Frank P wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:You know whats better than rapid scan ? Radar lol
Yeah but no radar in the middle of the Gulf.. what ya use then?![]()
Lol thats then this is now :p
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Frank P wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:You know whats better than rapid scan ? Radar lol
Yeah but no radar in the middle of the Gulf.. what ya use then?![]()
whatacane wrote:Tireman4 wrote:whatacane wrote:HWFI has this as a cat 5 on intesinty? does history repeat its self like the hurricane that hit Galveston?
You mean the 1900 Storm? Gosh I sure hope not. That was a doozy. It dramatically changed the landscape of municipal government and displaced Galveston as a major player in Texas and the US ( as far as population)
Yes the 1900 storm. seems there are a lot of big storms that can intensify and come from this area
weathermimmi wrote:I have been reading the boards and did not see anyone answer the question of what was causing all the models to take it right back over Florida? I remember Elena in 1985 that re curved twice?
Tireman4 wrote:Socalhurcnegirl227 wrote:Went on twc website for somethint unrelated and saw this headline! Wow this is why i said it was the little engine that could.
What headline?
bamajammer4eva wrote:NBC apparently got #9 confused with Gaston
Socalhurcnegirl227 wrote:bamajammer4eva wrote:NBC apparently got #9 confused with Gaston
Sadly its not that they got it confused they are misrepresenting facts and falsely using a picture of a different storm to cause hype and ratings. Its pathetic and being done too many times for a number of situations
bamajammer4eva wrote:NBC apparently got #9 confused with Gaston
Bhuggs wrote:So now that we have a depression, and it seems like the models are pretty well in line with the general path, when should we expect to have a good grasp on landfall intensity? Does this have any chance of being a > cat 1 hurricane?
Indigo wrote:Right? And what in the world does Zika have do with any of it? Gimme a break NBC
ObsessedMiami wrote:Indigo wrote:Right? And what in the world does Zika have do with any of it? Gimme a break NBC
Heavy flooding rains in SFL = greatly increased standing water = an explosion in mosquito population in a few days = an increased potential for Zika transmission. This is a legitimate story in Miami and Miami Beach
tolakram wrote:Ok everyone, despite the temptation let's stick to Nine and try and avoid multiple pages of media bashing. Thanks!
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