Quote:
Originally Posted by JET
there was afair amount of damage on the Dartmouth waterfront, the boardwalk was torn up and a few railcars knocked over. A few lobters a fair distance from the water
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Allow me to use my rather extensive knowledge from Juan I've put a lot of time researching to practical use lol. The damage was so extensive specifically along that section of the waterfront was solely from the fact the southeast wind from Juan was coming right up from the mouth of the harbour *directly* against the park/ferry terminal and that little cove where the railyard is, driving the waves from the surge, combined with an abnormally high tide that night, waaaay up the shore. I was at Lawrencetown an hour or so before Juan made landfall, and being in a spot where the wind comes right off the open ocean uninhibited really makes a difference for the wind-driven waves atop the surge. It was like that all up the eastern side of the harbour all the way from about Dartmouth Cove up to the passage, anywhere with a direct south-east facing orientation of the water got it bad. I know a couple of people up on shore road near Hartlen point in the passage who had seaweed on their doorsteps lol.