Saturday, September 2, 2023

Typhoon Saola Blows Through Hong Kong


Over 1,500 trees were reported fallen all over the city

Typhoon Saola blew through Hong Kong yesterday and most of the city was left in tact from the T10 tropical cyclone that packed winds at 200km/hr.

Eighty-six people were sent to hospital, while there were reports of 1,545 fallen trees and two landslides. Many of the trees were strewn across roads, causing traffic headaches this morning on major thoroughfares, like the Island Eastern Corridor and Gloucester Road in Wan Chai, though city crews did their best to remove most of the debris.

A tree that replaced one after Mangkut also fell
Someone posted on X, formerly known as Twitter that a tree by a gas station that had replaced one that fell after Super Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018 had fallen after Typhoon Saola. Too bad it wasn't mature enough to hang on, or perhaps the space for it didn't allow its roots to spread further into the ground?

My cousin reported that during T10, all outdoor MTR trains were not running, while there was flooding in Tai O, and minor flooding along the Shing Mun River in Sha Tin. 

Many residents in Lohas Park in Tseung Kwan O reported their flats were swaying during the brunt of the typhoon's force, with some experiencing headaches and motion sickness.

Reminds me of Typhoon Mangkhut when I felt my building swaying too, and I felt a bit dizzy and had to lie down for a bit!

Tai O experienced flooding after Typhoon Saola
As Hong Kong returns back to "normal", tropical Haikui may approach the city on Monday.

Hopefully it will not induce residents to ransack supermarkets like when Typhoon Saola was approaching -- people grabbed whatever they could, sweeping shelves clean as if they were preparing to hunker down for weeks.

People seem to forget that a typhoon rarely lasts longer than 24 hours and so there is no need to hoard food!



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