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In a general sense, yes - I think it looks to yank just far enough north to keep hurricane-strength winds offshore. But at the same time, it's so close that all it would take is a little left wobble to change that. I think the wisest course of action (and it seems like the one at least most are taking) is to prepare for a hurricane, because it that margin is razor-thin and can quickly disappear.artist wrote:since it is strengthening do you think that could be better for the islands, i.e. pulling it just a touch further north of them?
wxman57 wrote:Eye is about ready to pop open. Major hurricane tomorrow, most likely.
wxman57 wrote:I'm looking at a somewhat high-res presentation of the hour-by-hour projected wind speeds as Earl passes the NE Caribbean tomorrow. It shows TS winds brushing the northern tip of Guadeloupe island late tonight/early tomorrow morning (about 35-40 mph sustained with higher gusts on the island of Guadeloupe. Continuing west, the outer part of the possible 40 mph wind field brushes the BVI early tomorrow afternoon, staying JUST north of St. Croix. The TS wind field passes just NE of San Juan tomorrow evening, maybe 20 miles NE. Hurricane force winds stay north of the islands on the current forecast track, and Earl may be tracking a little right of the forecast now.
So, good news for the islands, hopefully.
chris_fit wrote:wxman57 wrote:Eye is about ready to pop open. Major hurricane tomorrow, most likely.
57.... Thoughts on forecast track?
wxman57 wrote:Eye is about ready to pop open. Major hurricane tomorrow, most likely.
cycloneye wrote:wxman57 wrote:I'm looking at a somewhat high-res presentation of the hour-by-hour projected wind speeds as Earl passes the NE Caribbean tomorrow. It shows TS winds brushing the northern tip of Guadeloupe island late tonight/early tomorrow morning (about 35-40 mph sustained with higher gusts on the island of Guadeloupe. Continuing west, the outer part of the possible 40 mph wind field brushes the BVI early tomorrow afternoon, staying JUST north of St. Croix. The TS wind field passes just NE of San Juan tomorrow evening, maybe 20 miles NE. Hurricane force winds stay north of the islands on the current forecast track, and Earl may be tracking a little right of the forecast now.
So, good news for the islands, hopefully.
That is good news if the track verifies. But if Earl deepens more than forecast,that windfield expands right?
wxman57 wrote:I'm looking at a somewhat high-res presentation of the hour-by-hour projected wind speeds as Earl passes the NE Caribbean tomorrow. It shows TS winds brushing the northern tip of Guadeloupe island late tonight/early tomorrow morning (about 35-40 mph sustained with higher gusts on the island of Guadeloupe). Continuing west, the outer part of the possible 40 mph wind field brushes the BVI early tomorrow afternoon, staying JUST north of St. Croix. The TS wind field passes just NE of San Juan tomorrow evening, maybe 20 miles NE. Hurricane force winds stay north of the islands on the current forecast track, and Earl may be tracking a little right of the forecast now.
So, good news for the islands, hopefully.
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