10-07-2016, 02:51 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-07-2016, 02:52 AM by Seperallis.)
Most of the heavy traffic took place the first day of evacuations, but they're still expecting several hundred thousand have yet to leave the coast. The lane reversals on I-26 (where all lanes are going the same direction) ends after tomorrow; Matthew's leaning further west, expected to hug the coast of Georgia and Charleston before heading out to sea, and SC has a lot of island communities down there where, once the surge hits, the roadways off those islands will be inundated, so tomorrow's really the last day to get gone; I expect all the last-minute procrastinators to be filling the highways.
Me? I'm on call at work in case we somehow get enough wind to warrant us going out with chainsaws to take care of fallen trees. In the meantime, we enjoyed the sunny hurricane weather with some fro-yo outdoors in the sun.
I expect, as long as the cameras don't get knocked over, that you'll be able to see the storm in real-time from those feeds, so that'll be fun.
Me? I'm on call at work in case we somehow get enough wind to warrant us going out with chainsaws to take care of fallen trees. In the meantime, we enjoyed the sunny hurricane weather with some fro-yo outdoors in the sun.
I expect, as long as the cameras don't get knocked over, that you'll be able to see the storm in real-time from those feeds, so that'll be fun.