- Auto Emergency Kits
- CAR EMERGENCY KIT LIST
- Ultamate Car Emergency Kit
- Pro Auto Emergency Kit
- Deluxe Auto Emergency Kit
- Roadside Emergency Kit
- Jumbo Auto Safety Kit
- Auto Safety Kit Shovel
- Best Car Emergency Kit
- Roadside Emergency Kit
- Roadside Emergency Car Kit
- Auto Mechanic Tool Kit ($39)
- EXTRA PARTS AUTO FOR KITS
- Monthly Auto KIT SPECIALS
- Battery Fans
- ALL BATTERY FANS
- Large Fan Battery Operated
- Battery Desk Fan
- 02 Cool Fan - Large 10" Fan
- 02 Cool Fan - Large 10" Fan
- Battery Air Conditioner
- NEW Battery Air Conditioner
- Small Battery Hand Fan
- Mini and Held Fans
- Hanging Tent Fan by O2Cool
- Personal Carabiner Held Fans
- Water Mist Fan
- 02 Cool Battery Desk Fan
- Large Rechargeable Fan
- Buy Alkaline Batteries
- Hurricane Kits
- Hurricane Kit (Best Seller)
- Hurricane Kit Catagory I
- Hurricane Kit Catagory II
- Hurricane Kit Cat III
- Large first Aid Kit
- Jumbo First Aid Kit
- Monthly Special Kits
- Emergency Kit Checklist
- KIT SPECIALS
- Emergency Kits
- ALL CAR EMERGENCY KITS
- Auto Emergency Kit (Deluxe)
- Car Emergency Kit (Ultimate)
- Auto Emergency Kit (T-Pro)
- Jumbo Auto Safety Kit
- Auto Safety Kit & Shovel
- Best Car Emergency Kit
- Roadside Emergency Kit
- Compact Auto Tool Kit
- Pro Car Cleaning Kit
- Pink Tool Kit
- Auto Mechanic Tool Kit
- Hurricane Kit (Best Seller)
- Hurricane Kit Catagory I
- Hurricane Kit Catagory II
- Hurricane Kit Cat III
- First Aid Kits
- More Auto Emergency Kits
- Monthly Special Kits
- EXTRA PARTS FOR KITS
- KIT SPECIALS
- Radios
- ALL RADIOS
- Emergency Alert Radio
- Emergency Wind Up Radio
- Wind Up Radio
- 12 Band Radio
- Windup Radio Flashlight
- TV/AM/FM/SW
- Weather Alert Radio
- Radio / TV Combo's
- MP3 CD Cassette Player
- Buy Alkaline Batteries
- Lanterns
- ALL BATTERY LANTERNS
- Large Camping Lantern
- Coleman 190 Lumen Lantern
- Outdoor Camping Lantern
- Brightest LED Lantern
- 12 LED Battery Lantern
- 300 Lumen Battery Lantern
- Mini LED Lantern
- 6 Volt Spot Lantern
- Rechargeable Lantern
- Kerosene Lanterns
- Coleman Lanterns
- Emergency Candles
- Electric Candles
- Buy Cheap Alkaline Batteries
- LED Flashlights
- ALL LED FLASHLIGHTS
- 4 Watt LED Flashlight
- 3 Watt LED Flashlight
- 2 Watt LED Flashlights
- 1 Watt LED Nigh Vision
- 45 Hour LED Flashlight
- Wind Up 5 LED Flashlight
- NEW Pivot/Magnetic
- Industrial 3 LED Flashlights
- Remington 3 Watt LED
- 100 Hour LED Flashlights
- Xenon Head Lamps
- Flashlights
- ALL FLASHLIGHTS
- Wind Up Crank Radio
- Rechargeable Spotlight
- Flashlights Rubber
- 6 Volt Spot Lantern
- 5 LED Windup Flashlight
- LED Flashlights
- Candles
- Emergency Candles
- Long Burning Candles
- 110 Hour Candles
- Long Lasting Candles
- Battery Powered Candle
- Glass Container Candles
- Tea Light Candles
- Scented Candles
- Matches and Lighters
- Battery Televisions
- All Battery Operated TV's
- Digital Battery Operated TV
- Portable 7 inch TV LCD
- Battery Digital TV Converter
- Battery Powered LCD TV
- Battery Portable TV
- Hand Held TV - Color
- Battery Powered Converter
- TV CD Boombox
- Communications
- No Battery Phone Charger
- Cell Phone Charger
- 2 Way Radios - 3 Miles
- 2 Way Radios - 6 Miles
- 2 Way Radios- 10 Miles
- Emergency Kits
- ALL CAR EMERGENCY KITS
- Travel Pro Emergency Kit
- Auto Car Emergency Kit
- Ultimate Auto Roadside Kit
- Deluxe Auto Emergency Kit
- Custom Car Safety Kit
- Hurricane & Earthquake
- First Aid Kits
- Special Kits
- EXTRA CAR KIT PARTS
- Rechargeables
- ALL AA BATTERY CHARGERS
- Sanyo Pro AA Charger
- Rayovac AA Charger
- JWIN AA Charger
- Coby AA Battery Charger
- Duracell Value Charger
- Batteries
- Cheap Alkaline Batteries
- AA Batteries In Bulk
- Cheap AA Batteries
- Cheap Duracell Batteries
- Discount AAA Batteries
- Cheap AA Batteries Duracell
- Cheap D Batteries
- Cheap C Batteries
- Alkaline Batteries Wholesale
- Rayovace Batteries Deals
- Buy D Cell Batteries In Bulk
- Discount Battery Sale (PDF)
- Adapters & Inverters
- All Adapters & Inverters
- 100 Watt AC to DC Inverter
- 400 Watt AC to DC Inverter
- 750 Watt AC to DC Inverter
- AC to DC Adapter
- DC to DC Inverter
- DC to AC Inverter
- Portable Cell Phone Charger
- Safety Products
- Car Fire Extinguisher
- Roadside Triangle
- Goggles Mask Combo
- Reflective Vest
- Portable Electric Heater
- Blinking Vest (PDF)
- Company Info
- About Us
- In The News
- Article Review Auto Kit
- Return Policy
- Shipping Info
- Privacy Policy
- Hurricane Links
- Print Forms
- Contact Us
- Feedback Form
- Top Selling Products
- Battery TV Bundle
- Wind Up Radio
- Emergency Car Kit
- Roadside Kit
- Blackout Emergency Kit
- Company Info
HEAD QUARTERS BatterySavers.com
Palm Beach Gardens
Riviera Beach
West Palm Beach
Florida 33404
Toll Free: 800-990-9110
Bus: (561) 848-2599
Fax: (561) 277-2530
EMAIL SUPPORT
- Montly Coupons
|
|
||
BEST HURRICANE KIT FOR
All Florida Houston Texas TX Dallas Miami Dade Broward
Direct Shipments To:
FLORIDA CALIFORNIA
NEW YORK MICHIGAN TEXAS NEW ORLEANS MISSISSIPPI ALABAMA SOUTH CAROLINA
Houston Texas TX
North Carolina & South Carolina Virginia Florida Keys Atlanta
Hurricane Center meteorologists, led by Chief Long-Range Meteorologist and Hurricane Forecaster Joe Bastardi, are calling for a much more active 2010 season with above-normal threats on the U.S. coastline.
"This year has the chance to be an extreme season," said Bastardi. "It is certainly much more like 2008 than 2009 as far as the overall threat to the United States' East and Gulf coasts."
Bastardi is forecasting seven landfalls. Five will be hurricanes, and two or three of the hurricanes will be major landfalls for the U.S.
He is calling for 16 to 18 tropical storms in total, 15 of which would be in the western Atlantic or Gulf of Mexico, and therefore a threat to land.
In a typical season, there are about 11 named storms, of which two to three impact the coast of the United States.
There are a number of physical drivers that have Bastardi concerned for this upcoming hurricane season. These include:
--The rapidly weakening El Niño. --Warmer ocean temperatures in the typical Atlantic tropical breeding grounds compared to last year (tropical storms draw energy from warm water).
--Weakening trade winds which reduce the amount of dry air injected into the tropics from Africa.
--Higher humidity levels which provide additional upward motion in the air and fuel tropical storm development.
Bastardi compared a number of years to the upcoming season in terms of storm setup, including 1964, 1995, and 1998. All were major impact seasons for the U.S. coast.
In 1964, Hurricane Cleo struck southeastern Florida near Miami as a Category 2 storm and killed 217 people.
In 1995, Hurricane Opal made landfall in Pensacola, Florida as a Category 3 storm affecting 200 miles of coastline and causing $3 billion in damages.
In 1998, Hurricane Bonnie struck near Wilmington, North Carolina as a borderline Category 2 to Category 3 storm, causing significant harm to crops and $1 billion in damages.
As Bastardi had predicted in last year's hurricane forecast, the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season was a year far below the average, with 11 tropical depressions forming and only nine of those becoming tropical storms, the lowest number of named tropical storms or hurricanes since the 1997 season.
The Atlantic hurricane season officially begins on June 1 and continues through November 30. These dates were selected because 97 percent of hurricane activity occurs during this six-month period.
As winter winds down, attention begins to turn towards the summer and hurricane
season which is approaching. After last year’s relatively quiet hurricane season
(9 named storms, 3 hurricanes, 2 major hurricanes) which was below the 30 year
average of 12 named storms and well below the 10 year average of 16 named storms,
I think we may see a rebound this season.
The reasoning is predicated on two things, First, a very warm Atlantic ocean
which for February, in the mean development region from the Caribbean to Africa,
is the warmest ever for February and the 2nd warmest anomaly for a month since
1948. This is known as the TNA index (Tropical North Atlantic) and is used by meteorologists
to gauge whether sea surface temperatures in the Atlantic will abnormally favor
(warmer than normal SSTs) or abnormally not favor (cooler than normal SSTs) development
of tropical systems.
Second, a potential weakening El Nino in the tropical Pacific should mean that
wind shear will not be an overwhelming problem in the Atlantic this season. We
have seen a moderate to at times strong El Nino this winter. However, SST data
seems to indicate that our El Nino peaked earlier this winter and that we are on
a downward trend as of now. The major SST plume models show the El Nino weakening
to at least neutral conditions for the hurricane season. Now, I think with still
a good bit of subsurface warmth in the Pacific, and continuing above normal global
atmospheric angular momentum (GLAAM) I think this El Nino will not break down so
quickly. However, I do think we will be near neutral or a weak El Nino by June/July
and probably neutral for the heart of the hurricane season. There is some concern
that their could be a lag effect on the atmosphere that could maintain somewhat
hostile conditions in the tropics, but for now I think the Atlantic will not be
negatively impacted by El Nino for the heart of the hurricane season.
|

