Is a trip up I-95 looking like the most likely outcome with this?

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took me 8 but had to take multiple breaks including a 30 min siesta...weather was hot and sunny..30 mins after completion we were hit with a downpour..mother nature usually gives the day before for preps and it did todayWeatherboy1 wrote:Well, it took seven hours but house is all shuttered and supplies are all stocked for Matthew here in northern PBC. Did most of my buying two days ago - and very thankful for that! Satellite view looks very impressive - will have to see if Recon obs eventually catch up.
Hammy wrote:
Is a trip up I-95 looking like the most likely outcome with this?
ALhurricane wrote:I would be extremely careful using the HRRR in a tropical situation.
ALhurricane wrote:I would be extremely careful using the HRRR in a tropical situation.
Blinhart wrote:I have a feeling that this might get all the way up to Cat. 5 before land fall in the Miami/Dade area before deciding not to go up the East Coast and going straight into the GoM before any major North movement.
Pure gut feeling, the cool front that is stalled over Florida will push it further West.
Blinhart wrote:I have a feeling that this might get all the way up to Cat. 5 before land fall in the Miami/Dade area before deciding not to go up the East Coast and going straight into the GoM before any major North movement.
Pure gut feeling, the cool front that is stalled over Florida will push it further West.
GeneratorPower wrote:Forgive the apparent locality bias, but we in SW Florida have been really struggling with what to do if there is an unexpected jog left tonight. That HRRR is not helping. It's basically too late to put up shutters. It takes hours because they are second story. If this goes to Miami it will be a colossal miscalculation by the experts and the entire area is under warned and underprepared.
Exalt wrote:ALhurricane wrote:I would be extremely careful using the HRRR in a tropical situation.
HRRR did quite well with Hermine IIRC.
Exalt wrote:Blinhart wrote:I have a feeling that this might get all the way up to Cat. 5 before land fall in the Miami/Dade area before deciding not to go up the East Coast and going straight into the GoM before any major North movement.
Pure gut feeling, the cool front that is stalled over Florida will push it further West.
Yeah the westerly jog on the HRRR has me feeling things I really am scared about, a possible Andrew 2.0.
johngaltfla wrote:GeneratorPower wrote:Forgive the apparent locality bias, but we in SW Florida have been really struggling with what to do if there is an unexpected jog left tonight. That HRRR is not helping. It's basically too late to put up shutters. It takes hours because they are second story. If this goes to Miami it will be a colossal miscalculation by the experts and the entire area is under warned and underprepared.
I'm not a met but I'm not as worried as the storm will likely pass north of you and I and curve back to the NNE or NE before major impacts reach our region. Just my .02 and per our local mets on TV.
ALhurricane wrote:I would be extremely careful using the HRRR in a tropical situation.
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