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While Tropical Storm Lee has been getting national recognition as the copious, slow-moving rain and severe weather maker that he has been, where ongoing drought is seemingly in the process of creating a new world desert (Chihuahuan del Texas, if you will), the weather has been much different. Over the weekend, Lee very slowly made landfall along the coast of Louisiana, and continued traveling through that state also at a snail's pace. Meanwhile, Lee's circulation helped to draw down an unseasonable cold front, plunging through the center of the country, including the state of Texas - and ultimately dropping well into the southern Gulf of Mexico. The wind funnel created between these two systems (the front to the northwest and Lee to the east-southeast) resulted in 20-40mph sustained winds, gusting up to 30-50, with relative humidity values dropping like a rock from already very low levels. Prior to this event, much of Texas also endured its hottest summer of record. The following excerpt from the NWS-Austin: Quote: No surprise then, Texas has been experiencing just about the worst drought imaginable Needless to say, this created a trifecta of disaster waiting to happen. Wildfires have sprung up without hesitation. Most fires are believed to have been caused by carelessness, but there is at least one that is now suspected to have been deliberately set by teenagers. Luckily, many smaller fires were quickly contained, but several got way out of hand in just the blink of an eye. What is now being called the most destructive fire in Texas state history is still underway just east of Austin in the lovable county of Bastrop. As of 6PM today, Sept. 7, the Bastrop Fire has claimed two lives and more than 470 homes, in an expanse stretching over 24 miles long and up to 20 miles wide. From Bastrop, Tx. facing east Source: KXAN. Bastrop: Smoke fills the city's horizon Credit: Kerri West Here's a close-up view of the Bastrop Fire approaching: Source: KXAN. Views from the fire in Bastrop County on Monday. More than 300 homes were destroyed. Credit: Babs Haller and Wendy Moore Here is a view of the Austin skyline: Source: KXAN. This was taken by Austin photographer Deanna Roy from the Austin skyline. While the worst, the Bastrop County Complex Fire is but one of around 200 that broke out over the past week, combined claiming at least 4 lives and over 1,000 homes, so far. Winds have been picking back up today, and now the latest is that a new fire has sparked up in southwest Bastrop county, and that all Bastrop fires are nowhere near contained. Tahitian Village in Bastrop County, about 7,000 lots (Community Website) , and where I was fortunate enough to spend a summer a few years ago, is now being completely evacuated. A gorgeous, thickly-wooded (many deep, tall pines) getaway in central Texas. All schools in Bastrop & Smithville are continuing with cancellations. |