CAYE
COFFEE is the freshest,
most
aromatic coffee sold in Belize.
Located
here on Ambergris Caye, we
roast only
enough coffee to meet demand – whenever, and as often as necessary. Buy
the cup, by the pot or buy the pound, it's the freshest taste around- CAYE
COFFEE
In Belize
email:info@cayecoffee.bz
or see
www.cayecoffee.bz
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EXOTIC CAYE
BEACH RESORT
CENTRALLY
LOCATED ONE HALF MILE SOUTH OF SAN PEDRO
TOWN.
FULLY
EQUIPPED OCEAN FRONT CONDOS
FIVE
STAR ATTITUDE
WARM AND FRIENDLY
SERVICE.
THREE HUNDRED FEET
OF BEACH
FRONT.
CLICK
HERE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT OUR CHARMING ISLAND RESORT, RATES AND
AMENITIES.
WWW.BELIZEISFUN.COM
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Featured Properties

3 unit apartment building
Blue
Reef Island Resort
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10 Coconut Drive, San Pedro
Ambergris Caye, Belize C.A.
voice 011 (501) 226 4400
fax 011 (501) 226 4401
mobile 011 (501) 624 5252
www.owninbelize.com
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Crazy
Canuck’s
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Located
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Happy
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Pasta
La Vista
Where good friends and good
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Meteorologist: Extreme storms will become
less rare
 After
the frightening experience of the last two weeks we can’t help
but wonder what’s going wrong with our weather. According to one of our
most experienced meteorologists, extreme events like Dean and Felix may
become a fact of life, not only for Belize, but for anyone living in
hurricane prone areas.
Carlos Fuller, Meteorologist/Deputy Director, CCCCC
“We have periods of high activity and periods of low
activity and we
are certainly in a period of high activity which began back in 1995 and
we know it is going to last twenty to twenty-five years. So we have
several more years of this to occur before we go back into a lower
cycle.”
Jacqueline Godwin, Reporting
Although we are just entering the height of the hurricane season in the
past three weeks, Belizeans have had to stock up on supplies and
evacuate due to the threats of hurricanes Dean and Felix. The systems
surprised weather experts with their rapid intensification and speed,
and that they kept on a westerly track at a time of the year when
historically most systems formed in June through August travel in a
northerly direction.
Carlos Fuller
“With climate change we’re seeing a warming of both the
atmosphere,
the land and the sea and hurricanes get their energy from the sea. So
if the Caribbean is warm than it normally is then you would expect
stronger hurricanes and that is exactly what occurred in the Caribbean.”
Deputy Director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre,
Meteorologist Carlos Fuller says they are also noticing that hurricanes
are forming farther south.
Carlos Fuller
“About ten years go we saw one develop in the south
Atlantic where your professor would tell you that never occurs.”
For Belize, already bracketed by two category five hurricanes in two
weeks, the news is not good.
Carlos Fuller
“Unfortunately, the two hurricanes have been category
five
hurricanes. They made landfall as category five hurricanes. It is the
first time in history and we have data going back to 1885. This has
never happened.”
Fuller says what has been contributing to the strange weather pattern
is a high pressure system known as the Bermuda High that kept both Dean
and Felix on a westerly track.
Carlos Fuller
“We can start to pray that the Bermuda high will weaken,
so that the
systems that do form, and they will form, will go more into the
Atlantic as they did in the past. The one inhibiting factor that could
occur would be if for example, an El Niño were to develop
quickly in
the Pacific, which would then tend to move the activity more into the
Pacific than the Atlantic, but we are certainly not seeing that right
now. So the outlook is right now for people, keep the plywood that
you’ve been using and look out. We could easily get a third threat.”
According to Fuller the national meteorological service has gotten much
better at monitoring and forecasting hurricanes.
Carlos Fuller
“The international coordinating mechanism is much better
and
observing systems are much better than what we had before. We now have
weather satellites that are now providing high resolution imagery, up
to one kilometre resolution every eight minutes. We have a network of
hurricane hunting aircraft that go into the hurricanes and find out the
intensity pressures and so on. We now have new aircraft that are doing
high resolution probes around the hurricane, finding out the
environment in which the hurricane is moving.”
“When we go back in the 1950’s and the early 1960’s, we did not even
have a weather forecasting office. Now we have a national
meteorological service with a full compliment of meteorologists,
forecasters and various levels of technicians.”
Fuller admits that while there have been improvements there is still
more work to be done.
Carlos Fuller
“We need more wind, monitoring equipment, stations
around the
country so that for example, when Dean made landfall just north of
Chetumal a couple weeks ago, if we had had wind recorders in Corozal,
in San Pedro, in Caye Caulker, in Orange Walk Town, we would know
exactly what was the strength of winds that occurred there. Similarly
for flooding, we have a few river gauging network stations around the
country, but we need to put many more so that we can be able to provide
warnings as the river is rising, what is the rate of rise and at what
time it will reach further downstream. We need to replace some of the
staff who have retired or have been transferred over the past few
years. we need to start at the ground level again because the young
meteorologists have been promoted over the years, at the higher level.
We need to start continuing that process of bringing people from the
bottom and letting them rise up, and we need to get that going right
away.”
The Belize Weather Bureau continues to operate without a radar system
that hopefully through a fifteen million U.S. dollar European Union
Regional project will be ready for next year’s hurricane season.
The 2007 hurricane season has been forecast to be an
active one with
a total of fifteen storms, ten of which are predicted to become
hurricanes. Read More
Hurricane
Felix
Faked Out Weather Channel's Jim Cantore
Hurricane Felix will go
down in
history as the fastest hurricane ever to reach category 5 strength and
the fastest hurricane ever to deteriorate from a category five to a
tropical storm. Indeed Felix made history and over the weekend most
forecasters agreed the bull’s eye was on Belize. That’s why a pack of
international media descended on Belize yesterday. We tracked down the
storm chasers today.
Keith Swift,
What brought you to Belize?
Jim Cantore, Weather Channel
“That would be Felix. You know we got the call Monday
morning that we were going to go to Chetumal first but obviously the
track shifted to the south. We came to Belize City instead and by the
time we got here, it had shifted so far to the south and it was too
late to get to Nicaragua.” Read
More
Brazil
donates food to Dean’s hungry
Also weighing in with hurricane relief
today was the government of
Brazil. This afternoon in his Belmopan office Prime Minister Musa
formally accepted a gift of two thousand baskets of basic food staples
to be given to victims of Dean in the Corozal and Orange Walk
districts. The donation was presented by Brazil’s resident ambassador
Roberto Coutinho. The baskets contain ten pounds each of rice and
flour, five pounds each of beans and sugar, one litre of cooking oil,
one tin of milk powder and two tins of corned beef. The supplies,
totalling over thirty-two tons, will be distributed this week by NEMO.
The food items were all purchased locally by the Brazilian Embassy. Read More
NOTICES/LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
THOUGHT
OF THE DAY
Reality leaves a lot
to the imagination
John Lennon
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BERMUDA
BEACH
LUXURY RESORT
Fantastic Views!

1/4
Mile North of the Bridge
Best
Location
Best
Design
Best
Construction
Best
Value
2
and 3 Bedroom Plans
Poolside
Kitchen
and Entertainment Center
For a no-obligation
tour and free cocktail please call
226-2509
or
663-9615
CLICK HERE
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OUR
SERVICES
Demand
Deposit Accounts
Savings Accounts * Loans Letters of Credit * Global (International)
Transfers
Term Deposits
CONTACT:
PO Box 11, Coconut Drive, San Pedro,
Ambergris Caye, Belize
Tel: +501-226-2388
Fax: +501-226-2892
Email: cibl@btl.net
Website: CLICK
HERE
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www.grandcaribe.bz
debbiewade@gmail.com
BELICAN
SUPPLY DEPOT
belican@btl.net
226-2669
EVERYTHING TO BUILD
& MAINTAIN YOUR POOL
Tiles
Pool Cement
Pumps
Filters
Lights
Maintenance Equipment
Pool Chemicals
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