A friend said 'bout the same, nothing major. The houses on that street are all sandwiched between two other houses, just a driveway apart, and both sides of the house are thus protected from a lot of the wind impact. Of course, when the tornadoes hit, nothing's gonna protect 'em.
My old place had 1" holes drilled in all the downstairs closets, including the water heater closet. An island old timer told us they did that to all new houses right after the 1900 storm to keep houses from floating off their piers in high water. My place was built around 1910-15, my architect brother-in-law told me. Still had its original slate shingle roof, though, which was frowned upon after the 1900 storm, as those caused severe bodily injuries and even decapitations in the 1900 storm. Needless to say, I had hubby plug all those holes in my closets to keep mice and roaches out of the house. But we sure unplugged them for Allen.
That was the only storm we had to deal with before we moved from Galveston to Texas City across the causeway.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7x64 Home Prem Svce Pack 1, Build 760...Intel Premium Dual Core, 2.7GHz8 GB DDR3-1333 Mhz SSDRAM (2DIMMS)Intel Graphics Media Accelerator HD 1000 (GT1)
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- HP Pavillion p62120t desktop
- OS
- Windows 7x64 Home Prem Svce Pack 1, Build 7601.win7sp1Ver 3.0install)
- CPU
- Intel Premium Dual Core, 2.7GHz
- Motherboard
- Pegatron 2AC2 2.0
- Memory
- 8 GB DDR3-1333 Mhz SSDRAM (2DIMMS)
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel Graphics Media Accelerator HD 1000 (GT1)
- Sound Card
- Integrated Realtek HD Audio - PCIe GBE Family Controller
- Monitor(s) Displays
- HP 2311 Series Wide 23" LED
- Hard Drives
- 500 GB Seagate SATA HDD
- Keyboard
- USB HP Multimedia keyboard
- Mouse
- USB HP Optical Mouse
- Other Info
- Canon MX 360 AIO printe; FX 13.0.1; AdBlock+ ; serial interface HP DVD-RAM GH80N; firmware version RF03


