This did not happen in my neighborhood.
Nor this.
Both did happen in yesterday’s predicted monster storm. But such damage was sporadic, not widespread. I’m still hoping to hear good news from blog readers to the north of Seattle, especially from the couple I know of who enjoy waterfront living. Which may not have been all that enjoyable yesterday.
But for a lot of us the storm was … meh. And that’s a good thing.
Where I am, it arrived about four hours later than forecast. Unusual, because whatever else does or doesn’t happen, you can often set your watch by the timing of high-wind warnings. Having arrived, the pre-named Ides of October Storm tossed tree limbs back and forth in a desultory manner for about an hour and a half, poured water over the edges of my newly cleaned front gutters (must eventually replace those creaky old things), and spitefully kicked over the garbage can on its way out. That was it aside from a generally rainy day. Didn’t even break any good-sized branches. All in all, Friday’s “lesser” storm was far nastier.
Apparently Saturday’s storm stayed offshore — much like Hurricane Matthew did earlier this month — and spent most of its slightly weakened furies over the ocean.
As a commentor from Kitsap County (a mostly rural Washington outpost) noted, this was a good exercise in checking and buffing up the preps. I’m glad it wasn’t too much more than that for most of us. Even the family in the crushed house above got out okay, according to the news. Zero deaths. Better to over-forecast and over-prep than to be caught unawares.
Alas, as often happens with these pineapple express events, there’s another coming right up behind. Not looking like anything fearful, though. Sigh. Just autumn in the good old NorthWET.


Nice that you escaped major destruction. I marveled at the report of tornadoes in Manzanita and Oceanside. How often does that happen? That’s like hen’s teeth.
Yep. Rare as hen’s teeth, indeed. The weather service in Portland actually issued 10 tornado warnings on Friday — a record. But thankfully most came to nothing. For a torpedo to be as damaging out here as the one that hit Manzanita is nearly unheard of.
Such a nice little town, too. Manzanita is a charming place — as I’m guessing you know from past experience.
Glad all is well. Did you get enough rain to give a good test to the new retaining wall and drains ?
Excellent. Thanks for the update, I had you in mind.
Ann S — Thanks for asking. Yep! Retaining wall and new drains are doing exactly their job. It’s shaping up to be an unusually wet winter, so that’s gooooood.
And thanks, Joel, for sending thoughts this way. You could have saved them for a more melodramatic occasion, though. What a big nothing.
Spent yesterday driving up from Monterey, California. Hard rain in a few place, (although not even close to the summer downpour we hit in North Dakota two years ago). Also wind remained virtually unnoticeable the entire drive. Arrived in the Skagit Valley at 2 am this morning… yet the good stuff never arrived. Thursday night the house-sitter did spend without power and some surge issues did some damage at wife’s work.
Up here in the NW corner it was just another winter storm, power didn’t even blink for me even though there are reports of some outages. Gusts under 50 mph, where every year we do experience a few storms with the 70+ gusts it seems. I’ve heard Vancouver Island got the worst of it;
http://vancouverisland.ctvnews.ca/third-storm-sweeps-b-c-s-south-coast-leads-to-ferry-cancellations-park-closures-1.3116654
I have to echo Camrade X’s comments, windy, rainy yes, a special nasty storm – no
I’m a happy camper
I lost some leaves. My travel trailer got a good cleaning. The dog got wet. Even took down my flag to keep it from whipping. I love “the biggest storm in history!” coming from the lamestream media.
Glad you and your dog fared well, Unclezip.
While the storm fizzled in a good way, in this case, I don’t blame media overhype. The charts clearly showed a small but tight cyclonic storm with potential for huge pressure gradients. It was a very dangerous storm — that just weakened and took a “safer” tack. Yep, the Weather Service meteorologists missed that and will have some analyzing to do. But I think the predictions in this case were responsible, even if wrong.
My $.02.