BYG Jacob wrote:I remember a storm that got organized before the eastern Caribbean, had a center relocation that helped it avoid land, and then moved into conditions ripe for intensification. Do y'all remember?
Dorian
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BYG Jacob wrote:I remember a storm that got organized before the eastern Caribbean, had a center relocation that helped it avoid land, and then moved into conditions ripe for intensification. Do y'all remember?
if she does that there won’t be much left of herCat5James wrote:Metro SE Florida not being in the cone makes very little difference. If Elsa rides the eastern edge of the cone and enters up the spine impacts to the metros areas will be the same.
InfernoFlameCat wrote:if she does that there won’t be much left of herCat5James wrote:Metro SE Florida not being in the cone makes very little difference. If Elsa rides the eastern edge of the cone and enters up the spine impacts to the metros areas will be the same.
sunnyday wrote:Looks like Palm Beach and Miami are out of the cone????
Weather Dude wrote:It's definitely still got some time to regain hurricane status before it hits Haiti. Either way the difference of impacts between a 60kt TS and 65kt hurricane is nothing.
I don't want to get too far ahead here but depending on how much of a hit the core takes from Haiti and Cuba, there looks to be a solid amount of time before it hits FL. Might be able to ramp back up.
Weather Dude wrote:sunnyday wrote:Looks like Palm Beach and Miami are out of the cone????
Yes but that doesn't mean they won't get any impacts.
Nimbus wrote:Weather Dude wrote:It's definitely still got some time to regain hurricane status before it hits Haiti. Either way the difference of impacts between a 60kt TS and 65kt hurricane is nothing.
I don't want to get too far ahead here but depending on how much of a hit the core takes from Haiti and Cuba, there looks to be a solid amount of time before it hits FL. Might be able to ramp back up.
NHC said they expected a strengthening trend in the gulf.
Of course the model tracks with the most time over Cuba are further right and make Florida landfall near the Florida straits with just a few hours to intensify over the gulf.
And the more southern model tracks that keep the storm mostly over the water south of Cuba have a long gulf track making landfall up near Apalachicola.
Really difficult forecast with the coastlines running nearly parallel to some of the potential tracks.
sunnyday wrote:Looks like Palm Beach and Miami are out of the cone????
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