excerpts from nhc report on hurricane georges:
The hurricane moved inland over Puerto Rico and weakened slightly and then moved into the Mona Passage early on the 22nd. Georges began to re-intensify while over the Mona Passage and made landfall later that morning in the Dominican Republic, about 75 n mi east of Santo Domingo with estimated sustained surface winds of 105 knots.
During the next 21 hours Georges weakened as it moved slowly across the mountainous terrain of the Dominican Republic and Haiti, where it produced copious rains resulting in deadly flash floods and mud slides. The system emerged into the Windward Passage on the morning of the 23rd with 65 knot maximum winds. Georges changed little before making landfall in eastern Cuba later that afternoon, about 25 n mi east of Guantanamo Bay. The system retained hurricane status while moving slowly west-northwestward across the northern coast of Cuba, exiting the northern coast by late afternoon on the 24th. Satellite imagery showed that the system retained a fairly impressive upper-level outflow pattern during its crossing of both Hispaniola and Cuba.
Once back over water, the hurricane began to re-intensify.
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1998georges.htmlThere was even more uncertainty...and closer in...with georges than we have seen with recent storms like ike....proof perhaps that forecasting has improved much in even the last 10 years...from NHC discussion on Georges
ON THIS TRACK GEORGES WILL BE MOVING OVER EASTERN CUBA AND THEREAFTER IS EXPECTED TO MOVE OVER FLORIDA STRAITS OR SOUTH FLORIDA BETWEEN 36 AND 48 HOURS.
I AM NOT PLEASED TO PUT UP A HURRICANE WATCH FOR SOUTH FLORIDA WITH
SO MUCH UNCERTAINTY...BUT AM DOING SO AS A STRATEGY OF LEAST REGRET.
gilbert88 wrote:How can a hurricane survive all those landfalls (including crossing Hispaniola east to west) without becoming a tropical storm?
