Faced with the growing inevitability of the most forceful October storms in at least a generation, people from North Carolina to New England and as far west as Ohio did all they could Friday to get ready.
Emergencies were declared, line crews were summoned, shelters were prepared and command centers opened. People stockpiled food, bought generators and chain saws, taped windows against the wind’s blast, and prepared to hunker down as Hurricane Sandy conspired with the jet stream and a nor’easter to deliver several days of misery and destruction to the most populated section of the nation.
Graphic


Several factors combine to make this storm particularly dangerous.
Get the latest information on Hurricane Sandy from The Post’s Capital Weather Gang team.
Information on preparing for the storm, reporting power outages and staying safe.
See the history of the storm, a weather radar and predictions as Sandy advances.
Jason Samenow
A debate has been raging in social media streams about what to call Hurricane Sandy.
Cancellations posted by local schools and organizations as a result of Hurricane Sandy.
The two big weather models that track storms came to a consensus Friday that the storm would turn inland somewhere to the east of the Chesapeake Bay and drench at least eight states as it drives across the Great Lakes into Canada. It is expected to turn into a blizzard before it gets there, dropping up to a foot of snow.
Although Sandy’s top winds diminished to 80 mph Friday, that loss of power was seen as temporary.
“That absolutely does not mean the threat to the eastern U.S. has decreased,” said Brian McNoldy of The Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang. “Quite the opposite, in fact. It is forecast to reorganize and strengthen on its inevitable approach to the East Coast.”
Rain is expected to spread over much of the region Sunday afternoon as the leading edge of the storm advances toward land, and people with events planned then and in the days to follow said they were pondering canceling them.
The first of it may fall on thousands of runners and hundreds of departing horses, as the annual Marine Corps Marathon flows through the streets of Washington and, later in the day, the last of more than 500 horses leave Verizon Center after the international horse show. “Right now, we’re going on with all of our events as planned. Runners will come rain, wind, whatever,” said Tami Faram, the marathon’s spokeswoman. “We’ll just have to wait and play that by ear.”
Jennifer Wood, with the horse show, said she hoped that the last of the horses and spectators would be gone before the worst arrives.
“Luckily, we don’t think we’re going to have much of an effect,” she said.
Gloria Garrett, who manages the Palisades Farmers Market every Sunday in Northwest Washington, said she wasn’t too worried about the storm. “I just e-mailed everyone to be sure they have their weights” for their tents, said Garrett, who added that some shoppers might decide to stock up before the storm. “I think there might be up to a 20 percent uptick in sales.”
With the full force of Sandy expected to arrive sometime on Monday, school schedules were in jeopardy.
“We’re reminding people to check our Web site periodically just in case the weather becomes nasty,” said Phil Kavits, a spokesman for Prince William County Public Schools.
Officials with D.C. Public Schools also asked parents to check the school system’s Web site. “We are taking every step necessary to ensure that our buildings are protected throughout the storm and ready to open on time,” spokeswoman Melissa Salmanowitz said in a statement.
Emergencies were declared, line crews were summoned, shelters were prepared and command centers opened. People stockpiled food, bought generators and chain saws, taped windows against the wind’s blast, and prepared to hunker down as Hurricane Sandy conspired with the jet stream and a nor’easter to deliver several days of misery and destruction to the most populated section of the nation.
Graphic


Several factors combine to make this storm particularly dangerous.
Get the latest information on Hurricane Sandy from The Post’s Capital Weather Gang team.
Information on preparing for the storm, reporting power outages and staying safe.
See the history of the storm, a weather radar and predictions as Sandy advances.
Jason Samenow A debate has been raging in social media streams about what to call Hurricane Sandy.
Cancellations posted by local schools and organizations as a result of Hurricane Sandy.The two big weather models that track storms came to a consensus Friday that the storm would turn inland somewhere to the east of the Chesapeake Bay and drench at least eight states as it drives across the Great Lakes into Canada. It is expected to turn into a blizzard before it gets there, dropping up to a foot of snow.
Although Sandy’s top winds diminished to 80 mph Friday, that loss of power was seen as temporary.
“That absolutely does not mean the threat to the eastern U.S. has decreased,” said Brian McNoldy of The Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang. “Quite the opposite, in fact. It is forecast to reorganize and strengthen on its inevitable approach to the East Coast.”
Rain is expected to spread over much of the region Sunday afternoon as the leading edge of the storm advances toward land, and people with events planned then and in the days to follow said they were pondering canceling them.
The first of it may fall on thousands of runners and hundreds of departing horses, as the annual Marine Corps Marathon flows through the streets of Washington and, later in the day, the last of more than 500 horses leave Verizon Center after the international horse show. “Right now, we’re going on with all of our events as planned. Runners will come rain, wind, whatever,” said Tami Faram, the marathon’s spokeswoman. “We’ll just have to wait and play that by ear.”
Jennifer Wood, with the horse show, said she hoped that the last of the horses and spectators would be gone before the worst arrives.
“Luckily, we don’t think we’re going to have much of an effect,” she said.
Gloria Garrett, who manages the Palisades Farmers Market every Sunday in Northwest Washington, said she wasn’t too worried about the storm. “I just e-mailed everyone to be sure they have their weights” for their tents, said Garrett, who added that some shoppers might decide to stock up before the storm. “I think there might be up to a 20 percent uptick in sales.”
With the full force of Sandy expected to arrive sometime on Monday, school schedules were in jeopardy.
“We’re reminding people to check our Web site periodically just in case the weather becomes nasty,” said Phil Kavits, a spokesman for Prince William County Public Schools.
Officials with D.C. Public Schools also asked parents to check the school system’s Web site. “We are taking every step necessary to ensure that our buildings are protected throughout the storm and ready to open on time,” spokeswoman Melissa Salmanowitz said in a statement.