People
need to get out and measure radiation levels now
Isle
Drying Out After 2+ Feet of Rain; More Coming
2
January, 2014
Sunny
skies prevailed over nearly the entire Big Island today, giving Big
Islanders a breather from a doozy of a winter storm that soaked some
areas with more than two feet of rain.
But
that respite will be relatively short-lived, as another system
approaching the state is expected to impact the Big Island by the
weekend.
The
National Weather Service said the cold front approaching from the
west will begin to affect Kauai tonight.
According
to meteorologist Matt Foster, the front will then continue its march
down the island chain, reaching Kona as early as Friday night and the
Big Island’s windward side on Saturday.
That
means showers are likely from Friday on for both sides of the island.
The
front, which resides relatively low in the atmosphere, is expected to
stall Sunday just east of the Big Island. There it will be enhanced
by an upper-level low-pressure system, resulting in more locally
heavy rains and possibly thunderstorms.
Foster
said this storm is not likely to be as strong as the one that
hammered much of the island over the five-day period ending at 8 a.m.
Wednesday morning.
Weather
service rain gauges tallied double-digit rainfall in at least five
windward locations during that period, with the Island Dairy gauge in
Ookala registering the most with 27.93 inches.
That
was followed by the mauka Hilo area of Waiakea Uka with 23.14 inches,
Honokaa with 18.47, Hilo with 14.96 and Pahoa with 10.82 inches.
According
to Civil Defense Director Darryl Oliveira, an independent weather
observer in Paauilo recorded 33 inches of rain during that time.
The
rainfall also set a record.
On
Monday, 7.51 inches fell at Hilo’s airport, eclipsing the previous
record of 4.58 inches for Dec. 30, which was set in 1951. The wettest
December day on record at the airport was Dec. 2, 1970, when 9.33
inches of rain fell.
The
New Year’s Day rainfall was focused mainly on a narrow area that
included the western end of Saddle Road and in the Honokaa area on
the other side of Mauna Kea.
The
thunderstorms Monday and Tuesday occurred after the low-pressure
trough had moved away from the Big Island.
“It
was a really funny system,” Foster said. “It was taking a while
to dissipate.”
Those
rains forced the closure of Saddle Road beginning early New Year’s
Eve.
Oliveira
said that night a county crew was able to clear the last remaining
county section of the road known as the “Seven Steps” which
passes through Waikii. That allowed cross-island traffic to resume
after several hours.
He
said unlike the Hamakua Coast, where landslides consist of rocks,
trees and other large items, the debris on Saddle Road was smaller
stuff like dirt and twigs, which are easier to clear.
The
state was not able to muster a crew and reopen the Saddle Road’s
new Keaumuku section until Wednesday morning.
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