Derek Ortt wrote:irene is no threat to land and its a TD... no need yet for recon
i thought they wanted to do more passes when storms are developing for research, seems like a good one to research
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caribepr wrote:I know this is a forum for following tropical storms, but after reading the last endless pages...I am pretty convinced (and this is depressing, as I have been using the internet since before it was called the internet and am still thrilled with the reality and potential) that sometimes, in some cases, there is just too much information available to be deciphered.
I'm not saying the thing of "pros are always right, respect your betters and shut up" - I'm simply saying...This is like seeing a 5 year old steal bubble gum and declaring that he is a mini crime wave (no pun intended) headed for a life in prison for theft and murder. Now..he might be, given circumstances as his life goes along, but on the other hand..
When ONE instance of weather, which is a LONG way out, has people bouncing around like balls in a lottery box, GEEZE! Isn't there a way to have interest, learn, and not draw conclusions every freaking time a storm has a change? They do this ALL THE TIME!!!
I can understand fears of those who have been seriously impacted by storms to naturally NOT want that thing coming back to your lives (the opposite of -removed-? Fearcasting?)...but that's an issue to recognize and deal with in your personal lives, not extropolate it into a forecast of the second/half minute/dare I say it, even day until a more appropriate time, which in this case is quite literally, for you east coasters, close to a week away?? Be prepared, watch, learn, enjoy, but calm down before you have a heart attack from something that isn't a threat to you at present.
Brent wrote:This thread is at 66 pages... isn't it time to start a new one??
du1st wrote:Cyclone the 5 am NHC discussion.
sma10 wrote:caribepr wrote:I know this is a forum for following tropical storms, but after reading the last endless pages...I am pretty convinced (and this is depressing, as I have been using the internet since before it was called the internet and am still thrilled with the reality and potential) that sometimes, in some cases, there is just too much information available to be deciphered.
I'm not saying the thing of "pros are always right, respect your betters and shut up" - I'm simply saying...This is like seeing a 5 year old steal bubble gum and declaring that he is a mini crime wave (no pun intended) headed for a life in prison for theft and murder. Now..he might be, given circumstances as his life goes along, but on the other hand..
When ONE instance of weather, which is a LONG way out, has people bouncing around like balls in a lottery box, GEEZE! Isn't there a way to have interest, learn, and not draw conclusions every freaking time a storm has a change? They do this ALL THE TIME!!!
I can understand fears of those who have been seriously impacted by storms to naturally NOT want that thing coming back to your lives (the opposite of -removed-? Fearcasting?)...but that's an issue to recognize and deal with in your personal lives, not extropolate it into a forecast of the second/half minute/dare I say it, even day until a more appropriate time, which in this case is quite literally, for you east coasters, close to a week away?? Be prepared, watch, learn, enjoy, but calm down before you have a heart attack from something that isn't a threat to you at present.
Ahh, a voice of reason in the wilderness.
Sometimes I actually think back fondly to the days before the world wide web when the only way I could get the public advisory was to call the NHC advisory recording on the telephone. (forget about the discussion -- we didn't even know it existed!)
Hyperstorm wrote:sma10 wrote:caribepr wrote:I know this is a forum for following tropical storms, but after reading the last endless pages...I am pretty convinced (and this is depressing, as I have been using the internet since before it was called the internet and am still thrilled with the reality and potential) that sometimes, in some cases, there is just too much information available to be deciphered.
I'm not saying the thing of "pros are always right, respect your betters and shut up" - I'm simply saying...This is like seeing a 5 year old steal bubble gum and declaring that he is a mini crime wave (no pun intended) headed for a life in prison for theft and murder. Now..he might be, given circumstances as his life goes along, but on the other hand..
When ONE instance of weather, which is a LONG way out, has people bouncing around like balls in a lottery box, GEEZE! Isn't there a way to have interest, learn, and not draw conclusions every freaking time a storm has a change? They do this ALL THE TIME!!!
I can understand fears of those who have been seriously impacted by storms to naturally NOT want that thing coming back to your lives (the opposite of -removed-? Fearcasting?)...but that's an issue to recognize and deal with in your personal lives, not extropolate it into a forecast of the second/half minute/dare I say it, even day until a more appropriate time, which in this case is quite literally, for you east coasters, close to a week away?? Be prepared, watch, learn, enjoy, but calm down before you have a heart attack from something that isn't a threat to you at present.
Ahh, a voice of reason in the wilderness.
Sometimes I actually think back fondly to the days before the world wide web when the only way I could get the public advisory was to call the NHC advisory recording on the telephone. (forget about the discussion -- we didn't even know it existed!)
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Count me in on the club of callers to the NHC! And the telephone bills....Yikes! They came so high. What was it....$1.00 a minute? Don't keep reminding me of those days...
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