Zonacane wrote:toad strangler wrote:
uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.
Probably getting tugged by intense towers and convection on the Eastern and Northern side of the storm.
Based on the last 2 vortex messages, Helene is moving NNE.
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Zonacane wrote:toad strangler wrote:
uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.
Probably getting tugged by intense towers and convection on the Eastern and Northern side of the storm.
wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
GCANE wrote:Looking a successive eye drops, the core was moderately dry but is moistening up.
wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
It's hard to say how much effect it will have on the storm. The HWRF looks like it modeled this same dry air intrusion pretty well. In that run it just powers right through the dry air. It's gonna be another one of those "wait and see effects" type things. I could definitely see it acting as a small hurdle.aspen wrote:Looks like there is a bit of a dry slot trying to work its way in on the east side of the CDO. Probably why that eastern band faded away in microwave. We’ll probably see Helene stay around 978-980mb until it’s able to mix it out and close off the eyewall.
wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Pipelines182 wrote:wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Those gators better watch out! lol but seriously, thankfully there's nothing to damage in the bay in the center or eastern side, just swamps and some camp grounds. Aside from the Everglades, that is the least populated coastline in Florida. If you had to pick somewhere in Florida to get hit by a major, this is the spot.
caneman wrote:wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Wxman57. What is the slosh for Tampa Bay?. They backed it down to 3 to 6 feet but living here as long as I have I feel that 6 ft. Will be the minimum. Thanks.
StPeteMike wrote:caneman wrote:wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Wxman57. What is the slosh for Tampa Bay?. They backed it down to 3 to 6 feet but living here as long as I have I feel that 6 ft. Will be the minimum. Thanks.
One of my friends shared that Shore Acres in St. Pete (just north of downtown but easily floods) already had water flooding the streets there….
jdjaguar wrote:Pipelines182 wrote:wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Those gators better watch out! lol but seriously, thankfully there's nothing to damage in the bay in the center or eastern side, just swamps and some camp grounds. Aside from the Everglades, that is the least populated coastline in Florida. If you had to pick somewhere in Florida to get hit by a major, this is the spot.
I beg to differ. Panacea is smack on the bay, albeit the western portion.
jdjaguar wrote:Pipelines182 wrote:wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
Those gators better watch out! lol but seriously, thankfully there's nothing to damage in the bay in the center or eastern side, just swamps and some camp grounds. Aside from the Everglades, that is the least populated coastline in Florida. If you had to pick somewhere in Florida to get hit by a major, this is the spot.
I beg to differ. Panacea is smack on the bay, albeit the western portion.
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