Wind Advisory this Afternoon

2:20 pm update:  it looks like the wind advisory has been cancelled.   Here's the current forecast on NWS:

Tonight: Showers likely, mainly before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 43. Breezy, with a southwest wind between 14 and 24 mph, with gusts as high as 37 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%

The National Weather Service has issued a wind advisory for our area starting at noon and ending at 9:00 tonight.

* WINDS…RISING FROM THE SOUTH OR SOUTHWEST AT 20 TO 30 MPH WITH GUSTS NEAR 45 MPH.

* TIMING…WINDS WILL KICK UP BEHIND A FRONT THAT WILL SWEEP
  ACROSS THE AREA THIS AFTERNOON. LOOK FOR WINDS TO GRADUALLY DIMINISH THIS EVENING

Upcoming tides for today are:

  • 7.85 at 11:19 a.m.
  • 1.6 at 5.44 p.m.  

Luckily this isn't taking place last week when tides were much higher!

Puget Sound Marine forecast:

…SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY IN EFFECT THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT…

TODAY…VARIABLE WIND TO 10 KT BECOMING SW 15 TO 25 KT MID AFTERNOON. WIND WAVES BUILDING TO 2 TO 4 FT THIS AFTERNOON. RAIN.

West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day is Coming Up!

West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day, a West Seattle Blog event, is taking place on May 14, 2011.  If you're interested in participating (150 have signed up so far!), you need to sign up by April 27, 2011.

For more information, or to sign up for this event, click here:  http://westseattlegaragesale.wordpress.com/

 

Rock Piles at Emma Schmitz View Point

On my way to capture the photo of the mystery sign, I noticed that someone has been up to stacking rocks at Emma Schmitz again.

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What’s Your Sign?

Wondering if any of our readers know what's up with this sign that's at the far north end (heading towards Alki) of Emma Schmitz/Mee Kwa Mooks park?

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Update April 21, 2011: this tip was just provided by a Beach Drive neighbor via the West Seattle Herald:

Through a grant of $99,916 from the Seattle Department of Neighborhoods, Feet First worked with nine neighborhood districts to support a kiosk and wayfinding project, holding community meetings to seek input.

 

 

Highs and Lows

We have some very high and very low tides this week.   Starting with this afternoon:

Tuesday, April 29 at 11:44 am:  -1.95 followed by 11.78 at 6:32 pm

Wednesday, April 20 at 5:37 am: 11.93 followed by a low of -2.67 at 1:13 pm and back up to 11.9 at 8:23 pm.

Thursday, April 21 at 7:03 am: 10.98 down to a -2.3 at 2:00 pm and up to 11.66 a6 9:20 pm.

Friday, April 22 has another pretty low tide of -1.55 at 2:49 pm.

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Film Crew Coming to Beach Drive

Later this month, a film crew will be on location using a Beach Drive home for a holiday movie, Ira Finklestein's Christmas.  Several neighbors may have received a notice from the Locations Manager providing a "heads up" that they have applied for a permit to use a portion of Beach Drive for the movie and asking some residences to not park their cars on the street during the filming… stay tuned!

NOTE:  The owners of the home where the movie is being filmed wish not to have their location disclosed at this time.  If you happen to know which property it is, we hope you respect their privacy.

Please help me! I’m going to be locked up at Angelina’s to raise funds for MDA!

MDAI'm scheduled to be "locked up" to raise funds for the Muscular Dystrophy Association on April 7, 2011 at Angelina's Trattoria in West Seattle. 

While I have no idea who the special person was who nominated me to this event, I do know that I'm tasked to raise $2,000 to help King County families.

Please help "bail me out" by making a donation (click here).  Every donation counts and I appreciate your support for this important cause.

Thank you!

Super Moon hanging over Manchester

Supermoon 
Caught from our telescope around 7 this morning.

Seattle Police Community Newsletter

Dear Community Friends:

We are beginning a series of security tips for your home to help deter residential burglaries. For this newsletter, we’re going to focus on exterior doors.

Door Security

The most common way used to force entry through a door with a wooden jamb is to kick it open. When a door is kicked in, the frame usually splinters and gives way, allowing the burglar to enter. The weakest point is almost always the strike plate that holds the latch or lock bolt in place. The average door strike plate is secured only to the doorframe molding. These lightweight moldings are often tacked on to the doorframe and can be torn away with a firm kick. Increasingly, we’ve noticed a trend of burglars increasingly using pry tools at doors to gain entry into homes.

Suggestions Regarding Exterior Doors.

  • Check the condition of the wood frame. If worn, have a new frame made.  
  • Anchor the frame to the wall stud. Do this by removing the short screws used to
    secure the strike plates and hinge plates. Replace them with 3”-4” wood screws. This should be done to all exterior doors.
  • Consider upgrading to a four-screw, heavy-duty, high security strike plate. They are available at any hardware store or home improvement center. Install this heavy-duty strike plate using 3”-4” wood screws to cut deep into the doorframe stud. Use these longer screws in the knob lock strike plate as well and use at least one long screw in each door hinge. This one step alone will deter or prevent most through-the-door forced entries. Even without installing a heavy duty strike plate, using the longer 3”-4” screws to secure your existing strike plates will vastly improve the security of your door.
  • To combat pry tools being used against your doors, ensure you have 3-4” inch screws on the strike plates, have a deadbolt lock on the door (see below), and install a latch guard on the door that covers the area above and below where your door knob and deadbolt engage. A latch guard like the one pictured here costs about $12 at major hardware retailers.
  • Finally, deadbolt locks should be installed on every exterior door, including doors that lead from the garage to the interior of the home. A decent deadbolt lock will retail for about $30. More substantial deadbolts can be run upwards of $200.

Deadbolt Locks

There are two types of deadbolt locks: a single cylinder deadbolt, which has a thumb turn on the inside and is keyed on the outside, and a double cylinder deadbolt, which is keyed on both the inside and outside. Deadbolt “throws” (the part that actually goes in to the door jamb) should always be a minimum of 1” in length.

  • Single Cylinder – Install on all solid doors where access to the locks and knobs
    cannot be gained by breaking adjacent glass
  • Double Cylinder – Install on all doors where access to locks and knobs can be
    gained by breaking adjacent glass. Never leave the key in the lock. If you live
    in an apartment or condo, make sure you know the building code. 

    Consider deadbolts with captive keylocks on all doors located next to windows.
    These locks have removable thumb latches so that even if a thief breaks a window, he still can't reach around and unlock the door. But because deadbolts can also be a fire hazard, make sure they have a removable key on the inside cylinder for when you are home. When you leave, just remove the key and keep the lock bolted on both sides.

  • Note: City of Seattle building codes do not permit Double Cylinder deadbolts to be installed in apartment or condominium settings, nor does the code allow for “Captive Keylock” deadbolts.

Until next time, Take Care and Stay Safe!

Mark Solomon, Crime Prevention Coordinator, mark.solomon@seattle.gov, 206.386.9766

Being Prepared for an Emergency in West Seattle

Hub Did you know that West Seattle has a website dedicated to preparing yourself for an emergency?   Check out http://westseattle.bepreparedseattle.info.

This site includes a list of Emergency Communication Hubs.   Depending on where you live on Beach Drive, the nearest hub may be the Alki Community Center or Fauntleroy Church…there are several hubs located in West Seattle.  I highly recommend that you check out the list to see which location is closest to you.

Tomorrow, March 14, at 6:30 p.m., Cindi Barker of West Seattle Be Prepared and Debbie Goetz from the Office of Emergency Management will be at the Delridge Branch Library if you would like to learn more about preparing for an emergency in West Seattle.

Click here to find them on Facebook.

PS: It was just a few years ago that a team of geologist from Japan studying earthquakes and tsunamis stopped by Beach Drive.