#1613 Postby typhoonty » Tue Jul 14, 2020 12:00 pm
Shell Mound wrote:The ridge looks a bit too meridional and is displaced too far to the northeast for CV-type landfalls on Southeast FL, doesn’t it? Normally the ridge axis is farther SW during such impacts. This time the axis is east of Bermuda on both the JMA and UKMET forecasts. Now this isn’t necessarily an OTS pattern, but it looks more like threatening to the Carolinas, Mid-Atlantic, and/or S New England than to S FL. Even if South FL gets hit from the SW in October, late-season hits tend not to be as strong/dangerous as the Aug/Sept ones, the latter of which tend to form in the MDR and produce most of South FL’s Cat-4+ landfalls. Plus, direct hits from the Atlantic don’t have to weaken over land, unlike late-season hits such as Wilma, which, despite making landfall in SW FL as a Cat-3, produced only TS or low-end Cat-1 conditions in metropolitan SE FL.
I would suggest to abstain from talking in such absolutes. No one has the ability to prognosticate to the degree of specificity that you are espousing. If anyone did, they be compensated well above the meteorologist paygrade.

Also, a strike from the south or southwest does not preclude metro SEFL from taking a direct hit from a major hurricane. The 1906 Florida Keys hurricane comes to mind as an example of this, and Irma came very close to being a direct hit despite a weakness over Florida. So the lack of a ridge does not save SEFL as a matter of course. I'd hate to lull people into a false sense of security.
It also seems like your underselling the intensity of Wilma in metro south Florida by about a category. I would categorize Katrina as a strong ts or weak hurricane impact for S FL. Wilma produced sustained winds of 85-90 mph from Virginia key north. And winds of over 100 mph sustained in palm beach county. Not to mention gusts 100-120 mph from Opa.Locka and Fowley Rocks north. I'm sure if you were in central or south dade your assessment would be correct, but not for the balance of S FL as was asserted.
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FSU Meteorology student, opinions are mine, 20 years experience covering TC's, consult NHC/Local officials when making decisions.
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