday, mostly on the Eastern Shore. Updates can be obtained online at www.hrsb.ns.ca or by calling the school cancellation line at 464-4636.
Monday, November 5, 2007
Photos of dammage to Crescent beach and Rissers Provincial park in Lunenburg County
Sunday, November 4, 2007
Areas in Nova Scotia still without power - note return to service approx 11/06/2007 11:30 PM
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OUTAGES Community | Estimated Time to Restore | |
Antigonish/Northern NS | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Baddeck/Central Cape Breton | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Bedford/Sackville | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Bridgetown | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Bridgewater | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Caledonia | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Chester | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Cheticamp | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Dartmouth | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Goshen | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Guysborough County | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Kentville/Wolfville | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Kingston | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Liverpool | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Louisbourg | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Mabou | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Metro Halifax/West County | 11/05/2007 06:00 PM | |
Middle and Upper Musquodoboit | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Musquodoboit Harbour | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
New Glasgow/Pictou County | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
North Sydney | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Parrsboro/Springhill/Noel Shore | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Port Hawkesbury | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
River Bourgeois/Southeast Cape Breton | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Sheet Harbour | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Shelburne | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
St. Margaret's Bay | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Sydney/Cape Breton County | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Tatamagouche/Wentworth Valley | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Truro | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Windsor | 11/06/2007 11:30 PM | |
Noel leaves 190,000 in Atlantic Canada powerless
CANADIAN PRESS
November 4, 2007 at 2:41 PM EST
HALIFAX — Noel was nasty, but nothing like hurricane Juan.
The post-tropical storm, the remnants of a full-fledged hurricane that killed 143 people in the Caribbean earlier in the week, was a much tamer beast by the time it rolled into Atlantic Canada early Sunday.
Powerful gusts pulled limbs from trees, knocking out power to about 190,000 homes and businesses across the region, and there were reports of washed-out roads and other damage.
But there were few signs of the kind of destruction that was inflicted on the region four years ago by Juan, a smaller but more intense system.
A family makes their way around an uprooted tree, toppled by Hurricane Noel, on Quinpool road in Halifax on Sunday. (Paul Darrow/Reuters)
Videos
CTV Newsnet: Denelle Balfour reports on Noel's progress from Dartmouth, N.S.
"It's half decent, but it's not as bad as it was for hurricane Juan," said Doug Mercer as he shot video of ragged whitecaps on Halifax harbour in the pre-dawn darkness.
"I was down here the same night Juan was happening. This is more like an average winter storm."
In Halifax, dawn broke with the electricity still on in the downtown core but most surrounding neighbourhoods doing without. Streets were littered with broken branches, shredded leaves and the occasional downed power line, but residents awoke with relief that the damage inflicted by Juan's direct hit in September 2003 hadn't been repeated.
"It's not as strong, there's not near the damage," said another man who went to the waterfront at the height of the storm. "The boats are still in the water here, no trains off the tracks."
Seven people died in the region as a result of Juan, a Category 2 hurricane that felled hundreds of thousands of trees and knocked out power to 300,000 homes and businesses in Nova Scotia alone — some for more than a week.
Juan's gusts were so powerful — 185 km/h in some bursts — they knocked a string of railcars off tracks at the edge of Halifax harbour, and tossed yachts onto land like children's toys. About 70,000 trees were uprooted in Point Pleasant Park alone.
One of the few trees ripped from the ground in Halifax by Noel narrowly missed Dov Bercovici's west-end home.
"It really sounded like a bomb," he said later as children played around the tree's exposed roots.
"The whole house shook and woke us up immediately. We had no idea what it was."
In coastal areas outside Halifax, the damage caused by the storm was heavier than in the city.
Eben Fry, who lives in Indian Harbour, was walking his dog on a shoreline road that was washed out by the storm.
"Basically it looks like the ocean picked up the road and shifted it a few feet," he said.
Carole MacInnis, owner of Oceanstone Cottages in Indian Harbour, said the storm surge was higher from Noel and caused more damage to her property than Juan did.
"I was here during Juan and we definitely have had more damage and it was more dramatic than Juan, which was surprising," she said.
"It was a little more exciting than I wanted."
Noel packed hurricane-force winds when it hit Nova Scotia shortly after midnight Sunday. The peak gust in the Halifax area was recorded in the middle of the harbour at 135 km/h.
In Cape Breton, where the wind always seems to blow harder, gusts at Grand Etang hit 143 km/h.
Margaret Murphy, a spokeswoman for Nova Scotia Power, said 150 crews, backed by private contractors and 20 crews from Maine and Quebec, were handling the outages. By noon, 130,000 customers were still without power in the province.
"We hope to make good progress today and tomorrow," she said in an interview.
The vast majority of those who lost power were expected to have their service restored by Monday. But that was little consolation to those who had to cope with the fact that temperatures were expected to dip close to the freezing mark overnight.
NB Power reported 6,600 customers without power, mostly in the western part of New Brunswick.
Andy Morton, a spokesman for New Brunswick's Emergency Measures Organization, said the storm left its dangerous mark over a vast swath of territory.
"Certainly we would want people to stay on alert because there's still the possibility of debris on the road if they're travelling, or downed power lines that might be live," he said.
In Prince Edward Island, more than 10,000 Maritime Electric customers were without power early Sunday, most of them in Kings County. The Confederation Bridge was closed for about an hour at the height of the storm
Noel also delivered heavy rain, with 130 millimetres reported in one small community in northern Cape Breton. Other parts of the Maritimes received between 60 mm and 90 mm.
Emergency officials said they were relieved to see the storm move on, but they were quick to praise residents for preparing for the storm — something few did before Juan slammed into the area.
The Canadian Hurricane Centre in Dartmouth, N.S., received reports Sunday of many downed power lines, a road being washed out near Eastern Passage, N.S., bricks torn from the side of one building and a trailer home in Dartmouth had its roof peeled back like a tin can.
The massive weather system left the region by noon and headed across the Gulf of St. Lawrence to central Labrador, moving at about 60 kilometres per hour.
Although the worst passed early for Nova Scotia, residents were warned to stay away from the shorelines as heavy waves were expected to pound the coastline.
"The coastline from the southwestern tip of Nova Scotia to the eastern shore of Nova Scotia is highly prone to these very large waves coming in from the south," said Chris Fogarty, a meteorologist with the hurricane centre.
Wind warnings remained in effect for Nova Scotia, parts of New Brunswick, P.E.I., Isle de la Madeleine, and parts of Newfoundland and Labrador.
The hurricane centre said peak winds at Wreckhouse in Newfoundland and Labrador — one of the windiest places in the world — were recorded at 180 km/h.
Even before the full effect of the storm hit Atlantic Canada late Saturday and early Sunday, Noel made itself known.
Nearly all flights leaving and arriving at the Halifax Robert L. Stanfield International Airport were cancelled Saturday evening along with some Sunday morning.
170,000 homes without power
The Daily News
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Nova Scotia Power crews are working to bring back power to the 170,000 homes still without power because of post tropical storm Noel.
Of those homes, an approximate 50,000 of them are in HRM. The homes without power are scattered throughout the municipality.
NSP spokeswoman Margaret Murphy said the utility is bringing in extra crews from as far away as Quebec to help restore power.
"For most everywhere in Nova Scotia, we're saying that many customers will have their power back on late Monday," Murphy said.
The QEII Health Sciences Centre was forced to use power from generators.
The police are warning people to be careful near downed lines.
"RCMP want to remind the public that there is several power lines down and outages within the HRM and to treat all intersections where lights are out as four way stops," Cpl. Joe Taplin said.
Mayor Peter Kelly said residents seem well prepared for the storm and said it was beneficial that it hit overnight and on a weekend.
"Compared to (Hurricane) Juan, we did get off considerably better," Kelly said.
An additional 50-100 HRM fire services volunteers are also helping to clear debris and trees.