johngaltfla wrote:boca_chris wrote:she has stalled for sure.....I hope that trough doesn't dig far enough to drive her N and NE into the west coast of FL...
sure looks like she is waiting to catch a ride if you ask me

Agreed. Clark's right up and then looking at the loop again (10th time this morning) made me think that this could drift for 12 hours then move again.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Charley drift around the Keys then intensify and move north??????????????(I was too busy boarding up and trying to get some sleep before landfall to watch all of the coverage that August 13)

Charley made it up from cuba to landfall in about 15 hours, exploding all the way.
From the NHC Archive:
By 0600 UTC, the eye was emerging from the north coast of Cuba, about 12 n mi west of Havana. Based on aerial reconnaissance observations, Charley weakened slightly over the lower Straits of Florida. Turning northward, the hurricane passed over the Dry Tortugas around 1200 UTC 13 August with maximum winds near 95 kt.
By the time Charley reached the Dry Tortugas, it came under the influence of an unseasonably strong mid-tropospheric trough that had dug from the east-central United States into the eastern Gulf of Mexico. In response to the steering flow on the southeast side of this trough, the hurricane turned north-northeastward and accelerated toward the southwest coast of Florida. It also began to intensify rapidly at this time. By 1400 UTC 13 August, the maximum winds had increased to near 110 kt. Just three hours later, Charley's maximum winds had increased to Category 4 strength of 125 kt. Since the eye shrank considerably in the 12 h before landfall in Florida, these extreme winds were confined to a very small area - within only about 6 n mi of the center. Moving north-northeastward at around 18 kt, Charley made landfall on the southwest coast of Florida near Cayo Costa, just north of Captiva, around 1945 UTC 13 August with maximum sustained winds near 130 kt. Charley's eye passed over Punta Gorda at about 2045 UTC,