Strong winds on Thursday downed trees across Anchorage and knocked out power for thousands of residents.
The National Weather Service forecast had called for southeast winds to rapidly increase across the Anchorage Bowl by late morning, with gusts of 30 to 50 mph to continue through late afternoon, reaching up to 60 mph on the Hillside.
The wind came from the remnants of a tropical storm in the Pacific Northwest that moved across the Aleutian Chain and is heading toward Southwest Alaska, said National Weather Service meteorologist Christian Landry.
“With higher pressure over the Prince William Sound area and low pressure over Southwest Alaska, that really drives higher winds to be pulled down through areas like the Turnagain Arm,” he said.
As of 5 p.m., the highest recorded gust in the Anchorage area was around 70 mph near Potter Marsh, Landry said. The weather service had also recorded gusts just over 50 mph at Glen Alps and 46 mph at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
By this evening, Landry said, the winds will shift more south-southwest but remain in the 25 to 40 mph range through Friday.
“People are urged to secure loose objects that could be blowing around or damaged by the wind,” he said.
By early Thursday evening, officials with Chugach Electric said roughly 8,000 households had lost power, largely due to trees falling on power lines. The outages spanned from Mountain View and East Anchorage, south to Huffman and west to the Jewel Lake area.
Chugach officials advised residents not to touch downed power lines or the trees near them.
Strong winds were also forecast for the Palmer area Thursday, with gusts of 30 to 45 mph through the afternoon and then diminishing overnight. And on the western Kenai Peninsula, the weather service said wind gusts were expected to increase to around 45 mph Thursday afternoon, with potential for gusts of up to 55 mph overnight.
Source : ALASKAPUBLIC